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ART NOW Links to Visual Art Sections: » Comix & Political Cartoons » Flags & Quilts » Group Exhibitions » International Artwork of Protest » Magazines » Murals » Painting & Collages » Participation Art Work » Poster Art » Sculpture & Installations » Web Sites
"A
few years ago, among 4 artists, I was invited by Balkans
Arts Link to work and exhibit in Tuzla, Bosnia. Herve Constant, London, UK (photos below)
Projects
by Marina Potok and Wendy Tremayne Artist Statement Our work utilizes volunteer-based public performance as a means for articulating shared ideas within our community. What began with projects that engaged the passerby in interplay with absurd, random events, developed toward the discovery of collective socio-political ideas. Volunteerism and the synergy produced by an open forum for the creative expression of each person who participates in our projects has become the most important component of our work. We believe that presenting an idea through the collective art form, rather then traditional means of protest, allows for the delivery of authentic artistic and political messages to wider audiences. Bushboozled:
4 Terrorfying Years of Domestic Policy
Welcome
To New York: An RNC Scrapbook
Includes photographs by Bella Frank (Sweden) Santo Barbieri (Canada) Michael Mulley (Buffalo) Antrim Caskey, Amelia Holowaty-Krales, Diane Green-Lent (NYC) and Video from Peter Sanders (NYC). For more information, click here. Tim
Davis: My Life in Politics
Traveling around the country, Tim Davis cast a photographic eye on the urban landscape. From sparse gatherings at abortion and anti-flag burning protests to humorous situations at polling places and interesting displays of election paraphernalia, Davis expresses an ironic point of view that paints a puzzling picture of present-day America. For more images from My Life in Politics, click here. Samuel Wiener is an artist whose works No More! and Those Who Fail to Remember were created as a response to the Vietnam war in the early seventies. Each work carries a significant weight of relevance to the current state of our world today. Sam Wiener lives in New York City.
Annu Matthew will explore post-Sept. 11 backlash against South Asians in a digital photographic study The Backclash of September 11. In Kingston, R.I. at the University of Rhode Island's Fine Arts Center Galleries. The Chicago Arab American Arts Council and the American Friends Service Committee sponsored a photo exhibition at the Thompson Center of the Palestinian experience between 1948 and 1998. In one photo, a body is carried through the streets of Bethlehem. Another shows a Palestinian youth lying in the street, shot by the Israeli army, as other Palestinians throw rocks. The photos were removed on June 3 because of concerns that it was too controversial, but were reinstalled just the following day. The exhibition was on display until June 7. The International Center of Photography in New York has a small exhibition of recent photos from Afghanistan, picturing many of the dead civilians--pictures the US press has not seen fit to publish. 6 Months, A Memorial at the Photographic Resource Center, Boston University, presents photographically-based works made in response to, but not necessarily documents of, Sept. 11 memorials. The work ranges from color photographs of spontaneous memorials and vigils to "A Moment of Silence," a one-minute video showing a close-up of a candle filmed during the nation-wide vigil (9/21/01), to "Flaggingspirits," a collective web-based project by photographers from all over the U.S. concerning the use and display of the American flag, to a recycled wedding dress adorned with newspaper images of Afghan people. March 11-April 28, 2002. Aftermath: Photography in the Wake of September 11: an ongoing series sponsored by the International Center of Photography in NYC of exhibitions, films, lectures, discussions, & publications that attempt to frame and understand the impact of the terrorist attacks on America through photographs. The Aftermath project means to broaden the dialogue around photography, to move beyond our collective fascination with the pictures many of us have committed to memory and to consider how they intersect with wider political and aesthetic issues. January 11-March 17, 2002. Social Documentary Photography - A Group Show by the NYC Indy Media Photo Collective: Throughout history, Social Documentarian photographers have rarely had a secure home. They have been beaten, jailed, black-listed and even that people would sometimes rather not see. This show at the Brecht Forum exhibits work which reflects the raw passion of independent media makers and documentarians. Exhibit opening on July 2. The Chicago Arab American Arts Council and the American Friends Service Committee sponsored a photo exhibition at the Thompson Center of the Palestinian experience between 1948 and 1998. In one photo, a body is carried through the streets of Bethlehem. Another shows a Palestinian youth lying in the street, shot by the Israeli army, as other Palestinians throw rocks. The photos were removed on June 3 because of concerns that it was too controversial, but were reinstalled just the following day. The exhibition was on display until June 7. Art Now Home | About Art Now | Commemorating Sept. 11 | Approaching the Aftermath | Calls for Submission | Related Sites & Resources | Contact Art Now |
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