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Latest attack on free expression
New York City: banned graffiti block party to go forward
By Jamie Chapman
24 August 2005
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A federal judge Monday overturned a ban imposed by New Yorks
billionaire mayor Michael Bloomberg on an art event due to take
place today. The occasion is a block party that is scheduled to
feature well-known graffiti artists spray-painting 20 works on
two-dimensional replicas of subway cars from the 1970s and 1980s.
A permit was issued July 18 by the citys Office of Community
Affairs to urbanwear designer Marc Ecko to hold the event, but
was revoked on August 16. This was the same day that a leading
Democratic council member was quoted in the New York Daily
News decrying the event for promoting criminal acts.
Later the same day, Bloomberg interrupted a visit to a senior
citizens center to speak to reporters on the subject, saying,
This is not really art or expression.... Its trying
to encourage people to do something thats not in anybodys
best interest.
In his ruling, District Judge Jed Rakoff ridiculed the Bloomberg
position. By the same token, presumably, he wrote,
a street performance of Hamlet would be tantamount
to encouraging revenge murder. As for a street performance of
Oedipus Rex, dont even think about it.
While the judges phrasing evokes a chuckle, the Bloomberg
administrations attempt to ban a harmless party with an
artistic theme is no laughing matter. It represents a deepening
of the attacks on democratic rights that have increased since
September 11, 2001, and which have reached new levels in New York
and other cities in the aftermath of last months London
bombings.
In the realm of art alone, Michigan artist Edward Stross was
sentenced to 30 days in prison last February for painting a half-naked
Eve on the outside of the gallery building he owns. And in Buffalo,
New York, artist Steve Kurtz faces terrorism charges under the
USA Patriot Act for using biological agents in a work of art.
In 1999, Bloombergs predecessor, Republican Rudolph Giuliani,
attempted to close down the Sensation exhibit at the
Brooklyn Museum, which was condemned by the former mayor as anti-Catholic,
pornographic and sacrilegious.
The current effort to clamp down on artistic expression takes
place in the context of an unprecedented atmosphere of repression
in the nations largest city. In the name of fighting terrorism,
transit riders are now being subjected to random police searches
and armed troops are patrolling busy terminals and subway stations.
Mimicking a policy imposed at airports nationwide by the Homeland
Security Department, public announcements punctuate travels on
the subway, saying, If you see something, say something.
These pronouncements have nothing to do with forestalling a terrorist
attack in progress but rather are designed to instill fear in
the population and encourage average citizens to spy on other
passengers.
Last month, five Sikh tourists from Britain were ordered off
the top of a sightseeing bus in Manhattan by armed police, handcuffed
and forced to kneel on the street after a tour company employee
phoned in a tip that they looked suspicious. Police
cordoned off the block for 90 minutes, ordered all 60 passengers
off the bus and searched their belongings and conducted body searches
before authorities admitted that no terrorist threat existed.
Mayor Bloombergs attempt to ban todays graffiti
block party reflects a nervousness that growing opposition to
such measures could coalesce around such a seemingly innocuous
event. A Bloomberg spokesperson immediately responded to Mondays
legal setback by threatening to appeal, although the success of
an appeal in time to halt todays festivities seems unlikely.
See Also:
Michigan artist sentenced
to jail over mural nudity
[24 February 2005]
New Yorks Mayor
Giuliani and the Brooklyn Museum reach a settlement
[31 March 2000]
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