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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 » Photography » Poster Art » Web Sites
Karen Fiorito, "Shox News," billboard 2005 (above)
Cut and Post G8
and Tsunami
Bush by Grupo Aire Libre
The markers were conceived as part of the "I-75 Project," which would place historical markers with social content at every rest stop up and down Interstate 75, which runs through Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. The artist considers the markers as social "thought starters" and wanted them to promote political discussion.
The installation work takes traditional games such as chess, Scrabble and darts, and adds an Iraq War twist to the games turning them into artistic statements about the war. In one of the games Gunter-Seymour created a chess board out of an Iraqi map and fashioned pieces to include the faces of President Bush, Osama bin Laden and others, while the pawns in the war are the troops.
Kyoto, No Kyoto by Mark Williamson - In December 1997, more than 160 nations met in Kyoto, Japan, the outcome of which was the Kyoto Protocol, in which the developed nations agreed to limit their greenhouse gas emissions, relative to the levels emitted in 1990
Ratification required enough signatures to account for
55% of total greenhouse gas emissions within the group.
The US, which accounts for 36% of the entire group,
refused to sign in 2001, arguing: a) "not enough
science" surrounding the issue b) signature would
place an undue strain
The
War Room Project: an Anti-War Installation by William
T. Ayton
is constructed of four wall-sized panels depicting fundamental
aspects of war: warriors, victims, witnesses, and aftermath.
Unlike conventional war rooms designed to devise military
strategy, Ayton’s War Room forces a provocative
confrontation with the brutal realities and consequences
of war. Inside the
Developed as a response to the first Gulf War, Lucy Orta's Refuge Wear captures the elements of survivalism and refuge. Orta began her career as fashion designer. Disillusioned with the state of the fashion industry, she turned her efforts into art. More recent installations by Lucy Orta include Collective Wear, sculptures in the form of tent domes and The Mobile Intervention Unit where Orta dressed two Red Cross ambulances with the faces of cows, referring to mad cow disease, and the image of a crowd of people in life jackets to symbolize the strife of Rwandan refugees.
With
the billions of bombs America has dropped, and
millions of foreign civilian's our armed forces
have killed in the past century, artist Marcos
Ramirez wondered how acquainted the average
American is with this ignominious, although,
perhaps unavoidable past. The Reading Public
Authority may have wondered the same, recently
approving Ramirez's artwork called Road to
Perdition which engages the average American
in this self-reflection.The billboard, which
will be installed along side a major street in Reading
Penn. lists various cities that America has
bombed and the dates of the conflicts. Reactions
of local citizens sent the work into a malestrom
of controversy. But the city counsel and arts
organizers are standing by the piece and Ramirez
is keeping his ear to the streets, relishing
in the moment of collective self-reflection his
work has inspired.
Gut Reflections. Israel. Palestine. 2002: Adi Yekutieli follows a familiar theme of his past work dealing with perception of history, colonialism, personal and collective memory, issues of identity, and the impact of occupation and oppression on the Arab-Jewish relationship. The installation is configured from 3 elements: 2 pieces of molded parts of the artist's body filled with raw cow guts; a series of 29 images consisting of some of the artist's art work done in the last 20 years (some of the art work he did with Arab communities in the last 6 years in Israel and Palestine, and some photos representing local reality). The last component presents fragments from an email exchange between Yekutieli and a Palestinian woman he met in Balata Refugee Camp. The correspondence starts in September 2000, a month before the outbreak of the Palestinian 2nd Intifada and ends in Spring 2001 with the death of Yekutieli's brother. April 6-18, 2002 at Adams House Art Space, Cambridge, MA. A Chair is a Throne is a Freedom Fighter's Camp Stool: Jerri Allyn's traveling installation will be exhibited in New York Public Library Reading Rooms in all 5 boroughs (one month each) from April-August, 2002. The installation is made up of 21 artist designed chairs and stools that act as portraits of people who have resolved conflicts creatively and rendered thought provoking alternatives to punishment. CD disc-man's are in the design of every seat for the public to listen to stories, written and narrated by Allyn, with soundscapes by award-winning Radio Producer Helene Rosenbluth. For more information, updated listings on events, and to book group tours, please visit: www.interactionarts.org Chadoor Study: Iranian-born Gita Khashabi's art exhibit examines the contrast between the bleak, black chadoor and the rich visual structures and decorative patterns of Islamic architecture and their written language. Khashabi has long been fascinated by the dichotomy between religious and social pressures, which shifted to repress all female expression as simultaneously the architecture began to display the beautiful and ostentatious structures we know today. Weekends in April 2002 at She@Gallery, Century City. Khasabi's performance piece, "Chadoor," was featured at the New Millenium Project: Response to Sept. 11th in Venice, CA. on Dec. 20, 2001. 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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