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Examples

  • In A Breed Apart, Haacke's simulates magazine ads for Leyland Vehicles, in which he appropriates actual Leyland ad copy and conjoins it with journalistic photographs of white military officers apprehending black South Africans during the South African government's apartheid rule.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • Whether it is then presented to the public in the form of simulated advertising or as reports on charitable contributions that his subjects have made to the arts, Haacke's intent is to link the complicity of arts funding with the social abuses and criminal acts of its sponsors.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • Whether it is then presented to the public in the form of simulated advertising or as reports on charitable contributions that his subjects have made to the arts, Haacke's intent is to link the complicity of arts funding with the social abuses and criminal acts of its sponsors.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • As Leyland supplied the vehicles used by the government for round-ups of dissidents and other "undesirables," many of whom then disappeared, were imprisoned and beaten, or found dead, Haacke is indicting not only the collaboration of the Leyland corporation with apartheid, he is also implying that the cultural institutions receiving Leyland's generous endowments and grants are tainted by their association with Leyland's South African affiliations.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • In A Breed Apart, Haacke's simulates magazine ads for Leyland Vehicles, in which he appropriates actual Leyland ad copy and conjoins it with journalistic photographs of white military officers apprehending black South Africans during the South African government's apartheid rule.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • As Leyland supplied the vehicles used by the government for round-ups of dissidents and other "undesirables," many of whom then disappeared, were imprisoned and beaten, or found dead, Haacke is indicting not only the collaboration of the Leyland corporation with apartheid, he is also implying that the cultural institutions receiving Leyland's generous endowments and grants are tainted by their association with Leyland's South African affiliations.

    G. Roger Denson: You Say You Want a Revolution. Well You Know, Art Can Cure You of That G. Roger Denson 2011

  • Entitled Global Marketing, it consisted of a large black cube on which Haacke had detailed Saatchi & Saatchi's various business dealings in apartheid-era South Africa.

    Victoria Miro, queen of arts 2010

  • And even liberty, it seems, is being created overseas now, says -- says -- says Haacke in that cartoon.

    The Story of American Freedom 1998

  • The Haacke incident has been covered so extensively and the position of both parties documented so exhaustively that its current rehash in truncated form is as redundant as would be the reiteration of my retorts.

    The Guggenheim Story Messer, Thomas M. 1992

  • He informs his readers that the criticism of Haeckel by men like Virchow, His, Semper, Haacke, Baer, and Wigand have been examined by professional specialists and proved practically worthless.

    At the Deathbed of Darwinism A Series of Papers Eberhard Dennert

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