{"type":"link","asset_type":"article","version":"1.0","cache_age":3600,"provider_name":"CANVAS Arts","provider_url":"https:\/\/artscanvas.org","title":"How a college prank turned into a public art tradition","publication_date":"February 07, 2020","summary":"The inflatable replica that rests on the lake's solid surface isn't a political statement, nor a throwback to the ending of 1969's \"Planet of the Apes,\" but a decades-long tradition founded on a good laugh.","author_name":"By Joshua Barajas","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/cdn.artscanvas.org\/static\/2020\/02\/9ac91ac86be7692f8de28e3c1d49334f-statue1-1024x681.jpg","thumbnail_height":681,"thumbnail_width":1024}