| Join NCAC Now | |
EXPRESS YOURSELF! |
in support of free expression The information presented here by the National
Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) may be freely redistributed in its entirety,
provided that readers are informed that the information was obtained from
NCAC's World Wide Web site and that credit is given to the appropriate source
of whatever information is used. Permission is expressly granted for the information
obtained to be made available for file transfer from installations offering
unrestricted anonymous file transfer on the Internet. Information found here
may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial documents without
the written permission from the National Coalition Against Censorship.
©Copyright 2005 NCAC
|
Letter to Postmaster John Viola to Restore the Artist of the Month Program to the Hyde Park Post Office
Dear Mr Viola, We are writing to urge you to restore the Artist of the Month program to the Hyde Park Post Office. It is our understanding that you cancelled the year-old program as a way to deal with one complaint regarding Fatgirl, the painting chosen to present the work of Audrey Francis, November Artist of the Month. There are very few venues where people can see art and local artists can share their work with the community. The Artist of the Month program is a wonderful and innovative way to enrich the community and encourage local artists. We hope you will reconsider your decision to end the program. We were quite surprised at the reason you terminated the program. People are entitled to dislike a work of art or disagree with the ideas expressed in it; in fact, they often do. However, the opinion of one person should not be able to prevent the whole community from enjoying the presence of art in the Post Office. As it has become clear after the successful exhibition of Francis' work in the Hyde Park Public Library, the rest of the community did not share the objection against Fatgirl. The Post Office, once it has opened a space for the public display of art, cannot decide to only allow certain images and viewpoints to be represented and not others. There are a number of ways to respond to complaints involving art: you could post a notice explaining that the art is selected by a curator based on artistic merit, and that the Post Office does not interfere in that judgment; or you could have a reactions book where people can register opinions about the artwork. Fatgirl, for instance, could have opened an extremely interesting discussion about body image and representations of femininity in our society. As the painting was part of an established series, it clearly could not be taken to represent the position of the post office. While we are, at this point, concerned about the community and their access to local art, there is another issue here: Audrey Francis' fundamental right to freedom of expression was seriously threatened when she was told she could not exhibit a work because of the viewpoint it is perceived to express. To their credit, both the curator, Antonio Marquez, and the artist stood staunchly behind the constitutional principles that are dear to all of us. We hope you, too, will take a stand in support of art and the democratic principles of free and open discussion and restore the Artist of the Month Program to the Hyde Park Post Office. Sincerely, Svetlana Mintcheva Christina Mace, Fallsburg, New York Cc: Postmaster General John E. Potter
|
![]()
Latest Incidents: |