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"scaffold" Definitions
  1. a platform used when executing criminals by cutting off their heads or hanging them from a rope
  2. a structure made of scaffolding, for workers to stand on when they are working on a building

326 Sentences With "scaffold"

How to use scaffold in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "scaffold" and check conjugation/comparative form for "scaffold". Mastering all the usages of "scaffold" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The Warriors and the pumpkins climb to the top of a scaffold, the pumpkins go off the platform, and the stage is set for a scaffold match.
You can't get to heaven in a single generation, but you make things a little bit better and then you are the scaffold for your children to build the next scaffold.
The scaffold helped support bone stem cells in the area.
Maybe we can rebar this, maybe we can scaffold it.
The new study focused on testing how well the scaffold design encouraged cells to grow across the gap and how well the scaffold material held up to give cells enough time to make the repair.
The scaffold consisted of thin metal bars placed at various angles.
Scaffold for growth Ovaries are essential to the female reproductive system.
Using this blueprint, researchers print out the scaffold of the organ.
A scaffold had been set up to simulate the staircase set.
Two soldiers watch workers on a scaffold hang a billboard advertisement, 1944.
"You need a scaffold just to give form and function," says Kaplan.
What are our young children going to say when they see that scaffold?
How strange it was, to view the scaffold of his thin belly medically.
Have there been objections related to other historical events referred to in "Scaffold"?
This formed a scaffold on which the two stem cell types could co-develop.
"Scaffold" is made up of a platform with several staircases leading up to it.
The cells attached to the scaffold, forming a new bone identical to the original.
And you don't build a purported search for truth on a scaffold of lies.
Based on this scaffold of achievement, there's an opportunity to build and accomplish more.
But to the case of "Scaffold," they have let an artist offer a response.
Though Lopez preserves Forster's moral seriousness, his play breaks free from its literary scaffold.
The Queensland process clamps viral proteins as they are synthesised, using a special molecular scaffold.
From cow bone, they sculpted a "scaffold" — a three-dimensional copy of the pig bone.
The ants formed a scaffold of vertical chains by interlocking the claws on their feet.
The photographers used a 10-metre-high (33 feet) portable scaffold and special telescopic lens.
The hottest match was a scaffold match between the Road Warriors and the Midnight Express.
I've used the word "scaffold" multiple times in this process, and that's not a mistake.
After protests from the local Dakota nation, Sam Durant's "Scaffold" will be taken apart starting tomorrow.
Dakota Elders have decided the fate of Sam Durant's "Scaffold," which is legally in their possession.
They put the scaffold in a nutrient solution along with stem cells extracted from the pigs.
All of these options, much like InVivo's scaffold, are still in the early stages of testing.
A.P.L.'s robotic arm was mounted on a scaffold of aluminum beams bolted to a wall.
"Tryna get as high as me nigga then where the fuck is your scaffold at?" goes another.
He crossed the scaffold to his beheading wearing a splendid, pear-shaped pearl dangling from his ear.
A similar scaffold concept is being applied for nerve repair, through yet another offshoot start-up Neurotex.
The set, by Sibyl Wickersheimer, is a loose scaffold of plastic sheeting, plywood pallets and splintered Sheetrock.
What Murray avoids discussing are the profound questions surrounding one of the studies that scaffold his thinking.
Unlike Thomas More, his canonised rival who preceded him to the scaffold, little in Cromwell's own hand survives.
The Walker Art Center's board hired a law firm to review its handling of Sam Durant's "Scaffold" (2012).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Sam Durant's massive sculpture "Scaffold" (2012) has been mostly dismantled in Minneapolis.
Videos show Manson walking to the back of the stage towards two oversized, crossed pistols on a scaffold.
That work involved two types of stem cells and a three-dimensional scaffold on which they could grow.
"It's hard to say 100 percent whether Fallis' progress was solely the work of the scaffold," Theodore says.
Although authorities rescued him from the scaffold, he would die later at a hospital at 51 years old.
While R. cleans, I write down the general scaffold of the recipe I made tonight with my edits.
The scaffold I build instead represents a very structured, very complex family of possible patterns to describe the data.
Using a custom, multi-material 3D-printer, the team laid down a base, or scaffold, comprised of silver particles.
The scientists let the stem cells migrate and populate over the scaffold for two weeks — but that was't enough.
Sam Durant's outdoor installation "Scaffold" references the US Army's mass execution of 22005 Dakota men in Minnesota in 22008.
It's just gotten far more important to produce a scaffold – financial, personal, and future-forward – to support your dreams.
Rabbit and cow cells latched onto the gelatin scaffold, growing until they formed about a square inch of muscle.
They then used a detergent solution to strip the existing cells from this rat intestine, keeping the scaffold behind.
Next, they coated the scaffold with two types of cells that would grow and make the intestine more effective.
If he can accept that, as well as the possibility of "Scaffold" going up in flames, we should too.
The researchers also put those heart muscle cells together in a 3D scaffold, to measure how the cells performed.
This means you could use something like this spinach leaf as an overlay or scaffold for delicate bodily tissues.
Their heads, apparently lifted from period political cartoons, are mounted on identical shoeless effigies hanging from an executioner's scaffold.
The chemical process left a "decellularized scaffold" made up of proteins and collagens, the normal material that connect cells.
"We have simultaneously stabilized the salvinorin scaffold and simplified its synthesis, while maintaining target engagement," the authors wrote. Nice!
The sister, an eccentric named Marguerite Pitre, would go to the scaffold denying any prior knowledge of the crime.
The extra bleachers that have been put up for the occasion, no more than scaffold and gangplanks, are full.
But the Sculpture Garden's opening was derailed when protests emerged against one of its pieces, "Scaffold" by Sam Durant.
We don't want to presume that putting something in the place of "Scaffold" is the right thing to do.
There is a script, but it seems to be more of a reconfigurable scaffold, changing from night to night.
When reconstructing ancient DNA sequences, scientists typically use the genome of a closely related living relative as a scaffold.
They were embedded into a scaffold to hold them in place, a living patch of cells only one layer thick.
"Scaffold," she wrote, depicts seven different historical gallows used in hangings sanctioned by the US government between 1859 and 2006.
Northwestern University researchers 3D-printed a scaffold of biodegradable gelatin then seeded it with ovarian follicles containing immature egg cells.
According to the 2016 biography "Marie-Antoinette," the deposed French queen apologized to her executioner on the scaffold in 1793.
A six-story scaffold was erected around the tree, where 20 men would work for a week to decorate it.
The eighteenth century's pretensions to Enlightenment ended at the Tyburn scaffold, where wretches were publicly hanged for stealing a purse.
What a design team builds is, largely, a scaffold: an edifice that the player engages and has an experience with.
In looking at romance options in games, we need to consider them from this angle: What experiences do they scaffold?
Regenova is also scaffold-free, meaning the printer fabricates tissue without needing to add any extraneous matter that might pollute it.
The data then fill in that scaffold to tell me which parts of that structure are represented and which are not.
In responding to the "Scaffold" controversy in Minneapolis, some art world onlookers have painted the white male artist as the victim.
Rubio has the air of Marie Antoinette, who apologized for stepping on the executioner's foot as she climbed to the scaffold.
A reopening in June of the Sculpture Garden in which "Scaffold" was installed, after a $10 million renovation, drew record attendance.
Protests of the "Scaffold" installation prompted the museum to delay the opening of the refashioned Sculpture Garden, with 17 new pieces.
And then the ashes are put up on a scaffold so that future generations of filmmakers can choose never to dare.
They broke a window and pulled the man inside, as a co-worker on the scaffold stood motionless, a witness said.
He placed Joan and her defenders downstage, and had the occupying force jeer at her loutishly from atop the scaffold staircase.
Raúl discarded some of the precepts that Fidel had considered sacred, chipping away at the Communist scaffold his brother had built.
And so the spiritual elders have said the sooner we remove the scaffold, the sooner we get rid of negative energy.
"The 'Scaffold' situation was not perfect, but they chose to take action and they didn't have to do that," she said.
Members of the Dakota Nation will bury the wooden remains of Sam Durant's "Scaffold" (2012) at an undisclosed location later this month.
The Times's Sharon Otterman reports: High on a scaffold, a stone sculptor rebuilt a tiny replica of the twin towers last month.
"This is the first time that isolated human follicles have survived in a decellularized human scaffold," Pors and her co-authors concluded.
One worker was knocked off a scaffold next to the alkylation unit and left dangling over the fire, according to two sources.
In "Scaffold," Durant invoked seven different public executions in US history, including the Dakota 38 + 2, to make commentary about capital punishment.
He'd been looking down at the cement truck a few hours earlier, as he sat on the scaffold platform eating his breakfast.
Mr. Rudansky said that the school was ordered to put up the current scaffold after an inspector deemed the facade's condition dangerous.
More soldiers held back a mob gathered on a central St. Petersburg parade ground, where five coffins waited behind a black scaffold.
On a chilly February morning in 1554, a 17-year-old girl awaited execution on a scaffold outside the Tower of London.
The nested loops of DNA radiated out like steps from that spiraling scaffold, packing snuggly into the cylindrical configuration that characterizes the chromosome.
The fictional premise is a scaffold on which the author hangs his theories about how to create an ecological and economic Utopian society.
"Sam Durant's 'Scaffold' examines numerous events and injustices against diverse cultures spanning a century and a half of U.S. history," she said recently.
The work, "Scaffold," by Sam Durant, is a two-story structure that aims to evoke gallows and public executions throughout United States history.
Manhood Development strives to create a scaffold of resilience with a flotilla of black male professionals and college advisers who mentor high school students.
She's gagged and pushed along with a group of handmaids into the center of an abandoned Fenway Park, where a scaffold has been erected.
The scaffold fell not in the open street but in a narrow alley—air resistance may have built up against the platform, slowing it.
"She stuck her neck out and spoke openly," said Monica Nassif, president of the Walker's board, complimenting Ms. Viso's handling of the "Scaffold" controversy.
" The high strings produced fierce tremolos in the "Meadows" movement, and the percussionists and double basses sketched a harrowing, thundering "March to the Scaffold.
Susan Tunick, a terra-cotta authority, told me that when the building was being restored, she was allowed to go out on a scaffold.
The sculptor Sam Durant's piece "Scaffold," honoring 38 Native Americans executed in 1862 in Minneapolis, was recently being assembled in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
The set was raised on a scaffold, with a breakaway floor to make room for puppeteers, who were arranged below in a Twister tangle.
I establish a scaffold, a set of parameters that will tell me what the data say, and what patterns may or may not be there.
His model suggested that condensin II molecules assembled into a helical scaffold, as in the famous Leonardo staircase found in the Chambord Castle in France.
Without the scaffold, which is made of materials that will eventually be absorbed by the body, many stem cells wouldn't make it across the divide.
There's no scaffold or gallows to be found, as such—but the stakes of Hierarch Square are a good enough substitute for any public execution.
This past September, DHS issued a notice stating that AFI was no longer merely a scaffold allowing agents to search and analyze various separate databases.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Artist Sam Durant's contested sculpture "Scaffold" will be dismantled in a ceremony beginning tomorrow at the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
As it melts, cigarette butts litter the ground like ants, every scaffold brings a brief hailstorm, and black ice trips you on your way home.
The team first used detergents to flush the plant cell material out of a spinach leaf, leaving only a clear scaffold made up of cellulose.
Each is about the size of a small shed — a section of a shipping container, with a scaffold on top to attach the solar cells.
The HB can be implanted under the skin as a scaffold for new bone to grow on, or used to replace lost bone matter altogether.
"Luckily I walked under the scaffold and I was almost at the end of the block when I heard a pretty loud boom," he said.
Images from downtown Webster showed parts of a scaffold sheared from a building and blown out windows at a strip mall, CNN affiliate WCVB reported.
Among them is a plaque that reads "SITE OF SCAFFOLD" - kept as a souvenir after it was removed from the site where executions took place.
This allows the cells to signal and act as they would in the body, hosted on a scaffold-like bio-structure holding the tissues together.
A man on drywall stilts walked around in a back room, and another worker was up on a scaffold beneath an ornate oval ceiling medallion.
After the researchers derived chondrocytes from the cartilage in each patient's microtia ear, those cells were seeded onto the scaffold and cultured for three months.
Kodak Black's concert came to a screeching halt after a drunken fan scaled a scaffold before trying to run away and getting his ass arrested.
The process involves creating a 3D-printed scaffold of biological material that grafts to natural blood vessels and are virtually indistinguishable from the monkey's natural organs.
It offers a basic scaffold for implementing technical features like head tracking and spatial audio, allowing creators to focus on what their VR content looks like.
All of these little actions might not seem like much, but I know that once he's older, I can scaffold these skills into more complex ones.
The goal is to support and scaffold students toward a more comprehensive understanding of the content, and eventually to identify the link between theory and practice.
The researchers used CT scanning and 3-D printing to build a biodegradable scaffold that replicated the exact 3-D structure of each patient's healthy ear.
Two memorable examples, Donna Tartt's "The Goldfinch" and Dara Horn's "The World to Come," use a scaffold of mystery to contain the logic of fairy tales.
Groups of these multiplying cells eventually look like patties or nuggets because they grow around a "scaffold, " which helps the meat take on a desired shape.
If the meat gets removed from the scaffold, as it would if the product was more like ground meat, then it just has to be safe.
Another benefit of the scaffold is that it protects the stem cells from the toxic environment around the injury site that is caused by inflammation, Tuszynski said.
Grab your tickets HERE On the morning of Wednesday, February 8 1587, at precisely 8 o'clock, Mary Stewart, Queen of Scots, approached the scaffold for her execution.
Local members of the Dakota nation protested the installation of "Scaffold" in the Walker Art Center's public sculpture garden last week, saying that the work was traumatic.
ViiV said it would seek to prove that Biktarvy infringed ViiV's U.S. and Canadian patents covering dolutegravir and many other compounds that include dolutegravir's unique chemical scaffold.
But those resources scaffold via raw materials and production buildings into other resources—like polymers or electronics—that are critical both for maintenance and more advanced buildings.
The timeframe is supported by a complicated scaffold of brushstroke techniques, seal research (the red stamps prevalent on many Chinese paintings), and correspondence between artists and patrons.
Ironically, the quality that made Build Therefore Your Own World successful is the same one "Scaffold" so desperately lacked: a deeply felt sensitivity towards his subject matter.
"What's happening with 'Scaffold' is that we are waking up to the fact that we need our own Native people to represent our own Native art," she said.
A large television screen mounted on a scaffold, as if to broadcast a football game, showed a session of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in The Hague.
Around me, Ally Pally is being decked out in the regalia of the entertainment industry — scaffold on the walls, cables on the floor, and lights and cameras everywhere.
They agreed to a mediation process, which resulted in Durant's transferring of the intellectual property rights for "Scaffold" to the Dakota people and the destruction of the sculpture.
He builds a "liver parenchyma scaffold" and then pours in a silicone material that lets surgeons see inside the liver as well as understand its mass and shape.
Bioengineers are using 3D printers to make more durable hip and knee joints, prosthetic limbs and, recently, to produce living tissue attached to a scaffold of printed material.
"The artificial ovary will consist of a scaffold (originating from the woman's own tissue or from donated tissue) combined with her own follicles," Pors wrote in an email.
A stuffed moose head, pulled from a Dumpster, becomes — with its skin painted blue with yellow dots, like a night sky — the centerpiece for a scaffold-like altar.
The musicologist Eric Walter White had another theory: that the Tchaikovsky salon pieces that Stravinsky chose were simply too fragile a scaffold to support so fraught a tale.
Do they believe that the United States Congress should send Mr. Trump to the scaffold as the British Parliament did to Charles I during the English Civil War?
As I type this, reflecting on my sense of immobility, I realize that, although not painting on a scaffold or sweating as I march, I am far from immobile.
As for "Scaffold," it remains to be seen how quickly the sculpture will be removed, what will be done with it, and what will eventually stand in its place.
At Mexico City's SOMA headquarters, Sam Durant reflected on his "Scaffold" sculpture and how there's an enormous disparity between the art world and everyday life in the United States.
Clinton to shake herself loose from the elaborate, decades-old scaffold of assumptions — built up by scandal and bolted in place by her enemies — that her motives are impure.
Lethem's representation of injustice seems doubly relevant in the wake of the Dakota Access Pipeline protests and the recent dismantling of Sam Durant's "Scaffold" in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
MINNEAPOLIS — The wooden remnants of "Scaffold," the gallows-like sculpture that created so much controversy at the Walker Art Center this summer, will soon be buried in symbolic fashion.
"The wind — whether you're working scaffold, on belt or on ladder — is very dangerous," said Andy Horton, who has been cleaning windows for 210 years and trains window washers.
"They've surrounded a set of kitchen sinks," she said, pointing to them in the middle of Trafalgar Square, where several protesters were dancing on a scaffold they had erected.
As director of the Walker Art Center, in Minneapolis, I faced this challenge in 2017 after a controversy over the placement of a public sculpture, "Scaffold," by Sam Durant.
Winnier said trains will sit immobile for anywhere from 10 minutes to two hours, which can be problematic if they wedge themselves between the nearest road and her scaffold.
"Earmouse"—made by inserting an ear-shaped scaffold seeded with cow cells under the skin of a live mouse—became a sensational meme at the dawn of Internet Bizarre.
At 2pm on Friday, elders from the Dakota community led a ceremony of healing and blessing of construction workers, who subsequently began dismantling Sam Durant's imposing sculpture "Scaffold" (2012).
Rather than start with a scaffold that's then hand-layered with cells, the ITOP uses cells embedded within a hydrogel that holds them in place during the printing process.
Certain printers therefore impose the desired shape by printing cells directly onto a pre-prepared scaffold, which dissolves away once the cells have proliferated sufficiently to hold their own shape.
This year, the snowboarding event will feature riders like Mark McMorris, an X Games gold medalist and Olympic bronze medalist, on a 16-story scaffold supporting a snow-covered runway.
Dozens of pilfered boxes had been left piled on the roof, according to the police, next to a makeshift plywood scaffold that appeared to have been constructed over the hole.
"Normally, nanotechnology uses very expensive technology and requires sterile rooms ... but we didn't have to do that because of this scaffold that we used which protects the materials," Rodriques said.
The aquarium, designed by Eric Spencer, and the towering scaffold meant to resemble a mountain (complete with waterfalls), envisioned by ATYPE Architecture, are among the most outlandish of this group.
There's also the implicit understanding that Silicon Valley itself is built off of the idea of moonshots—promising more than what exists, borrowing money to scaffold an imagined future, disrupting.
Rangers with the National Park Service, which manages the site, along with conservation specialists recently hosted free scaffold climbs for the public to "meet the eagle" on its historic perch.
The Iraqiya TV broadcast ended there, but a second video -- shot on a cell phone by an onlooker below the scaffold -- emerged a few hours later showing the moment of death.
In counterpoint to the wobbly stacks, he uses color as a scaffold to hold the forms in place, while infusing them with a rhythmic musicality that is both harmonious and dissonant.
Perhaps most impressive, though, is that the researchers think that it could be used not just as a an artificial hand, but as an actual scaffold for growing a new one.
Kingdoms and Castles begins as a medieval village sim as you scaffold your economy from basic materials like food and stone into high-end buildings like libraries, hospitals, bakeries, and weaponsmiths.
If Tony can jump from one part of a scaffold to the other and not bust his ankle, well then let's do it two or three times and go to lunch.
What if we could literally print pieces of an organ and a scaffold for it, then reintroduce to it induced pluripotent stem cells from the donor, who then becomes the recipient?
"It went from a synthetic scaffold to natural minerals being created by the cells themselves," study co-author Adam Jakus, a post-doctoral fellow at Northwestern, said during a press call.
When protests grew, both the artist and director wrote open letters apologizing for installing the piece, with Viso's letter echoing Durant's own assertion that "Scaffold" was not intended as a monument.
To create the robot, which measures 16 millimeters in length, Dr. Parker's team layered heart cells from rats onto a gold and silicone scaffold that they designed to resemble a stingray.
"This started with the truckers, but it reached millions," said Alexsandro Faria, 39, an unemployed scaffold builder who worked at the refinery for seven years before being laid off in 2016.
Finally, 'Light over the Scaffold: The Prison Letters of Jacques Fesch' … letters from a no-good thief and murderer who had a magnificent conversion in prison, just before he was executed.
Typically, when bioengineers want to "make" an organ, they build a "scaffold" that's approximately the shape of the organ in question, and then they populate it with the right kinds of cells.
If there's one thing that I've learned from the "Scaffold" and Jimmie Durham controversies, it's that there's a need for more attention to be paid to Native artists working in contemporary practices.
This may have worked more successfully in LA, as the scaffold was out in the lobby, from which the audience entered a theater to discover her body already on the dissecting table.
It turns out that Pérez-Barreiro was indeed motivated by his own fatigue with thematic display arrangements and the high-blown rhetoric that tends to scaffold art in these kinds of exhibitions.
This past May, Dakota people, the Native community, as well as local leaders decried the Walker's decision to install Sam Durant's "Scaffold" sculpture evoking the Dakota hangings in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
Or, better yet, why not pretend that the news media is a scaffold upon which our basic rights are framed and support it just as you would support any other beneficent organization?
Abdallah's cousin lived there with his wife and seven children, and he welcomed us into his tent, a simple construction of plaited palm fronds draped over a scaffold of sun-bleached sticks.
A golden curtain sweeps away to reveal, silhouetted on a scaffold in a cloud of vermilion light, a 103-piece orchestra, digging into the opening notes of Jeanine Tesori's triple-crème score.
Launched in 2014, Tango took a fresh approach to AR that focused on locating a device's position in space (like the human sense of proprioception) to provide a scaffold for visual overlays.
Winnier catches her fish the old way - with hoop-shaped nets dangling from a wooden scaffold thrust into the river - and sells it fresh and smoked under the label 'Northwest Fish Hogs'.
The primitive opera of Link and Ganon, Mario and King Koopa, gave way to more complex iterations and, in the end, the scaffold of nostalgia can only hold up so much new storyline.
MicroRNA Scaffold Cancer TherapyCredit: João Conde, Nuria Oliva and Natalie Artzi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)This synthetic net can coat a tumor and deliver short genetic sequences, called microRNAs, to cancer cells.
The collagen is separated from the tobacco and used to 3-D print a framework for a human organ, referred to as a scaffold, which is then cellurized with the patient's own cells.
Members of the Dakota Nation suspended plans to ceremonially burn Sam Durant's 2012 sculpture, "Scaffold," in order to "slow down and allow more voices" in the debate regarding the work's dismantling and destruction.
The addition of stem cells in the matrix, or scaffold, also led to increased mechanical strength and more normal characteristics of the replacement tendon tissue, compared with suturing alone, the study authors note.
As he was led to the scaffold, two of his brothers had been already hung, and the executioner hoped to prolong the preacher's death long enough for him to be burned alive, screaming.
Splendiferous mountain vistas of greensward and cliffs scaffold my dreams, drawn from memories of sheep pastures in Sicily and Greece, rich with textured sedges or tinted canyons, then bombastic skyscrapers, or Matisse's Chapel.
The algorithm created by the researchers determines the exact order of bases needed to provide the "scaffold," the single strand of DNA that will bend and twist around itself to produce the shape.
In response to further questions by email this week, Ms. Viso said that only one staff member shared concerns with her about "Scaffold," just a week before the controversy erupted Memorial Day weekend.
This week, Warhol's first self-portrait goes to auction, Sam Durant speaks about "Scaffold," India's problem with architectural preservation, Zadie Smith on black pain, the six people who created "Silence = Death," and more.
From pastry chefs, Mariño learned the importance of whipping egg whites to just the right point: a silky, medium-stiff peak strong enough to form the scaffold that will support the whole soufflé.
In rehearsing the battle scene, Timbers directed the actors to train flashlights on the Earl of Warwick's face when Joan appeared atop the scaffold, as if resurrected, to underline his fear and horror.
The benefit of using biological materials, such as viruses, is that they already exist in this 'nano' form, so they are essentially a natural template or scaffold for the synthesis of battery materials.
Meanwhile, the scientists behind the current study plan to monitor their patients for at least five years, in order to make sure the ears stay intact even after the scaffold has completely broken down.
The scaffold tubes, each with a diameter twice the width of a human hair, serve as a guide for the cells to grow from one side of the torn spinal cord to the other.
"The gallows used in the sculpture represent a range of executions, some nearly iconic, beginning with John Brown in 1859 and culminating in the scaffold used in Saddam Hussein's hanging in 2006," he wrote.
We are going to collaborate with researchers from biology and tissue engineering to further explore its potential to serve as a bio-fabricated device/scaffold in the emerging fields of neuroprosthetics and limb regeneration.
In a second experiment with similar results, rats were given a juiced-up version of PEG that uses graphene nanoribbons—an electrically conductive material—that serves as a scaffold along which neurons can grow.
In video of the punishment seen by CNN, people can be heard jeering as the detainees, who are wearing white, traditional koko shirts, are brought up to the scaffold in front of the mosque.
In the two-stage MACI surgery, healthy cartilage is collected from unaffected parts of the damaged knee and sent to a lab where it's used to grow more cartilage on a scaffold-like material.
A 51-year-old man was suspended on a scaffold as he did facade repair work on a brick building in Manhattan when he was hit in the head by a heavy stone slab.
A scaffold made of biomaterial, designed to biodegrade once it's no longer needed, gives shape to the organ-in-progress; after each layer of cells is deposited, they grow together, developing into functional tissue.
Looking over to the Manhattan skyline from the scaffold, it's remarkable to think that this sculpture was here long before any of those skyscrapers, and it has witnessed so much of the city's history.
Now scaffold-clad and undergoing renovations, the parliamentary building is for some people a metaphor for a feeble legislature that is unable to fix the country's Brexit woes and feels remote from normal life.
For Mobbs, the next step is to be able to harvest cells from the patient's body in order to print the patient's own cells onto a 3D scaffold in order to grow fully-customised organs.
To that end, Harvard researchers have taken inspiration from a cotton candy machine to develop a kind of meat scaffold made of thin strands of gelatin that mimic muscle fibers, on which animals cells grow.
His attempt to overdose on the drug, when his love for a woman goes unrequited, results in surreal and gruesome visions, such as a march to the scaffold and a witches' Sabbath surrounding his corpse.
As Dr Tourlomousis and his colleagues report in Microsystems and Nanoengineering, cells stuck well to this scaffold and grew in a uniform way—essential if the technique is to result, ultimately, in a transplantable organ.
MakerBot has been selling machines with multiple extruders since 2012, for instance — so one extruder can print an object with ordinary plastic filament, and another can lay down a support scaffold that dissolves in water.
It's a scaffold, like a tabletop game or a sports title, for stories to emerge from, and the personalities that dot those shows are dedicated to acting out the possibilities that the game presents them.
False equivalences between these fours works in Art and China after 1989 and Dana Schutz's "Open Casket" (2016) or Sam Durant's "Scaffold" (2012) demonstrate art criticism's focus on freedom of speech that feigns color blindness.
A wall of downloaded images provides a condensed history of scaffolding: Ancient Egyptian sculptors carve tomb statuary from raised platforms, while a print by Hokusai features builders near Mount Fuji, scaling a scaffold of bamboo.
For example, Marlena Myles's swirling digital-vector print, "Dakota 38 + 2 Prayer Horse" (2017), which takes on Sam Durant's "Scaffold" sculpture, feels a bit flat, especially since that issue has been, for the most part, resolved.
Northwestern's Feinberg school of medicine and McCormick school of engineering came together for the project using 3D-printing technology and follicles from prior ovarian tissue to form a scaffold that was then placed inside the mouse.
They are located on each forewing, the upper-level set of wings, and appear to be beefed-up compared to the more common, scaffold-like veins used to maintain structure on both the hindwings and forewings.
On the day of my visit, John Hovanec, Chris Ironside and Zachary Robinson were navigating the tight confines of the uppermost scaffold level, resetting stones that had been removed, inspected and — when necessary — repaired or replaced.
" According to the BBC, the feather cell and those plant proteins are placed into a bioreactor, along with a "scaffold to give structure to the product and a culture, or growth, medium to feed the meat.
A rabbit perched on "Scaffold" offers a young woman a cherry on a spoon — a reference to Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen's giant sculpture "Spoonbridge and Cherry" (1985-88), the centerpiece of the Sculpture Garden.
The man had been outside the 14-story residence at 311 East 50th Street when he was struck by a coping stone that had been removed to anchor the suspended scaffold, a Fire Department official said.
Protests over Sam Durant's sculpture "Scaffold," installed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden of the Walker Art Center, have drawn immediate parallels to the controversy this year over Dana Schutz's painting "Open Casket" in the Whitney Biennial.
A bamboo scaffold had been erected, and I began to climb, exalted by the sense that at last I was to witness something truly rare—a sight I would recall, with wonder, in my future life.
What I had hoped would be an opportunity for public education and "truth to power" in the presentation of "Scaffold" was simply not possible because of the continuing historical trauma about an unreckoned-with colonial past.
Finally, the sculpture "Scaffold" taken down in Minneapolis was removed because it was a constant and painful reminder to Dakotas who live here of stories they have heard all their lives about the hangings of relatives.
On Monday, scientists at Harvard University reported that they had found a way to more closely mimic the form and flavor of real meat, by growing the muscle cells of cows and rabbits on a gelatin scaffold.
This week in art news: Miami museums braced for Hurricane Irma, Dakota elders decided to bury the wooden remnants of Sam Durant's controversial "Scaffold" sculpture, and JR unveiled a monumental new work at the Mexico–US border.
They agreed to enter into mediation with the Dakota, but they didn't have to; they could just have easily ignored the outcry and left "Scaffold" in place, or paid lip service to the protests without doing anything.
Pors and her co-authors theorized that if they could bioengineer an ovarian tissue scaffold that is free of cancer, they could seed it with previously frozen early-stage follicles, which then might develop and mature naturally.
When that potential to build awareness just wasn't possible because "Scaffold" was only being read through that lens of pain and trauma for the Dakota people, that's when we realized it needed to take a different form.
" Mr. Durant, in a statement on Saturday, wrote that he made "Scaffold" to speak out about "the racial dimension of the criminal justice system in the United States, ranging from lynchings to mass incarceration to capital punishment.
That said, asking your friends and family to help keep you accountable to your goals, or recruiting them to make this change with you, can be a "very powerful way to scaffold your behavior change," Edmondson says.
That was the case at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis last year when it showed Sam Durant's gallows-themed "Scaffold" — an attempt, the artist said, to address the state-sanctioned hanging of Dakota men in 21920.
In his Paris studio recently, Mr. Hadi recalled teaching local masons to help create the plaster and materials needed for the mural, and told of completing the fresco in two months of arduous labor on a giant scaffold.
The novel part of the new research is the 3D-printed scaffold, which is honeycombed with tiny tubes that function like highway tunnels keeping the new cells growing on a straight path, the researchers report in Nature Medicine.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Yesterday, the last of the wood from Sam Durant's controversial sculpture "Scaffold" (2012) was placed into large bins and removed from the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden by Dakota workers from Straight Line Construction.
Up on the scaffold in late October, Mr. Kincannon pointed out how he had, in an ancient tradition of stone carvers, added a bit of his own personal history to the work: his brownstone on West 112th Street.
For the first full men's show, he made up for lost time, commandeering Liberty State Park in New Jersey, erecting an enormous silver scaffold, even going so far as to lay down a runway tiled in actual marble.
In the late eighties, he was working at Mass General; his brother Jay, a liver-transplant surgeon at Children's Hospital and a pioneer of tissue engineering, was struggling to grow a liver from cells seeded on a scaffold.
Craig Oleszewski, senior exhibit specialist, led the scaffold climb with Ranger Lindsay Davenport (not the tennis star), and pointed out that some of the work was likely carved at the elevated height, while other pieces were joined later.
We're doing this already on the surface — printing organ replacements and the like — but it's very difficult because the biological material must be attached to a scaffold in order to take the right shape and have the right spacing.
The Group launched its second spin-off, Orthox, which used Spidrex to create a malleable material that could be shaped to replace knee cartilage and serve as a biocompatible scaffold to support tissue that would then regenerate over it.
Compared with the 3-D printed scaffold, the ovary has "a lot more sophisticated architecture when it comes to varying pore sizes and pore shapes," said Shah, who hopes to replicate this in the bioprosthetic ovary, creating version 2.
It's an advance on previous attempts, which either involved making a plastic scaffold and then trying to get cells to grow in and on it, or that printed out organ shapes that ended up being too floppy and dying.
LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists in Britain have for the first time created a structure that resembles a mouse embryo using a 3D scaffold and two types of stem cells - research which deepens understanding of the earliest stages of mammalian development.
Currently, human embryos for research are developed from surplus eggs donated through fertility clinics, but Zernicka-Goetz said it should in future be possible to use the stem cells and scaffold technique to make artificial human embryos for study.
There's also Singh's most astonishing feat of paper engineering: With the flip of a die-cut page, a vertical stack of three mustachioed men ("Few") joins 15 other acrobats to create a paper-doll-chain-like human scaffold ("Many").
Mr. Durant's wood-and-steel scaffold, made in 2012 and previously exhibited without incident in Europe at venues including Documenta 13, is a composite of the gallows used in seven United States government-sanctioned hangings from 1859 to 2006.
Her sensational contribution to the 1995 Whitney Biennial was a thirty-foot-long mural of the museum blasted to ruins; victims lie on the ground, and only one wall remains, at which she sits on a scaffold and paints.
I listen with an open ear, though there is one measure I've looked forward to ever since I first played it as a teenager: In the fourth movement, "March to the Scaffold," the hallucinating protagonist witnesses his own execution.
"The method for making these constructs is quite complicated, involving three distinct biomaterials that are combined into a scaffold, seeded with cells, then cultured for three months before implantation to ensure proper cell distribution throughout the construct," he said.
"The scaffold would be useful in these cases once we have iPS-derived female oocytes and the hormone producing somatic cells (granulosa and theca) and we are able to develop a complete in vitro iPS-derived follicle," Woodruff told TechCrunch.
"But pardon…the flat unraised spirits that hath dared / On this unworthy scaffold to bring forth / So great an object," says the voice, and two black men, in white and pink, walk forth along a concrete platform, great beings suddenly objectified.
The sculpture in question, "Scaffold" (20173) by Los Angeles-based artist Sam Durant, is a giant structure made of steel and wood, placed adjacent in the park to "Spoonbridge and Cherry" (22017–210) by Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen.
Her recent work includes Regenerative Reliquary, a bio-printed scaffold seeded with stem cells that, over time, will theoretically grow into a human hand—exactly the kind of tech that might one day give us robots with Dolores's flawless complexion.
And so, fewer than a dozen times a year, at venues ranging from ballparks to parking lots, impeccably orchestrated teams of engineers, ice suppliers, snowmakers, crane operators, up riggers, down riggers, scaffold designers—you get the picture—do exactly that.
Recent artistic controversies about the cultural appropriation of trauma, as in Sam Durant's Scaffold (2012) and Dana Schutz's Open Casket (2016), are often framed as big picture questions about free speech and identity, but they pivot on subtle questions of tone.
To see if mimicking the environment in which tendons normally grow would help repaired tendons to heal better than surgery alone, the researchers tested an artificial scaffold embedded with stem cells in a rats with a surgically repaired tendon tear.
The tears repaired with stitches alone continued to show disorganized tissue 12 weeks after surgery, while tendons appeared much more normal after repair using the approach that combines advanced scaffold material with cells to engineer ideal conditions for tissue regeneration.
About 518 years ago, give or take a week, the Dominican Friar Girolamo Savonarola was stripped of his black robe, condemned as a heretic, and led to the scaffold erected in the heart of Florence, condemned to be hanged and burned.
The controversy surrounding "Scaffold" doesn't only point to the failure of one artist or one museum, but to an institutionalized, systemic failure of representation — the "incredible disconnect between the art world and the rest of the world," as Durant put it.
In 2017, the artist Sam Durant's "Scaffold" went on view in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden of the Walker Art Center, approximating the form of a gallows where 38 Dakota people were massacred on the order of President Lincoln in 1862.
MINNEAPOLIS — The remains of "Scaffold," a sculpture that prompted outrage among Native Americans this summer when it was placed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, will be buried in a secret location in Minnesota, according to Ron Leith, a Dakota representative.
"Planting," in which a Native American appears in the foreground, continues the theme of Western settlement, while in "The Witch," chilling and surreal, a young woman in white begs forgiveness on her knees as pilgrims prepare her for the scaffold.
" Held on Thursday in the courtyard of the Palais de Tokyo, on a vertiginous three-story scaffold of ramps and stairways, Mr. Owens's show was titled "Dirt" and set to a remix of Egyptian Lover's often-sampled "I Need a Freak.
"No two jumps are ever totally identical, although some of the scaffold jumps are starting to get to that point where they are always exactly the same where it's going to end up being like freestyle aerials or something," Gunnarson said.
The pieces "Bridge" (1985) and "Scaffold" (2015) are on view in another room, side by side, demonstrating the evolution of clarity regarding how much one might reduce the body to the barest minimum of structural signification and still retain that signification.
MISRATA, Libya (Reuters) - Next to the rusting shell cases outside Misrata's museum of Libya's 2011 uprising is a new addition: a scaffold used by Islamic State in Sirte to display bodies of executed prisoners, mounted on a would-be suicide bomber's captured truck.
The more straightforward representational approach of the performance's visual and physical choreography acted as a scaffold for a soundscape that explored the possibility of sound and other non-representational expressions to offer some small means for memorializing the inarticulable trauma of the past.
Watching Cunningham's and Atlas's film Channels/Inserts in the High Line setting achieves a distinctive effect, as the exhibition space enters the equation: a plane of angles and activity in the scaffold-covered, this-site-under-construction spot where the Channel series occurs.
This interactive work was originally commissioned for the courtyard in front of Philadelphia's City Hall in 2017, and is comprised of two white scaffold-like ramps that lead participants to two terminal points glassed in at roughly waist height on four sides.
There is a concept out of the philosophy of science called scaffolding that you and the work of your generation, you build a scaffold on the shoulders of those who came before, so things are a little bit higher, a little bit better.
To ameliorate these problems one of the researchers working on such patches, Tal Dvir of Tel Aviv University, in Israel, is developing a new type of cardiac scaffold that can secure a patch in place using light instead of stitches or glues.
Faced with this task, Shah and her colleagues created a 3-D printed structure -- essentially a scaffold on which to embed follicles -- made out of hydrogels, a material that is 99% water with a little polymer in it to give it strength.
"Sockets have been placed in the granite plinth to accommodate scaffold poles to allow the statue to be more easily encased in hoardings during demonstrations or other potentially sensitive times," Westminster City Council planning officers noted in a summary of the proposal.
The style creates an atmosphere of impending marvels, and many of Vang's poems perform, in words, the transformations that they describe: In the dove tree Corrals of your hair, A scaffold ascends The perfumed winter Where frost has hewn You into azalea.
" As early as Book 1, he writes: "My brother perished on the scaffold, my two sisters departed their painful lives after many years spent languishing in prison, and my two uncles didn't leave enough to pay for the four planks of their coffins.
And he will have to navigate the bureaucracy of the City of New York, which owns the museum's building, on Fifth Avenue and 104th Street, where a tall scaffold has stood for years in front of the facade as part of planned repairs.
The Walker's executive director, Olga Viso, expressing deep regret at the "anger and sadness" that "Scaffold" had brought to local Native Americans, quickly agreed with Mr. Durant to remove the gallows structure from the sculpture garden — a space where children often play.
"I am in agreement with the artist that the best way to move forward is to have 'Scaffold' dismantled in some manner and to listen and learn from the Elders," Olga Viso, executive director of the Walker Art Center, said in a statement.
"I love the history and want to save as much as possible, but I also really enjoy the atmosphere of the new Brooklyn," said Caison Elliott, an Alabama-born engineer, while standing on a scaffold high up beside the Wheeler facade last summer.
BERLIN, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Heshmat is a loving father and supportive husband who delights local children by rescuing a trapped cat - but also the man who operates the trapdoor through which a row of the condemned plunge from the scaffold to their deaths.
Lincoln worked his way up from poverty to become a successful lawyer, while Trump inherited a ton of dough from dear old dad and used his inheritance to build a financial house of cards on a scaffold of bankruptcies and unpaid bills.
That this "Jersey Boys" still delivers some Pavlovian thrills is a testament to the solid foundation laid by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice's book, and by Des McAnuff's deceptively straightforward production, centered around a bi-level scaffold (the set is by Klara Zieglerova).
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In a few weeks, members of the Dakota nation will bury the wooden remains of "Scaffold," a controversial sculpture by Sam Durant that was removed from the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden last June following protests from outraged Dakota groups.
LONDON (Reuters) - A giant scaffold bearing the image of British Prime Minister Theresa May appeared on the cliffs of Dover on Monday, complete with a Union Flag skirt and a rude hand gesture indicating to the rest of Europe that it should go away.
The Walker's board has hired a law firm to review its handling of "Scaffold," by the artist Sam Durant, which evoked the macabre settings of seven executions — including the hanging of 38 Dakota Indian men in Minnesota after the United States-Dakota war in 1862.
The four-day public dismantling of Sam Durant's sculpture "Scaffold," overseen by Dakota traditional and spiritual leaders, is nearly complete in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, after a week of protests, apologies and mediation involving the artist, the Walker Art Center and the Dakota people.
The exhibition comes several months after Heap of Birds visited Minneapolis to give a talk at the Walker Art Center, which at that moment was embroiled in controversy over Sam Durant's 2012 "Scaffold" sculpture, as well as the touring Jimmie Durham retrospective, recently opened at the museum.
The several studies and drawings for these paintings are replete with to-do lists ("haircut, text family"), notes and quotes, and pen-and-ink renderings thumbtacked alongside "Out the Wilderness (Scaffold Askew)" (2019), a large-scale painting with four arches, all in a range of bright oranges.
In the second example, Filippos Tourlomousis of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, working with a team at the Stevens Institute of Technology, in New Jersey, produced a scaffold from polymer fibres a mere hundredth of a millimetre wide—far smaller than most 3D printers can manage.
For those who haven't been following the story, a quick recap: When "Scaffold" landed in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, which is jointly maintained by the Walker Art Center and the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, members of the local Dakota community showed up to protest it.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads MEXICO CITY — Sam Durant, the artist at the center of the explosive controversy over his installation at the Walker Art Center, "Scaffold" (2012), was in Mexico City this week to speak about his project which was met with intense protest.
She accompanied the advice with a PowerPoint slide of herself after falling from a low scaffold and being splattered with blue paint from a pail that had followed her down—a studio mishap, in 2013, that an assistant had paused to snap before helping her up.
In some cases, debates over the presence of Native Americans in museums have come without warning; in 22011, at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, objections from Dakota people to Sam Durant's public sculpture "Scaffold" led the artist to disclaim the work and approve its dismantlement.
The ear was actually just cow cartilage shaped to look like one that was grown on a ear-shaped scaffold and grafted onto the mouse, but it nevertheless seeded the idea (and for some people, fear) of someday being able to mass-produce needed body parts and organs.
The now dismantled "Scaffold," which referenced seven historical gallows, including one that hung 38 Dakota warriors at the end of the U.S. Dakota War, had enraged local Native communities, and questions of Durham's Cherokee identity caused members of Native communities both locally and nationally, to further distrust the Walker.
Unsurprisingly, there's a strong Native American presence in the show, with works that reflect on Standing Rock, Native American mascots, and the recent local controversy surrounding Sam Durant's "Scaffold" that was briefly erected at the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden, before protests against the Walker Art Center prompted its disposal.
The negative receptions of recent artworks such as Dana Schultz's "Open Casket" (2016) and Sam Durant's "Scaffold" (2012) were the result of artists acting as new authors to a history experienced in bodies and environments to which those artists don't belong, a chasm that empathy alone cannot bridge.
Melody Feo, a middle school math and science teacher in New York until this year, told Motherboard she was pleased with the MacBooks her classroom used, which she primarily used "to scaffold for different learners" (meaning that while some students worked on assignments online, others worked directly with her).
Next, they grew the harvested cells in a lab for two weeks, then cultured them for another two weeks on a scaffold made of what's known as collagen membrane to grow thin sheets of cartilage measuring 30 mm by 40 mm, or about 1.2 inches by 1.5 inches.
With the blessing of artist Sam Durant, the museum allowed for the destruction of Scaffold—a 2012 sculpture resembling the gallows used for a number of executions, including that of 38 Dakota Native Americans in 1862—by the Dakota people who protested its installation in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden.
Nor does Jason Sherwood's grimy scaffold set, mirroring the gritty sensibility of the down-and-out New York portrayed in the HBO series "The Deuce," suggest anything like the supposed glamour of Studio 54 or its darker downtown rival, the Mudd Club, which figures fleetingly in the second act.
"Scaffold," a wood and steel structure depicting the gallows used in seven historic hanging executions sanctioned by the US government, was dismantled after members of the Dakota Nation objected to its portrayal of the structure used to hang the Dakota 38 at Mankato, Minnesota following the US-Dakota War of 1862.
In particular, the researchers found that certain stem cells (cells which can be coaxed into differentiating into more specialised cells that carry out specific functions) survived on the scaffold for much longer, without losing their properties, than would have been the case if they had been grown in a Petri dish.
He found himself wondering whether he could create a supportive scaffold by mixing albumin, a common protein, with tiny particles of gold and then sculpting the resultant material with a laser into a shape that would fit the damaged tissue so snugly that neither stitches nor glue would be needed.
You can either freak out because you have to stand in line a few more minutes, or realize that you're standing on a scaffold of bones, breathing through air sacs made of tissue and making sense of it all with a brain so vast it could potentially house the entire Internet.
" She added: "As a result of that, I sort of domesticated myself, so I would clean the house and I'd take on chores, but in the same breath I kind of used food as a scaffold — I just really controlled my life with food and things that I could do easily.
"What happens is the enzymes that normally work inside neutrophils to digest bacteria are put on DNA, and the DNA is used as a scaffold to keep these enzymes in check so they don't diffuse," explained Mikala Egeblad, a cancer researcher at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and co-author of the paper.
Referencing last month's controversy over Sam Durant's "Scaffold" sculpture — when the artist and the Walker chose to remove the sculpture from the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden due to outcry by Dakota community members over its reference to traumatic events in their history — White Hawk saw that the Walker is capable of making change.
In New Jersey in 1782, for example, a cascading series of quasi-official executions — a Loyalist murdered by Patriot troops, then a Patriot strung up for the Loyalist's killing, then a British officer picked by lot to mount the scaffold for the Patriot's death — embodied the paradoxical notion of "lex talionis": the law of retaliation.
Today the process starts with cells from a live animal, putting them into a culture medium that provides necessary nutrients, adding a biomaterial "scaffold" to which cells attach and form muscle fibers, and combining the whole mix in a bioreactor where fluctuations in temperature will spur growth—more complicated, but not terribly unlike brewing beer or kombucha.
The feud had been simmering for months, with the high point—in which the Road Warriors work out in the gym to the strains of Black Sabbath's "Iron Man" before climbing a work scaffold to shout and throw pumpkins representing their opponents onto the asphalt below—becoming one of the great pro wrestling vignettes of its time.
Some Native American leaders who denounced "Scaffold" as offensive — which ultimately led to its demolition — are still troubled that the museum displayed the sculpture on former Dakota land, and that it also imported an exhibition this summer by Jimmie Durham, a celebrated artist whose past self-identification as Cherokee has drawn criticism from leaders of the Cherokee tribe.
That is why the movie begins in the ravishing sorrow of dawn, in Montmartre and Pigalle, with the street lamps going off; the cinematography, gray on gray, was by Henri Decae, who, in addition to his films for Melville, also shot Louis Malle's "Lift to the Scaffold" (1958) and François Truffaut's "The 400 Blows" (1959), a crest of the French Nouvelle Vague.
As free as this fall, which he had neither intended nor chosen, this dive that had resulted from his left foot slipping off the scaffold and his body sliding out of his either loosened or broken safety harness, as though a wrathful hand had pulled the straps off him, tipped him on his side, and tossed him into the air.
Mr. Kentridge's performance was the second part of a show that began with "Enyangeni," by the dance teacher and composer Nhlanhla Mahlangu, in which nine singers and dancers spoke and sang in Zulu, a language probably equally mysterious to most in the audience, while a stamping dance, performed up, down and across a scaffold, told a tale of its own.
But the debate over "Open Casket" — and a subsequent controversy over the Walker Art Center's handling of "Scaffold," by the artist Sam Durant, which evoked in part the hanging of 38 Dakota Indian men in Minnesota in 6803 — raised challenging questions for the exhibition of art in museums and elsewhere: Who has the right to tell certain stories, empathetically or not?
The anger and action aimed at the statues are reminiscent of recent controversies over two prominent artworks — Dana Schutz's painting "Open Casket" depicting Emmett Till, the murdered African-American teenager, in the Whitney Biennial, and Sam Durant's sculpture gallows "Scaffold," at the Walker Art Center's sculpture garden, which was denounced by Native American groups for recalling an act of genocide.

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