Confronting Your Fears: Difference between revisions
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===Date: [[Category 1994|1994]]=== | ===Date: [[Category 1994|1994]]=== | ||
===Region: [[Category North America|North America]]=== | ===Region: [[Category North America|North America]]=== | ||
===Subject: [[Category Explicit Sexuality|Explicit Sexuality]]=== | ===Subject: [[Category Explicit Sexuality|Explicit Sexuality]]=== | ||
===Medium: [[Category Public Art|Public Art]]=== | ===Medium: [[Category Public Art|Public Art]]=== | ||
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'''Description of Artwork''': ''Confronting your Fears'', features a male figure with an erect penis strangling a woman. The piece was also exhibited with another piece called [[The Telephone Call]]. Both drawings were meant to protest family violence and investigate gender roles and social identities. | '''Description of Artwork''': ''Confronting your Fears'', features a male figure with an erect penis strangling a woman. The piece was also exhibited with another piece called [[The Telephone Call]]. Both drawings were meant to protest family violence and investigate gender roles and social identities. | ||
'''The Incident''': The Baton Rouge Gallery is a cooperative gallery where local artists are allowed to become members of the gallery and exhibit their work. The gallery has had a contract with the Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commission to use it's facilities for exhibits, for which the Commission has no curatorial control. A community member complained about Cohen's works, and after reviewing Confronting your Fears and ''The Telephone Call'', Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commissioner, Bill Elam, stated that the pieces were "not something that normal people should be viewing." The Gallery Director, Kathleen Sunderman, and other artists refused to remove their works. The gallery was closed and the artists dismantled the exhibit. | '''The Incident''': The Baton Rouge Gallery is a cooperative gallery where local artists are allowed to become members of the gallery and exhibit their work. The gallery has had a contract with the Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commission to use it's facilities for exhibits, for which the Commission has no curatorial control. A community member complained about Cohen's works, and after reviewing Confronting your Fears and ''The Telephone Call'', Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commissioner, Bill Elam, stated that the pieces were "not something that normal people should be viewing." The Gallery Director, Kathleen Sunderman, and other artists refused to remove their works. The gallery was closed and the artists dismantled the exhibit. | ||
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'''Results of Incident''': The exhibit was closed entirely and the ACLU helped the artists file a lawsuit claiming the abridgement of First Amendment rights. [[Cohen v. Recreation and Park Commission]]. | '''Results of Incident''': The exhibit was closed entirely and the ACLU helped the artists file a lawsuit claiming the abridgement of First Amendment rights. [[Cohen v. Recreation and Park Commission]]. | ||
'''Source:''' Artistic Expression Under Attack, 1995 | |||
[[Category:1994]] | [[Category:1994]] | ||
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">Confronting Your Fears</span>}} | |||
__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ |
Latest revision as of 19:07, 10 February 2012
Date: 1994
Region: North America
Subject: Explicit Sexuality
Medium: Public Art
Artist: Roberta Cohen
Confronting Bodies: Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commission, a local community member.
Dates of Action: 1994
Location: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Description of Artwork: Confronting your Fears, features a male figure with an erect penis strangling a woman. The piece was also exhibited with another piece called The Telephone Call. Both drawings were meant to protest family violence and investigate gender roles and social identities.
The Incident: The Baton Rouge Gallery is a cooperative gallery where local artists are allowed to become members of the gallery and exhibit their work. The gallery has had a contract with the Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commission to use it's facilities for exhibits, for which the Commission has no curatorial control. A community member complained about Cohen's works, and after reviewing Confronting your Fears and The Telephone Call, Baton Rouge Recreation and Park Commissioner, Bill Elam, stated that the pieces were "not something that normal people should be viewing." The Gallery Director, Kathleen Sunderman, and other artists refused to remove their works. The gallery was closed and the artists dismantled the exhibit.
Results of Incident: The exhibit was closed entirely and the ACLU helped the artists file a lawsuit claiming the abridgement of First Amendment rights. Cohen v. Recreation and Park Commission.
Source: Artistic Expression Under Attack, 1995