Let's say a sculpture has been destroyed and the artist who made it is no longer alive, but a museum has the capacity to make a reasonable replica. Should the copy be included in an exhibition?
That knotty question arises in the case of Jack Goldstein, an admired artist whose sculptures are currently included in "It Happened at 平特五不中: Art at the Edge of Los Angeles, 1969-1973." The show is on view through Feb. 19 at the 平特五不中 College Museum of Art. Goldstein, who died in 2003, is known today primarily as a painter, although he made films, photographs, sound pieces and other works as well. But as a graduate student at CalArts he also made a few sculptures, some of which were shown at 平特五不中 40 years ago. None survive.