U.S.
Printmakers Mount Countrywide Art Protest
A couple
of veteran art activists have recently started a very interesting ball
rolling in the United States. Stephen Fredericks, of the New
York Society of Etchers, and Art
Hazelwood, longtime member of the California
Society of Printmakers, have founded a movement--which they call a
"national coalition"--of artists who will be mounting and participating
in a series of political art exhibitions this fall.
They declare
in the introduction to their website:
"We chose this time when the nation is particularly politically aware
to bring into focus overlooked and under-represented voices and views
on the state of politics, and the state of democracy today."
Let's let
them tell their own story, below.

Lucerito Macías
A
Brief Interview with Stephen Fredericks
Q: When did The Art
of Democracy project begin?
A:
The earliest press leaks about the National Security Agencys domestic
spying programs inspired me to organize an exhibition called the Art
of Persuasion. Officially, this show was a production of the New
York Society of Etchers. It was first presented at the National
Arts Club in November 2006 to cover the mid-term election period.
Q: How did it come about?
A:
Shortly thereafter, multi-activist and artist Art Hazelwood (who was the
only guest artist in our show) wrote and said that he had
been so inspired by our effort that he had then and there resolved
to produce a like exhibition in San Francisco to cover the 2008 elections.
I instantly picked up the phone and called Art to propose a joint effort.
He accepted. We almost immediately began talking about expanding our efforts
on a national basis. The NYSE had received several offers to travel the
Art of Persuasion show including one from Loyola University in
Chicago for the fall of 2008 so bang we were on our feet
and running almost immediately.
Q:
How has it grown and extended to other places around the U.S.?
A: Art Hazelwood was already well know and represented in activist art
circles so networking thru existing relationships nationally was
pretty seamless. To help me get started organizing local artists in Chicago,
Art put me in touch with Kurt Webb. Josh Macphee connected me to the activist
blog world in Chicago as well. Concurrently, we launced a website and
started spreading the word via newsletters and general releases to printmaking
societies, etc. Word has traveled fast, we now have commitments for over
30 exhibitions in over 24 cities nationwide and the list is still,
really, growing.
Q: How do artists go about participating.
A: Artists can organize their own shows and have them listed as coalition
exhibitions, and/or participate in exhibitions being organized by others
thru calls for entries. There is a list of calls for entries
to open exhibitions on the website. We also have extensive links on the
website to direct people to related activities and events.
Q: What media formats are accepted?
A:
Multiple, but as it stands now mostly prints. Each exhibition effort
is pretty much unique. There are also public art exhibitions, poster exhibitions,
a show on billboards in St Louis accompanied by posters of them
the list is quite variable and highly creative. I only saw posters on
the website. Are prints and paintings also admitted? Yes, mostly prints
as it stands and posters, but yes, paintings too to some extent.
Q: What can concerned Americans do to help The
Art of Democracy achieve its goals?
A:
Organizing a show is the most effective way to get involved, followed
by the creation and distribution of politically oriented posters. We need
not lecture you on the power of the printed image particularly
graphic art posters. Exhibitions can be of any scale and duration
though they must be open to the public and aspire to legitimate professional
standards. We are not pursuing an anarchy-based, destructive, negative
visual arts campaign. On the contrary we are advocating change
through legal, democratically inspired activism.
Q: Wouldn't it have been nice to have launched
this project after the First Persian Gulf War in 1991? What took so long?
A:
Personally, it was the 2001-2005 assault on the Bill of Rights and the
increasing encroachments upon our private lives through the growth of
police powers that caught my attention.
Q: Given the Americans' general lack of interest
in the current spate of anti-war films and books, do you think anti-war
art will fare any better?
A:
America, politically, has not been this on fire since the Vietnam War
era. The Art of Democracy is only partly focused on anti-war art. Politics
themselves, oil, energy, immigration, civil liberties, and global warming
are just a few of the hot buttons here.

Gregory Sidelink
Comments
by Art Hazelwood
- You
would not believe the kind of enthusiasm that is developing around this.
- There
are, for me, two sides of this that are inspiring. First, of course,
the heightened political engagement that I have not seen in my conscious
adult life. A lot of this energy is coming from college campuses now
too, which is inspiring. But a second thing that is equally inspiring
for me is to see artists taking an active role in creating venues, pursuing
ideas, taking the whole participation in society seriously.
- Certainly
there are more than a fair share of artists that sit back and say...
its not art, or no one will show my work, but the surprising thing is
how many are stepping up and saying basically, I will be heard.
- We
are artists and we can use this talent to make some noise. That is inspiring
to me.
- We've
got more, a lot more coming down the pike with a group of wildly enthusiastic
artists in Puerto Rico, who are thrilled to even be considered part
of the concept. With billboards in Missouri, and street posters in Milwaukee
and Atlanta, and college student shows and high school student projects
and grand old artists and radical street artists alike.

Edy Cruz
More
information: http://www.artofdemocracy.org
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Click on images for enlargements

Art Hazelwood

Stephen Fredericks

Michael Goro

Eric Santoy

Art Hazelwood
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