Gente De Tu Barrio: Difference between revisions

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{{Display censorship incident
{{Display censorship incident
|ongoing=yes
|ongoing=no
|year=2015,
|year=2015,
|region=North America
|region=North America
|artist=Victor De La Rosa,
|artist=Victor De La Rosa,
|subject=Political/Economic/Social Opinion, Racial/Ethnic
|subject=Political/Economic/Social Opinion
|medium=Public Art, Public Speech
|confronting_bodies=San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit
|description_of_content=La Gente De Tu Barrio / The People of Your Neighborhood [The Mission Suite] (italicize) consists of four textile posters portraying local residents by text based on quotes Victor De La Rosa overheard in the Mission or on stories told by the residents (NCAC.org).  
|medium=Mixed Media, Public Art
|date_of_action=September 2015
|location=San Francisco, United States of America
|description_of_content=La Gente De Tu Barrio / The People of Your Neighborhood [The Mission Suite], by Victor De la Rosa, features local residents of the San Francisco Mission neighborhood addressing gentrification. The work consists of four textile panels and accompanying text.


One panel "features Mickey “Tiny Loca” Martinez saying in bold letters, “Bitch you’re not from here.” Martinez is surrounded by words and phrases echoing her feelings about the changing Mission: “start up, forced out, moved on, fed up, cleaned up, bussed in, bought off and taken over” (SFGate).
De la Rosa solicited stories from Mission residents and included conversations heard locally. One panel features a photo of resident Micky "Tiny Loca" Martinez, quoting from a story she told the artist, which included the words "Bitch, you're not from here!". Every panel has keywords reflecting views of life in the Mission, such as "Vibrant" or "Art!" or "forced out," and a border consisting of pairs of words such as "Us Vs. Them," "Pour-Over Vs. Nescafe," or "YOLO VS. OG."
|description_of_incident=Victor De la Rosa, a San Francisco State University art professor, was one of five artists commissioned by the city to depict life in the Mission (SFGate). The transit agency said this week [week of December 7, 2015] it approved the other three panels, but [the panel featuring Mickey "Tiny Loca"] violated its standards (SFGate).
|description_of_incident=Commissioned by the City of San Francisco in February 2015 to create artwork about the Mission neighborhood, De la Rosa's panels were intended to be placed in the plaza of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) 16th St. station in September 2015.
|description_of_result=A compromise that included blurring out the word "bitch" was rejected by BART, with the agency spokesman explaining that the issue was the “overall demeaning tone of the message in that panel.” (NCAC.org)
 
|image=920x920.jpg
BART rejected the "Tiny Loca" panel due to the use of the word "bitch" and "overall demeaning message." The agency, which is still developing a public art policy, allegedly applied its advertising policy when evaluating the work.
|description_of_result=BART offered to feature the other three panels. De la Rosa viewed the fourth panel as integral to the work and refused. In late October, in a guerilla action, De la Rosa and supporters placed copies of the panels on the plaza display cases at the 16th St. station and spoke with local residents about the work.
 
On December 4, 2015, the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California and the National Coalition Against Censorship submitted an open letter to BART, arguing that the refusal to place one of the four panels of La Gente De Tu Barrio because some official may have subjectively found it "demeaning" was viewpoint discrimination and violated the First Amendment.
 
As of December 2015, La Gente De Tu Barrio / The People of Your Neighborhood [The Mission Suite] has not been placed in the plaza of the San Francisco 16th St. BART station.
|image=Tumblr nw0wtuekNl1szfav0o1 1280.jpg
|source=http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/BART-rejects-Mission-gentrification-art-6682500.php, http://www.scribd.com/doc/292160799/Letter-to-BART-Censored-Art,
}}
}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">La Gente De Tu Barrio</span>}}

Latest revision as of 15:37, 14 November 2016

Tumblr nw0wtuekNl1szfav0o1 1280.jpg

Artist: Victor De La Rosa

Year: 2015

Date of Action: September 2015

Region: North America

Location: San Francisco, United States of America

Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion

Medium: Mixed Media, Public Art

Confronting Bodies: San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit

Description of Artwork: La Gente De Tu Barrio / The People of Your Neighborhood [The Mission Suite], by Victor De la Rosa, features local residents of the San Francisco Mission neighborhood addressing gentrification. The work consists of four textile panels and accompanying text.

De la Rosa solicited stories from Mission residents and included conversations heard locally. One panel features a photo of resident Micky "Tiny Loca" Martinez, quoting from a story she told the artist, which included the words "Bitch, you're not from here!". Every panel has keywords reflecting views of life in the Mission, such as "Vibrant" or "Art!" or "forced out," and a border consisting of pairs of words such as "Us Vs. Them," "Pour-Over Vs. Nescafe," or "YOLO VS. OG."

The Incident: Commissioned by the City of San Francisco in February 2015 to create artwork about the Mission neighborhood, De la Rosa's panels were intended to be placed in the plaza of the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) 16th St. station in September 2015.

BART rejected the "Tiny Loca" panel due to the use of the word "bitch" and "overall demeaning message." The agency, which is still developing a public art policy, allegedly applied its advertising policy when evaluating the work.

Results of Incident: BART offered to feature the other three panels. De la Rosa viewed the fourth panel as integral to the work and refused. In late October, in a guerilla action, De la Rosa and supporters placed copies of the panels on the plaza display cases at the 16th St. station and spoke with local residents about the work.

On December 4, 2015, the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California and the National Coalition Against Censorship submitted an open letter to BART, arguing that the refusal to place one of the four panels of La Gente De Tu Barrio because some official may have subjectively found it "demeaning" was viewpoint discrimination and violated the First Amendment.

As of December 2015, La Gente De Tu Barrio / The People of Your Neighborhood [The Mission Suite] has not been placed in the plaza of the San Francisco 16th St. BART station.

Source:
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/BART-rejects-Mission-gentrification-art-6682500.php,
http://www.scribd.com/doc/292160799/Letter-to-BART-Censored-Art