검색
Home
National
All
Politics
Social Affairs
Foreign Affairs
Defense
North Korea
Diplomatic Circuit
K-Wellness
Business
All
Industry
Technology
Mobility
Economy
Market
Life&Culture
All
Culture
Travel
Food
Books
People
Arts & Design
Film
Television
Performance
Sports
All
Soccer
Baseball
Golf
More Sports
World
All
World News
World Business
Opinion
All
Editorial
Viewpoints
K-pop
한국어판
More +
Weekender
English Eye
Podcast
Interactive
PR newswire
Global insight
Send E-mail
These art installations reveal the sad truth about keeping animals in cages
Eduardo Srur's works question the cruelty of animals trapped for human entertainment.
From
Send to
Close
Send
Link copied
05:30
[Editorial] Growth challenge
05:27
[Lee Byung-jong] Bromance with President Trump?
22:18
Defense chiefs of S. Korea, U.S., Japan, Philippines, Australia discuss cooperation on sidelines of ASEAN meeting
22:01
S. Korea issues travel ban alert for entire Kursk region in Russia amid intensifying clashes
20:01
Disney+ offers sneak peek at 2025 lineup of Korean originals
18:10
LG chooses stability in leadership reshuffle amid uncertainties
17:44
Paper firms fined W30b for colluding on newsprint prices
17:40
Police claim NK hackers stole cryptocurrency worth W58b
17:30
[More than APT] On our own, but together: Shared housing points to new possibilities
17:27
[Today’s K-pop] Blackpink’s Jennie, Lisa invited to Coachella as solo acts
These art installations reveal the sad truth about keeping animals in cages
May 12, 2022 - 23:47
By euronews (in English)
Eduardo Srur's works question the cruelty of animals trapped for human entertainment.
Most Popular
1
IMF lowers Korea's 2025 growth outlook to 2%
2
Labor Ministry dismisses Hanni harassment case
3
North Korean troops fighting alongside Russia, NIS confirms
4
Reality show 'I Live Alone' disciplined for 'glorifying' alcohol consumption
5
[Herald Interview] How Gopizza got big in India
6
Japan to hold 1st memorial for Korean forced labor victims at Sado mine