Category:Public Art
From Censorpedia
This category refers to censorship incidents involving works displayed in public locations.
Pages in category "Public Art"
The following 148 pages are in this category, out of 148 total.
A
- A Graphic Picture Is Worth A Thousand Votes
- Thomas Aikenhead
- Ambikesh Mahapatra (professor)
- America Tropical
- America's Finest?
- American Nocturne
- Anti-Defamation Law
- Anti-war Speech Silenced Across America
- Antlered Queen Manhole Cover
- Arrest for Trespass in Mall for store bought Peace T-Shirt
- Arrested for Posting Pictures of Iraqis in Public Space
- Art Censorship at University of Cape Town
- Art Farm
- Artistic Freedom in Uganda
- Artwork censored in exhibit honoring Chinese New Year
B
C
- Canadian Non-profit Association Orders Artist to Remove Image of Karl Marx From Public Mural
- Carbon Sink (sculpture)
- CCTV
- Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire
- Charlie Sheen Mural
- Chris Brown's Monstery House
- City of Indio v. Arroyo
- City of San Marcos tries to remove car-turned-visual art from public view.
- Clarence (Cal) Peters Murals (Menomonie, Wisconsin)
- Conflict Kitchen
- Confronting Your Fears
- Cop-Pig (sculpture)
- Andy Cox
- Critics of abstinence-only education banned from speaking at a national conference on the prevention of sexually transmited diseases.
- Cube Venice
- Cápsula del tiempo
D
F
I
K
L
M
P
R
S
- San Diego Elementary School Mural
- San Mateo Cartoons
- School Days (exhibit)
- Second Chance Mural
- She Nourishes (painting)
- Spirit of Harlem (public art)
- Stand Tall, Stand Loud
- Statue of Leonard Peltier
- The Student Body (sculpture)
- Student Protests at Yonsei University
- Susan E. Wagner High School students' anti-rape art
T
- Technologia
- The Telephone Call
- Tepee Art Project
- Tertulia (installation)
- The Achilles Statue
- The Bride (sculpture)
- The Story of Chickens: A Revolution (exhibition)
- The Underground Railroad, Vermont and the Fugitive Slave
- The Underground Railroad: Vermont and the Fugitive Slave
- Three Peoples (Mural)
- Tillman's Legacy