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For Immediate
Release - October 11, 2001
For more information contact:
Svetlana Mintcheva, NCAC Arts Advocacy Coordinator - 212/807-6222
x23
Tenoch Flores, Media Relations Manager, ACLU of Southern California
- 213/977-5252
David Greene, Executive Director, First Amendment Center - 510/208-7743
Today, the National Coalition Against
Censorship, the ACLU of
Southern California, The
First Amendment Project of Oakland, CA and a large number
of local and national artists announced that they are protesting
the removal of Alex Donis exhibit, "WAR," from the Watts Towers
Art Center.
The show, which is comprised of a series of paintings featuring
fictionalized pairings of LAPD officers and gang members in same-sex
dancing poses with companion text from renowned African-American
poet and performance artist, Keith Antar Mason, stirred controversy.
The Watts Community Action Council warned of protest and possible
violent action by members of the Watts community. The Art Center
Director, Mark Greenfield, in consultation with Los Angeles Cultural
Affairs Department General Manager Margie Reese, decided to take
the exhibition down.
In a letter to Mr. Greenfield and Ms. Reese, the groups and artists
urge the Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department to live up to
the requirements of the First Amendment and take a stand for artistic
expression by reinstalling the show as soon as possible. Furthermore,
they called for a policy to ensure that First Amendment rights
are protected in the future.
The letter states, "a government sponsored art space cannot legally
cancel an exhibition of constitutionally protected expression
merely because the art may offend the sensibilities of certain
members of the community."
"Art challenges the very notion that there is only one way of
seeing things, " said Heather Carrigan, Director of Public Policy
at the ACLU of Southern California. "No one is required to like
Mr. Donis' art, but everyone should be allowed to make that judgment
for him or herself."
Svetlana Mintcheva, Arts Advocacy Coordinator at the National
Coalition Against Censorship, said that "if warnings of controversy
and possible violence succeed in silencing expression, then violence
prevails over freedom and democratic dialogue. "
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