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Please add the case description between the two <nowiki><onlyinclude> </onlyinclude></nowiki> tags. The content (description) shown below will be shown on [[Main Page]].
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====Date: [[:Category:2006|2006, 2013|2013]]====
{{Display censorship incident
 
|ongoing=no
====Region: [[:Category:North America|North America]]====
|year=2014
 
|region=Asia
====Subject: [[:Category:Sexual/Gender Orientation|Sexual/Gender Orientation]]====
|artist=Hong Seong-dam
 
|subject=Political/Economic/Social Opinion
====Medium: [[:Category:Literature|Literature]]====
|confronting_bodies=City government of Gwangju, South Korea
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|medium=Painting
[[File:Funhomecover.jpg|left]]
|date_of_action=August, 2014
'''Artist:''' Alison Bechdel
|location=Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, South Korea
 
|description_of_content=A 32-foot-wide painting, which portrays, among other elements, Korean president Park Geun-hye as a maniacal scarecrow facing off against angered parents of children who died in the sinking of the MV Sewol ferry in April, 2014, a national tragedy that has had huge political repercussions. Park is being held back by former president Park Chung-hee (her late father), and her chief of staff Kim Ki-choon.
'''Confronting Bodies:''' Marshall Public Library, Louise Mills; Charleston in South Carolina
|description_of_incident=The Biennale Foundation initially claimed that the work’s exclusion from the exhibition had nothing to do with politics and was purely logistical—Hong simply submitted the work late. But it was later revealed that the decision to withhold the painting from the 20th anniversary exhibition was in fact prompted by the city of Gwangju, which sponsors the exhibition to the tune of $2.4 million for this year’s Biennale. The city government had asked that Hong change the painting.
 
|description_of_result=In response to the censorship of Hong’s work, other artists featured in “Sweet Dew” removed their works from the exhibition and its  curator, Yun Beom-mo, resigned. The president of the Gwangju Biennale Foundation, Lee Yong-woo, also resigned. The case has provoked international protests and has been covered widely.
'''Dates of Action:''' October 2006 - March 2007; July 2013
|image=park1.jpg
 
|source=http://news.artnet.com/art-world/gwangju-biennale-president-resigns-over-censorship-82587
'''Location:''' Marshall, Missouri; Charleston, South Carolina
}}
 
'''Description of Artwork:'''Alison Bechdel's award-winning and critically acclaimed graphic novel is her memoir of her childhood in central Pennsylvania. It featured content pertaining to sexual orientation, suicide, gender roles, and dysfunctional family life.
 
'''The Incident:''' In Missouri:
The Marshall Public Library had placed Fun Home, as well as Craig Thompson's graphic novel Blankets, on its shelves for their reading public. The board then received a complaint from Louise Mills, who argued that the content was inappropriate for children, and even called some of it "pornographic." [http://www.marshallnews.com/story/1171432.html] After several hearings, the library board voted to withdraw the books from the shelves until a new materials selection policy could be developed.
 
In South Carolina:
Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home has been challenged once again, this time for its inclusion on a freshman recommended reading list at the College of Charleston (CofC) in Charleston, South Carolina. The conservative religious group opposed to the book has labeled it “pornographic.
 
http://cbldf.org/2013/07/south-carolina-group-challenges-fun-home-as-pornographic/
 
'''Results of Incident:''' In Missouri:
After several months, and a letter from the NCAC, the library board voted to restore the two books under a new selection policy.
 
In South Carolina:
There has been no formal challenge. CofC participates in an annual program that selects a book and provides free copies of the book to all incoming students and fulltime faculty. Fun Home was selected as this year’s book, but while students are encouraged to read the book and to participate in a discussion during orientation, they are not required to read it.
 
'''Source:''' http://www.marshallnews.com/story/1172698.html
 
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Latest revision as of 20:54, 18 October 2023

Please add the case description between the two tags. The content (description) shown below will be shown on Main Page.



Park1.jpg

Artist: Hong Seong-dam

Year: 2014

Date of Action: August, 2014

Region: Asia

Location: Gwangju Biennale, Gwangju, South Korea

Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion

Medium: Painting

Confronting Bodies: City government of Gwangju, South Korea

Description of Artwork: A 32-foot-wide painting, which portrays, among other elements, Korean president Park Geun-hye as a maniacal scarecrow facing off against angered parents of children who died in the sinking of the MV Sewol ferry in April, 2014, a national tragedy that has had huge political repercussions. Park is being held back by former president Park Chung-hee (her late father), and her chief of staff Kim Ki-choon.

The Incident: The Biennale Foundation initially claimed that the work’s exclusion from the exhibition had nothing to do with politics and was purely logistical—Hong simply submitted the work late. But it was later revealed that the decision to withhold the painting from the 20th anniversary exhibition was in fact prompted by the city of Gwangju, which sponsors the exhibition to the tune of $2.4 million for this year’s Biennale. The city government had asked that Hong change the painting.

Results of Incident: In response to the censorship of Hong’s work, other artists featured in “Sweet Dew” removed their works from the exhibition and its curator, Yun Beom-mo, resigned. The president of the Gwangju Biennale Foundation, Lee Yong-woo, also resigned. The case has provoked international protests and has been covered widely.

Source:
http://news.artnet.com/art-world/gwangju-biennale-president-resigns-over-censorship-82587