Re: (",) To Networking, a la red...2

2005-04-16 Thread john barlow

i wish to reply before catching up on the rest of mailartnetwork inbox 
to clemente padin's post. as a plane flies faster if seen closer to eye 
i don't want the rest of the i'm sure interesting inbox to distract... 
perhaps there will be a message of great concern i shd have noted 
well i will. 

i think when - in 99.9 of cases - when the governments object 
to art it is about the governments' feelings and fears of illegitimacy 
and nothing else. as a child one realizes if one draws a fish on the sidewalk
then casts one's fishing rod so the hook dangles near the fish 
one will fail to catch fish, but governments that confuse art with 
what it portrays should be laughed off history's stage. 

what i have read of the exhibition the police harassed and intimidated, 
kind of veers away from even conjecture why'd they think to hassle it. 
but remember, on this issue of jousting with religions, it is not a 
question of the first punch: if the religions will condemn 
gays, lesbians, artists, ironists,atheist intellectuals, single mothers, 
"exhibitionists" and so on, it is then a bit late to accuse 
the condemned of unkind criticality to the religions. 
We realize the religions can sometime be more powerful and numerous 
Rejecting religion's condemnation of our brilliant beautiful lives
surely cannot be considered an unfair attack on our part 
of these bigoted constructs being wielded against us. 
Show some courage of conviction, if you want to condemn people 
on the basis of millenia old misreadings of ancient language text 
you will not expect agreement of those you condemn. 

Is that not fair? Myself I'd rather promote courage on the part of the 
condemned 
and let these wealthy numerous religions experience critical art full force. 
Planet wide. 

John Barlow, Canadnannndannanananannaa

--- Clemente Padin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> Friends,
> fortunately the things have not gone farther, in the one which 
> concerns to the 
> exhibition " Axis of Evil: the secret history of sin" according to 
> an email of its curator, the artist Miguel Hernández de Luna, the exhibition 
> "is no secret any
> more, as a headline had previously mentioned. No ones going to jail and none 
> of the work has
> been confiscated.". The exhibition has the support of the authorities of the 
> Columbia College
> and had received a massive diffusion in the mediums. In his words: "The show 
> is doing what it is
> supposed to do: question our times." 
> 
> However, we know that the first that the anti-democratic governments make is 
> attack the liberty
> of expression repressing the free course of the ideas in the mediums of 
> communication and, 
> above all, in the art and the culture. For it, I think, we have to be 
> attentive to 
> everything the one which occurs in this sense. Otherwise, we could lose our 
> supreme law:
> liberty.
> 
> Fraternally,  
> -
> Amigos,
>al parecer las cosas no han pasado a mayores, en lo que concierne a la 
> exhibición "El Eje
> del Mal:la Historia Confidencial del Pecado". De acuerdo a correo electrónico 
> de su curador, el 
> 
> artista Miguel Hernández de Luna, la muestra "ya ha dejado de confidencial 
> como lo afirmara un
> titular de prensa previamente difundido. Ninguna persona fue encarcelado ni 
> se ha confiscado
> ninguna obra". La muestra cuenta con el apoyo de las autoridades del Columbia 
> College y ha 
> 
> recibido una difusión masiva en los medios.En sus palabras: "La exposición 
> está haciendo lo que
> se supuso que haría: cuestionar nuestro tiempo". 
> 
> Sin embargo, todos sabemos que lo primero que hacen los gobiernos 
> anti-democráticos es atacar la
> libertad de expresión reprimiendo el libre curso de las ideas en los medios 
> de comunicación y, 
> 
> sobre todo, en el arte y la cultura. Por ello, creo, tenemos que estar 
> atentos a todo lo que
> ocurra en este sentido. De lo contrario, podríamos perder nuestro bien 
> preciado: la libertad.
> 
> Fraternalmente,  
> --
> Stamp art show not so secret now - April 13, 2005
> 
> BY NATASHA KORECKI Federal Courts Reporter
> 
> News that the Secret Service visited a Columbia College art exhibit caused a 
> spike in gallery
> visitors Tuesday, drawing about 150 curious art seekers to the South Loop 
> gallery. Exhibit
> curator Michael Hernandez de Luna called the public response
> overwhelming to "Axis of Evil, the Secret History of Sin," a collection of 
> sharply political
> artwork on fake sheets of stamps.
> Two Secret Service agents visited the gallery Thursday just before its public 
> opening,
> responding to a citizen complaint about some of the pieces.
> They followed with a phone call asking specifically about the artist who 
> created "Patriot Act,"
> a fake sheet of stamps picturing President Bush with a gun pointing at him.
> 'We ... respect artistic freedoms'
> The artist, Al 

(",) To Networking, a la red...2

2005-04-15 Thread Clemente Padin


Friends,
fortunately the things have not gone farther, in the one which concerns 
to the 
exhibition " Axis of Evil: the secret history of sin" according to 
an email of its curator, the artist Miguel Hernández de Luna, the exhibition 
"is no secret any more, as a headline had previously mentioned. No ones going 
to jail and none of the work has been confiscated.". The exhibition has the 
support of the authorities of the Columbia College and had received a massive 
diffusion in the mediums. In his words: "The show is doing what it is supposed 
to do: question our times." 

However, we know that the first that the anti-democratic governments make is 
attack the liberty of expression repressing the free course of the ideas in the 
mediums of communication and, 
above all, in the art and the culture. For it, I think, we have to be attentive 
to 
everything the one which occurs in this sense. Otherwise, we could lose our 
supreme law: liberty.

Fraternally,  
-
Amigos,
   al parecer las cosas no han pasado a mayores, en lo que concierne a la 
exhibición "El Eje del Mal:la Historia Confidencial del Pecado". De acuerdo a 
correo electrónico de su curador, el 

artista Miguel Hernández de Luna, la muestra "ya ha dejado de confidencial como 
lo afirmara un titular de prensa previamente difundido. Ninguna persona fue 
encarcelado ni se ha confiscado ninguna obra". La muestra cuenta con el apoyo 
de las autoridades del Columbia College y ha 

recibido una difusión masiva en los medios.En sus palabras: "La exposición está 
haciendo lo que se supuso que haría: cuestionar nuestro tiempo". 

Sin embargo, todos sabemos que lo primero que hacen los gobiernos 
anti-democráticos es atacar la libertad de expresión reprimiendo el libre curso 
de las ideas en los medios de comunicación y, 

sobre todo, en el arte y la cultura. Por ello, creo, tenemos que estar atentos 
a todo lo que ocurra en este sentido. De lo contrario, podríamos perder nuestro 
bien preciado: la libertad.

Fraternalmente,  
--
Stamp art show not so secret now - April 13, 2005

BY NATASHA KORECKI Federal Courts Reporter

News that the Secret Service visited a Columbia College art exhibit caused a 
spike in gallery visitors Tuesday, drawing about 150 curious art seekers to the 
South Loop gallery. Exhibit curator Michael Hernandez de Luna called the public 
response
overwhelming to "Axis of Evil, the Secret History of Sin," a collection of 
sharply political artwork on fake sheets of stamps.
Two Secret Service agents visited the gallery Thursday just before its public 
opening, responding to a citizen complaint about some of the pieces.
They followed with a phone call asking specifically about the artist who 
created "Patriot Act," a fake sheet of stamps picturing President Bush with a 
gun pointing at him.
'We ... respect artistic freedoms'
The artist, Al Brandtner, was not returning phone calls. On Tuesday, the Glass 
Curtain Gallery at 1104 S. Wabash bustled with viewers all day, compared with 
the two dozen or so people who visited Monday before news of the government 
visit broke.
U.S. Secret Service spokesman Jonathan Cherry said he doesn't know if the 
inquiry is complete but no artwork has been confiscated.
"We certainly respect artistic freedoms, but the Secret Service also has the 
responsibility to look into exhibits or statements when
necessary. In this instance we've done just that," Cherry said. "The Secret 
Service hasn't confiscated any artwork or questioned anyone against their 
wishes; we just need to ensure as best we can that this is nothing more than 
artwork with a political statement."
Hernandez said the incident has generated a good discussion on the artwork and 
the political statements of the show. The exhibit
features work from 47 artists who are not affiliated with Columbia.
Artists' reaction? 'They love it'
Hernandez said Columbia received some e-mails calling the exhibit unpatriotic 
or un-American. But most of the responses were positive, he said. Hernandez 
didn't expect Brandtner to make any public statements. He said a few artists 
shunned the media and government attention but nearly all the artists embraced 
it.
"They love it. They knew what they were getting into," Hernandez said.
A mother and son browsing the exhibit Tuesday had different perspectives. Lynne 
Sward, a Virginia artist, called the
exhibit "provocative, clever and humorous."
Her son, Scottt Sward -- a Chicago resident who collects stamps -- said some 
pieces "make my stomach upset." The stamp sheets mocking the pope, Catholicism 
and its issues with abuse by priests were over the top, he said. "I feel funny 
about it. I find some of it disturbing," he said. "I'm Catholic; you don't want 
to think about that all the time with our
religion."

http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-axis13.html
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