Property:Has description of result
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M
After a letter of complaint from the NCAC, as well as vociferous objection from the artist, the Marin Arts Council elected to place the painting back where it had been originally. +
S
After a meeting with Dakota tribal elders, a determination was made to dismantle the sculpture and burn the wood in a ceremony; Durant pledged to transfer his intellectual property rights to the work to the Dakota tribe. The Dakota Nation then suspended the ceremonial burning until further notice. They eventually chose instead to bury the material. +
A
After an unspecified number of complaints within the first few hours of the exhibition's opening, the two artworks were pulled from the display. The artists were invited to submit new art pieces, but whereas Zanotti obliged, Byrne didn't. According to Byrne, since the purpose of the exhibit was to showcase artwork for the auction, "For me to substitute a piece that wouldn't be part of the show and has nothing to do with it made no sense to me."
The rest of the exhibit remained on display until March 12. +
H
After being harassed, Flux Factory closed the space to the public for the remainder of the exhibition and visits to the installation could be made by appointment only. ('Hands Up' was scheduled to be on display at Flux Factory from May 15–19, 2015). +
C
After garnering enough media attention, and getting the National Center for Lesbian Rights involved, Claudetteia was told by Principle Taylor that she could wear a tuxedo to the Senior Prom. Additionally, a local businessman offered to create a prom for Love and her friends. In response to the response, Claudetteia was quoted saying "It is a source of strength that I will keep with me as I move on the next phase of my education and life beyond high school." +
A
After hundreds of students protested the censorship, multiple meetings between the artists and the faculty, and a letter of complaint from NCAC, the offending panel was replaced, only with a larger, soccer ball-sized golden snitch painted over the first one. +
"
After it's release and receiving several Oscars for musical score, Disney agreed to change the two lines. +
T
After joint action from The National Coalition Against Censorship and Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Winthrop no longer threatens to suspend or expel Valdez and the Association of Artists for Change for their anti-lynching art installation. The university has decided that Samantha Valdez must complete 32 hours of community service and must work with campus administrators to host a panel to discuss the installation, campus civility and the First Amendment. +
D
After much controversy, she was reinstated and the class was put back on the schedule. Professor Adler announced she would retire after the spring semester. +
After much dissent from the public as well as an opinion piece written by artists Carol Zou and Darryl Ratcliff for D Magazine, the city announced that the work could be reinstalled, but the Faz ultimately decided not to rehang it. Now, Faz plans to use the banners to help raise money for her aunt who is at risk of losing her West Dallas rental home. +
L
After numerous parents called in to support the marching band's performance, and many others complained that it would be too late for the band to perform a new song, the superintendent reversed her decision. +
F
After pressure from free speech organizations, Deputy City Attorney Steven Graham responded, "...in consideration of the Library’s commitment to protection of freedom of speech, out of a desire to avoid the expense of litigation to ensure that the Library’s already limited funds are not wasted unnecessarily, and without admitting any wrongdoing, the Library agrees to allow the painting to rejoin the other paintings for the remainder of the exhibit.”
The painting was returned to the exhibit, and with the artist's consent, placed on the second story of the library. +
T
After protest from the town's inhabitants and the NCAC, the town reversed its decision, apologized to both Eaton and George Jacobi, whose artwork had also been removed, [http://wiki.ncac.org/Local_American_History_%28photography%29] and agreed to work with the NCAC to create an official policy for displaying art in public buildings. +
L
After protest from the town's inhabitants and the NCAC, the town reversed its decision, apologized to both Jacobi and artist Eda Easton, whose artwork had also been removed, and agreed to work with the NCAC to create an official policy for displaying art in public buildings. +
T
After receiving many legal threats from Dow Chemical company, NTT/Verio declared that it terminated its contract with Thing.net for hosting a parody press release from the activist artist group. +
After review, the book was retained on the high school English reading list. Hurston’s protagonist does experience a sexual awakening, but the scenes are mild by today’s standards. There are references to rape as Janie learns of her own family story, but there is no description. +
B
After several months, and a letter from the NCAC, the library board voted to restore the two books under a new selection policy. +
A
After the ASA warned American Apparel of the unacceptable sexualized content of the ad, American Apparel stopped using in. However, they did not agree with the assertions. They said that they would “not be altering [their] classic advertising aesthetic which is internationally recognized for its artistic and social values.” +
S
After the Planning and Zoning Commission won the first case in court, the NSC owners appealed the trial court's decision to the Connecticut Appellate Court. The case was transferred to the Connecticut Supreme court, where the defendants claimed that the application of the height restrictions to a work of art violated their First Amendment rights. The court did not address constitutional issues, but held that the Commission's decision to classify the sculpture as a "sign" was "unsupported and arbitrary and unreasonable." The court believed that the distinction between commercial and noncommercial speech was necessitated when considering whether or not something ought to be categorized of as a sign; this distinction seemed to be built into Hamden's zoning regulations, too. +
W
After widespread protest, including a "nurse-in" by 500 Texas mothers at the center, the city of Lubbock apologized to Jaddo. City Manager Lee Ann Dumbauld released a statement saying "For the past two years, the Buddy Holly Center has operated under a written no-nudes practice. After review of current case law, we have determined we should not place restrictions on art exhibits. I apologize to Ms. Jaddo for the inconvenience and I hope she will consider hosting a future exhibit at the center." [http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=4079181&page=1#.T9eZD78xs7A] +