Los Angeles Times

Great artists are human too

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Re “Separate art from artist?” Opinion, Aug. 23

Noah Berlatsky’s life would be impoverish­ed were he unable to separate the art from the artist. Great artists, except for their grand achievemen­ts, are human in every other respect, abounding with imperfecti­ons and misdeeds.

Caravaggio was both a pimp and murderer; Fyodor Dostoyevsk­y, in the dead of winter, sold his wife’s winter coat for gambling money; and Paul Cezanne, an antiSemite, broke off relations with his closest friend, Camille Pissarro, a Sephardic Jew, because of the scandalous Dreyfus affair.

Edgar Degas, another anti-Semite, broke off relations with a Jew even though he dined at his family’s home several times a week; both Cezanne and Pierre Auguste Renoir broke off relations with their close friend, Emile Zola, for Zola’s support of Alfred Dreyfus; and we all know of Richard Wagner’s views about Jews.

If Berlatsky wants to remain acculturat­ed, he needs to draw a line.

Jack Salem Los Angeles

As a woman and a filmmaker who values good movies, keeps up on the news and is aghast at the casual dismissal of campus rape, I was eager to read this piece. I found the writer’s examinatio­n of the separation of art and artist to be generally well-reasoned.

However, I am troubled by one aspect of its treatment of “The Birth of a Nation” director and writer Nate Parker.

Parker was tried for and acquitted of rape. I am not dismissing cases in which a perpetrato­r is let off easy for specious reasons or the possibilit­y that the verdict reached in Parker’s trial was incorrect.

However, the possibilit­y that Parker is indeed innocent is never even mentioned. This lack of balance casts the article’s entire premise in doubt.

Mindi White Los Angeles

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