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Email: [email protected]   Phone: 785.864.4710

 


 Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2012 17:51:44 -0500
 From: [email protected]
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: [AR-News] SUE COE, World Famous Visual Artist, Tells Spencer Museum 
of Art to Cancel Cruel Slaughter Exhibit; Other Powerful Voices Speak Out 
Against Chicken Slaughter as "Art"
 
 United Poultry Concerns -  http://www.UPC-online.org/
 10 February 2012
 
 SUE COE, World Famous Visual Artist, Tells Spencer Museum of Art to Cancel
 Cruel Slaughter Exhibit; Other Powerful Voices Speak Out Against Chicken
 Slaughter as "Art"
 
Keep flooding the Spencer Museum of Art through their Facebook Page and Email 
Address! Thank you! https://www.facebook.com/spencerart
 Email: [email protected]   Phone: 785.864.4710
 
 Protest Chicken Slaughter "Art" Project in Lawrence, Kansas - 8 February 2012
 http://www.upc-online.org/entertainment/120208chicken_slaughter_art.html
 
 --------------------
 
 SUE COE
 Author of Dead Meat
 
To: Spencer Museum of Art:   I am not a member of Facebook, so am communicating 
with you this way, please post it to your wall.
 
 This type of event, using sentient beings to make some bizarre point, is
 morally wrong.  If the individuals involved are non-consenting adults, i.e.,
 incapable of giving informed consent, as in mentally challenged people,
 prisoners, children, and nonhuman animals,  they should not be used, exploited
 and then murdered to make an art statement. It's sad and shocking that I have
 to explain this to you.   As a vegan and an artist that has spent her entire
 life fighting for animals not to be murdered for human entertainment and 'food'
 -- this type of exhibit is revolting, and an insult to all the artists, people
 with a mind, animal rescuers, and animal protectors in this country who educate
 others about cruelty to animals and promote a vegan alternative.   There is no
 "humane" way to take another's life.  If you think having your throat cut is
 "humane," then I suggest you try it on yourselves first, as a real test of your
 humanity.  Community members can stand by, sharing fond stories of their
 interaction with you, and can witness this event, to remind themselves of the
 intersection of arrogance and stupidity.  Sue Coe
 
 --------------------
 
 STEVEN F. EISENMAN
 Professor of Art History
 Northwestern University
 
 The following is the email letter I sent to the Spencer director, curator of
 modern art, and curator of contemporary art:
 
 Dear Dr. Hardy,
 
 I read with interest that your museum is planning an exhibition called, "The
 Story of Chickens:  A Revolution." As a scholar of modern art, and historian of
 the image of animals in art (the subject of my forthcoming book), I must tell
 you that there is nothing "revolutionary" about your exhibition or its
 subject.
 
 The depiction in words and images of the killing or exploitation of animals for
 the purpose of encouraging kindness extends back more than two hundred years.
 Such works -- and John Lawrence's profusely illustrated treatises circa 1800
 come to mind -- always supported the most conventional of beliefs:  that humans
 are the crown of creation (the pinnacle of the "Great Chain of Being") and
 possess the God-given right to own, exploit and kill any animal, so long as the
 slaughter is done humanely.  This line of reasoning -- sometimes called
 "welfarist" -- has sanctioned the killing of billions upon billions of animals
 every year, usually in the cruelest manner imaginable.
 
 What is avant-garde, even "revolutionary" today -- because it refutes the
 cruel, old stereotypes -- is the view that animals are sentient creatures who
 possess a right to life and autonomy. This perspective is embraced by many
 scientists, (such as the pioneering ethologist Donald Griffin) philosophers
 (such as Bruno Latour) artists, (including Sue Coe), and writers (for example
 J.M. Coetzee).
 
 In the interests of a progressive museology and simple humanity, I ask you to
 cancel the planned exhibition, "The Story of Chickens" and to renounce any
 killing of animals for the sake of art-making.
 
 With respect,
 
 Stephen F. Eisenman
 Professor of Art History
 Northwestern University
 (Curator, "Gauguin:  Artist of Myth and Dreams," "The Ecology of
 Impressionism," "Design in the Age of Darwin," etc.)
 
 -----------------------
 
 ELIZABETH SCHULTZ
 Former faculty member of the University of Lawrence
 Member of the Board of Directors of the Spencer Museum of Art
 
 To: Spencer Museum of Art:
 
 Last night I received the following news regarding an upcoming event at the
 Spencer, and I must say that it causes me deep concern. Although I recognize
 the SMA's desire to engage our community in provocative and meaningful
 discussions (and I must assume that this is the visiting artist's intention as
 well), I am nonetheless distressed by the Spencer's decision to endorse and
 encourage a project which sponsors the actual (not figurative) deaths of five
 animals.
 
 It is disturbing to me that the Spencer would be associated with the slaughter
 of these animals, especially after they had been well and even lovingly cared
 for within the museum for a month. Certainly, the project forces viewers and
 participants to consider the inhumane treatment of millions of animals in
 slaughterhouses throughout the US and the world and the disjuncture that is
 made between the living animal and the consumption of meat. I question,
 however, whether the Spencer needs to enact the final part--the chickens'
 slaughter--of Amber Hansen's project in order to make these points. I feel
 strongly that the entire project demonstrates human power over and control of
 animals (the androcentric position, perspective), which is crucial for us to
 acknowledge, but that its culmination in their planned deaths and a gourmet
 meal is cynical and fascistic. Although the deaths would occur off site (away
 from the museum), I feel that the museum would be tainted, blood-splattered
 forever.
 
 I very much hope that the Spencer's program planners will 1) consider
 alternative ways of asking questions about the complexity of humans'
 relationships with animals in general and about the implications of the
 corporate meat industry in particular and 2) eliminate this particular project
 from its spring programming. I certainly will be glad to discuss this with you
 in person. Elizabeth Schultz
 
 ---------------------
 
 SAVANNA SCARBOROUGH
 
 To: Spencer Museum of Art:
 
 This project would be more aptly named, "The Story of Chickens: A Betrayal."
 The description of Hansen's proposed 'art installation' is a sanctimonious
 crock, exceeded only by her alarming lack of consciousness and clarity of
 intention within the project itself.  If volunteers and community members
 became true guardians of these birds, and came to see and care for them as
 the sentient individuals they are, they would not in good faith then turn on
 their friends, watch their murder, and shamelessly eat them the next day.  I
 would personally view that as a form of cannibalism. Children are naturally
 keyed in to the natural world, sensitive to their true connection with
 non-human animals; they haven't yet been desensitized by society to put on
 their blinders and to accept the false proposition that certain animals are
 our food and other animals, our companions.  They also get the
 inherent betrayal of trust when animals they've cared for and raised are
 then slaughtered.
 
 If Hansen were to present an 'art project'  that would begin to challenge the
 hypocritical bias of the kinds of megalomaniacal assumptions about food
 animals corporatocracy promotes, it might merit approval as a kind of
 revolution, though I wouldn't be so unctuous as to call it art; leave that to
 great artists!  I fervently ask that Spencer Art Museum withdraw its support of
 Ms. Hansen's ill-conceived project, because not only is it not
 art, it contradicts and turns into a sham the deeper, more truthful meaning of
 her statement: "Interacting with animals allows us a more complete
 understanding of humanity; it reminds us of our relationship with the natural
 world, and our responsibility in caring for it." Savanna Scarborough
 ___________________________________________________________________________
 
 Post your objections on the Spencer Museum of Art's Facebook Page.
 https://www.facebook.com/spencerart
 Email: [email protected]    Phone: 785.864.4710
 
 -- 
 United Poultry Concerns is a nonprofit organization that promotes
 the compassionate and respectful treatment of domestic fowl.
 Don't just switch from beef to chicken. Go Vegan.
 http://www.UPC-online.org/ http://www.twitter.com/upcnews
 http://www.facebook.com/UnitedPoultryConcerns


                                          

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