The Underground Railroad: Vermont and the Fugitive Slave: Difference between revisions

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{{Display censorship incident
{{Display censorship incident
|ongoing=no
|ongoing=no
|year=1993
|year=2020
|region=North America
|region=North America
|artist=Sam Kerson
|artist=Sam Kerson
Line 7: Line 7:
|confronting_bodies=The Vermont Law and Graduate School
|confronting_bodies=The Vermont Law and Graduate School
|medium=Painting, Public Art
|medium=Painting, Public Art
|date_of_action=2020
|date_of_action=July 2020 - December 2020
|location=The Vermont Law and Graduate School, Montpelier, VT
|location=South Royalton, Vermont
|description_of_content=The mural is titled "The Underground Railroad: Vermont and the Fugitive Slave," intended to highlight Vermont's role in the abolitionist movement. The mural had remained there for three decades.
|description_of_content=The mural is titled "The Underground Railroad: Vermont and the Fugitive Slave," intended to highlight Vermont's role in the abolitionist movement. The mural had remained there for three decades. At the Chase Community Center since 1993, Sam Kerson’s mural depicts enslaved people and the history of the Underground Railroad in Vermont. According to the artist’s website, Kerson intended for the mural to “celebrate the efforts of black and white Americans in Vermont and throughout the United States to achieve freedom and justice.” However, since 2013, the mural spurred discussions about its inaccurate depiction of Black people.
|description_of_incident=In 2020, several students wrote an open letter to the school asking for the mural to be removed. They cited that the exaggerated facial features of the Black figures were racially insensitive.
|description_of_incident=Student concerns regarding the mural began in 2013, but in 2020, several students wrote an open letter to the school asking for the mural to be removed. They cited that the exaggerated facial features with the Black figures were racially insensitive. On July 6, 2020, VLS Dean Thomas McHenry announced that the school would paint over Kerson’s mural. The Vermont Law School students hope that the removal of Kerson’s mural will allow for a Black artist to paint a new mural which accurately depicts Black people and narratives. Kerson told the Valley News that he equated the mural’s removal to “burning books.”
|description_of_result=The state court gave permission to the Vermont Law and Graduate School to cover up the mural in 2021. The artist, Sam Kerson, appealed the decision in federal court, citing the covering up as a violation of the federal Visual Artists Rights Act, protecting artists' work from mutilation and distortion. The Vermont Law and Graduate School received the support from the ACLU to have the right to remove the mural. A decision has yet to be released, but the mural remains covered currently with large white panels.
|description_of_result=The state court gave permission to the Vermont Law and Graduate School to cover up the mural in 2021. The artist, Sam Kerson, appealed the decision in federal court, citing the covering up as a violation of the federal Visual Artists Rights Act, protecting artists' work from mutilation and distortion. The Vermont Law and Graduate School received the support from the ACLU to have the right to remove the mural. A decision has yet to be released, but the mural remains covered currently with large white panels.
|image=a050c1a7098d4004bb2d62699b65c8b2.jpeg
|image=a050c1a7098d4004bb2d62699b65c8b2.jpeg

Latest revision as of 19:06, 13 February 2023

A050c1a7098d4004bb2d62699b65c8b2.jpeg

Artist: Sam Kerson

Year: 2020

Date of Action: July 2020 - December 2020

Region: North America

Location: South Royalton, Vermont

Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion

Medium: Painting, Public Art

Confronting Bodies: The Vermont Law and Graduate School

Description of Artwork: The mural is titled "The Underground Railroad: Vermont and the Fugitive Slave," intended to highlight Vermont's role in the abolitionist movement. The mural had remained there for three decades. At the Chase Community Center since 1993, Sam Kerson’s mural depicts enslaved people and the history of the Underground Railroad in Vermont. According to the artist’s website, Kerson intended for the mural to “celebrate the efforts of black and white Americans in Vermont and throughout the United States to achieve freedom and justice.” However, since 2013, the mural spurred discussions about its inaccurate depiction of Black people.

The Incident: Student concerns regarding the mural began in 2013, but in 2020, several students wrote an open letter to the school asking for the mural to be removed. They cited that the exaggerated facial features with the Black figures were racially insensitive. On July 6, 2020, VLS Dean Thomas McHenry announced that the school would paint over Kerson’s mural. The Vermont Law School students hope that the removal of Kerson’s mural will allow for a Black artist to paint a new mural which accurately depicts Black people and narratives. Kerson told the Valley News that he equated the mural’s removal to “burning books.”

Results of Incident: The state court gave permission to the Vermont Law and Graduate School to cover up the mural in 2021. The artist, Sam Kerson, appealed the decision in federal court, citing the covering up as a violation of the federal Visual Artists Rights Act, protecting artists' work from mutilation and distortion. The Vermont Law and Graduate School received the support from the ACLU to have the right to remove the mural. A decision has yet to be released, but the mural remains covered currently with large white panels.

Source:

https://www.wcax.com/2023/01/27/should-vermont-law-school-be-allowed-remove-controversial-mural/

https://www.vnews.com/Vermont-Law-School-says-artist-can-remove-mural-35395900