The Wedding Fragment Series: Situational Ethics: Difference between revisions
MeganBellamy (talk | contribs) |
MeganBellamy (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====Date: [[:Category:1995 | ====Date: [[:Category:1995|1995]]==== | ||
====Region: [[:Category:North America|North America | ====Region: [[:Category:North America|North America]]==== | ||
====Subject: [[:Category:Nudity|Nudity | ====Subject: [[:Category:Nudity|Nudity]]==== | ||
====Medium: [[:Category:Sculpture|Sculpture | ====Medium: [[:Category:Sculpture|Sculpture]]==== | ||
---- | ---- | ||
'''Artist:''' Byll Cawley | '''Artist:''' Byll Cawley | ||
'''Confronting Bodies:''' University of Alabama administrators | '''Confronting Bodies:''' University of Alabama administrators | ||
'''Dates of Action:''' 1995 | '''Dates of Action:''' 1995 | ||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
'''Location:''' Tuscaloosa, Alabama | '''Location:''' Tuscaloosa, Alabama | ||
'''Description of Artwork:''' Byll Cawley's | '''Description of Artwork:''' Byll Cawley's ''The Wedding Fragment Series: Situational Ethics'' consists of bronze sculptures of nude female figures, including a woman suspended from a cross. One piece contains a kneeling, armless woman with both a vagina and a penis. <P> | ||
'''The Incident:''' Eight of Cawley's works were hastily chosen to replace a student exhibit that was unexpectedly cancelled. During the installation of the work, university administrators informed Cawley that a cover and a sign explaining that the director of student life considered the penis on his sculpture inappropriate would accompany the sculpture. After a story on the covered piece appeared in the local paper, administrators moved the sculpture to a storage closet. <P> | '''The Incident:''' Eight of Cawley's works were hastily chosen to replace a student exhibit that was unexpectedly cancelled. During the installation of the work, university administrators informed Cawley that a cover and a sign explaining that the director of student life considered the penis on his sculpture inappropriate would accompany the sculpture. After a story on the covered piece appeared in the local paper, administrators moved the sculpture to a storage closet. <P> | ||
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
'''Source:''' Artistic Freedom Under Attack, 1996. | '''Source:''' Artistic Freedom Under Attack, 1996. | ||
[[Category:1995 | [[Category:1995]] | ||
[[Category:1990s]] | |||
[[Category:]] | |||
[[Category:North America]] | [[Category:North America]] | ||
[[Category:]] | [[Category:USA]] | ||
[[Category:]] | [[Category:Alabama]] | ||
[[Category:Tuscaloosa]] | |||
[[Category:Nudity]] | [[Category:Nudity]] | ||
[[Category:Sculpture]] | [[Category:Sculpture]] | ||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">The Wedding Fragment Series: Situational Ethics</span>}} |
Revision as of 20:41, 7 December 2011
Date: 1995
Region: North America
Subject: Nudity
Medium: Sculpture
Artist: Byll Cawley
Confronting Bodies: University of Alabama administrators
Dates of Action: 1995
Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Description of Artwork: Byll Cawley's The Wedding Fragment Series: Situational Ethics consists of bronze sculptures of nude female figures, including a woman suspended from a cross. One piece contains a kneeling, armless woman with both a vagina and a penis.
The Incident: Eight of Cawley's works were hastily chosen to replace a student exhibit that was unexpectedly cancelled. During the installation of the work, university administrators informed Cawley that a cover and a sign explaining that the director of student life considered the penis on his sculpture inappropriate would accompany the sculpture. After a story on the covered piece appeared in the local paper, administrators moved the sculpture to a storage closet.
Results of Incident: President of University Programs, Brian Jackson, suggested that the work was removed only because it had not been reviewed by the selection committee prior to its installation, although several other works that had not been reviewed remaied on display. The sculpture remained locked in a closet for the remainder of the show.
Source: Artistic Freedom Under Attack, 1996.