Public art

LA museum whitewashes anti-war mural

MOCA erases commissioned work within 24hrs

by Rob Maguire on December 11, 2010 · View Comments

Blu-Gets-Buffed-MOCA-Los-AngelesThis past week, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles commissioned Blu, an international street art rock star, to paint a mural on a nearby wall in conjunction with their upcoming Art in the Street exhibition.

Less than 24 hours later, the same museum ordered the work destroyed.

For an uncomfortably long time, MOCA remained mum as to why they rushed to cover up the work, which featured rows of coffins draped in dollar bills. Then, they finally issued a response, stating that the work was “inappropriate” given that their neighbourhood included a war monument and a veterans’ hospital.

Whether MOCA believes the needless deaths of young soldiers and civilians is inappropriate in unclear.

(Via Hyperallergic. Image by Casey Caplowe of GOOD Magazine.)

If you visit the Metropolitan Museum of Modern Art’s website today, you won’t find your visual senses tingled by their regularly shown artwork-of-the-day. A black square is shown instead, in observance of World AIDS Day and the Day With(out) Art. Today, many art distributors will be making a conscious decision to show nothing, while others expand outwards to use art to tell the story of the impact of AIDS.

The Day With(out) Art is an annual day of action and mourning in response to the AIDS crisis which began December 1, 1989 (as simply, ‘the Day Without Art’). In 1997 the name of the day was modified so that rather than excluding cultural programming, the day could highlight the art projects of artists living with HIV/AIDS and art that explores the challenges experienced around the world as a result of AIDS could be celebrated. The name “was retained as a metaphor for the chilling possibility of a future day without art or artists.”

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Bringing the war home through street art

Justseeds and IVAW collaborate on Operation Exposure

by Art Threat on November 26, 2010 · View Comments

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“Operation Exposure: War is Trauma” hit the streets of Chicago on Monday November 15th. This collaboration between the Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative and veterans and supporters from Iraq Veterans Against the War (IVAW) is a direct response to the suicide epidemic and violation of GI’s right to heal within the GI and veteran community.

Veterans, artists, and supporters met in Rogers Park in Chicago and split into teams. They divided up posters that Justseeds had designed for IVAW and then wheatpasted the city. Teams hit advertising spaces and boarded up buildings with messages of GI resistance and “Operation Recovery” – a new IVAW campaign aimed to stop the redeployment of traumatized troops and focus public attention towards Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), military sexual trauma (MST), and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI).

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A ‘State of Emergency’ in Montreal

Festival of socially acceptable terrorism for the homeless

by Michael Lithgow on November 22, 2010 · View Comments

In just a few days (on Nov 25) begins one of the most remarkable festivals in Canada, Etat d’Urgence, a cultural gathering for the homeless in the heart of one of North America’s finest urban playgrounds – Montreal, Quebec. The event – as this year’s promotion suggests – is an all inclusive vacation for Montreal’s homeless. And, for the other 14,000 regular Montrealers expected to attend, Etat d’Urgence is a cultural festival that is entirely unique.

For four days, the homeless of Montreal will have access to three large tents offering 24-hour food service and medical aid, psychological counseling, more than $50,000 in donated clothing (including some nice all-weather gear from Mountain Equipment Coop), haircuts, sleeping facilities, information tables for services offered year round by community organizations, three hot meals daily and a surprisingly world class roster of cultural and musical performances by artists and musicians.

All inclusive indeed.

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Feds slash funding for homeless festival

Last minute cuts suspected of Quebec bashing

by Michael Lithgow on November 17, 2010 · View Comments

The Department of Canadian Heritage announced yesterday that it would not renew funding for Montreal’s Etat d’Urgence, now in its 12th year, one of the largest festivals for the homeless in North America. The announcement comes less than two weeks before the festival begins prompting organizers to accuse Canadian Heritage of a politically motivated attack on Quebec culture.

ATSA co-founder Annie Roy compares the recent cuts to last summer’s decision by Canadian Heritage to cut funding to Festival FrancoFolie, one of the largest French music festivals in the world. She suspects the minority Conservative government of growing hostility to Quebec arts. Says Roy, “Heritage Canada cut our funding from $43,000 to zero, and we don’t know why because our funding has increased over the 12 years we have organized the event. I think it’s ideological.”

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Mohen Makhmalbaf gives voice to muzzled Iran

2009 Freedom to Create prize winner

by Amanda McCuaig on November 14, 2010 · View Comments

This upcoming Friday, November 26 the 5th Freedom To Create Prize will be announced in Cairo, Egypt. The prize celebrates the courage and creativity of artists who promote social justice and who are “the voices of courage, unity, strength, reconciliation healing and hope.”

The Freedom to Create Prize so closely aligns with what we do here at Art Threat, I’m going back in time this week to highlight the two winners from 2009 before fast forwarding to this year’s inspiring artists.

Mohan Makhmalbaf is, by any definition of the term, a remarkable man. He was granted the 2009 Freedom to Create Main Prize for his years of dedicated work creating films which explore and comment on the Iranian state and its people. Raised in Iran, Makhmalbaf left the country in protest against Iranian dictatorship in 2005 when Ahmadinejad came into power.

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Is resistance the secret of joy?

Activist marching bands and the sounds of protest

by Michael Lithgow on October 7, 2010 · View Comments

This weekend marks the 5th annual Honk festival in Somerville, MA, a celebration and gathering of activist street bands from across North America. These are the musicians who protest with instruments, costumes and rowdy improvised dance beats – the marching bands who put festivity into political resistance and a little bit of order into boisterous crowds. It is an often overlooked and yet vital aspect of protest gatherings around the world.

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