Marco Evaristti’s provocative exhibition in Copenhagen was designed to protest Denmark’s pork industry. But then there was a twist — and an act of sabotage.
It's "The Three Little Pigs" as you've never heard it. The big bad wolf in this tale was Chilean artist Marco Evaristti, who ...
Languages: English, French Marco Evaristti creates art that provokes, unsettles, and forces confrontation and reflection. The Chilean-born, Copenhagen-based artist is known for pushing boundaries ...
COPENHAGEN (AP) Three piglets which were being allowed to starve as part of a controversial art exhibition in Denmark that had drawn international attention have been stolen, the artist said on ...
Chilean-born Marco Evaristti said he had been aiming to raise awareness of the suffering caused by mass meat production with his art installation that opened last week in Copenhagen. The piglets ...
Marco Evaristti, a Chilean artist living in Denmark, told The New York Times this week that the piglets were swiped from his exhibit at a former butcher's shop in Copenhagen on Saturday ...
The artist, Marco Evaristti, said in an interview on Monday ... a former butcher’s warehouse in the Meatpacking District of Copenhagen, included three live piglets that were caged by two ...
Chilean artist Marco Evaristti said the animals disappeared ... they come out and it was no pigs," Evaristti told the Times. Copenhagen police have not confirmed whether the disappearance was ...
The provocative exhibition, called “And Now You Care,” opened on Friday in Copenhagen. Artist Marco Evaristti is hoping the piece will shed light on the cruelty of modern pig production in ...
Chilean-born Marco Evaristti said he had been aiming to raise awareness of the suffering caused by mass meat production with his art installation that opened last week in Copenhagen. The piglets ...
A view of the exhibition "And now you care" by the artist Marco Evaristti, before the opening in Den Graa Koedby in Copenhagen, Friday, Feb. 28, 2025. (Emil Nicolai Helms/Ritzau Scanpix via AP ...