Hide/Seek Timeline: January 2011

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Under Construction


Continued from: Hide/Seek Timeline: Part 2

See also: Hide/Seek Timeline: Part 1

January 5, 2011

PEN American Center. "Letter to the Smithsonian Board of Regents".


January 10, 2011

PEN American Center. "PEN Calls on Smithsonian Institution to Reinstate Controversial Video.


January 11, 2011

Blasenstein, Mike, and Michael Dax Iacovone: Museum of Censored Art, January 11, 2011 Press release announcing opening of Museum of Censored Art on January 13, 2011, in Washington, D.C.


Cole, Merrill (Senior Fulbright Research Fellow residing in Berlin). "WikiLeaks and David Wojnarowicz: A Perspective from Berlin". Huffington Post. Blog.


Hedges, Jim. "Smithsonian Stands Firm on Censorship, Congressional Checkbook Trumps Constitution". Huffington Post. Blog.


January 12, 2011

Smithsonian Institutions. Newsdesk. Announcement of Hide/Seek Scholarly Forum on Saturday January 29, 2011


January 13, 2011

Catholic Leage. "MoMA HOSTS VILE VIDEO"

January 13, 2011
New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) has acquired the video showing ants crawling all over Jesus on the Cross that was withdrawn from the Smithsonian Institution on November 30 after a protest by the Catholic League, and complaints from congressmen. MoMA also has the original 13-minute version; the video is being shown, starting today.
Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments as follows:
In Tucson, President Barack Obama correctly noted that "our discourse has become so sharply polarized" that it has disfigured our society. He made note of the "lack of civility" which marks our culture, beckoning us to "sharpen our instincts for empathy." And just one day later, MoMA announced that he was wrong. It wants a sharply polarized society; it delights in incivility; and it abhors empathy. That is why it has decided to assault Christian sensibilities by hosting the vile video.
"We really do live in a time when anything can be hailed as a work of art. This has naturally led to a proliferation of pretentious and often pathological nonsense in the art world." Those words were penned ten years ago by noted art critic Roger Kimball. As evidenced by the reaction to this "artwork" by the artistic community, nothing has changed.
Unlike the Smithsonian, which is federally funded, MoMA is largely supported by fat cats like Glenn D. Lowry, the museum's director, thus alleviating some of our objections. Lowry makes over $2 million a year and lives for free in a $6 million condo atop the museum. Unlike the rest of us, he pays no income tax on his housing.
Looks like the artistic community got fleeced twice: once by embracing the "pathological nonsense" of this masterpiece, and once by the corporate welfare queen who runs—and lives in—the joint.
Contact Lowry: glenn_lowry@moma.org


January 14, 2011

Gilchrist, Aaron. "Museum of Censored Art Pops Up in D.C. Controversial video gets temporary home near Portrait Gallery". Updated 11:09 AM EST, Fri, Jan 14, 2011.

January 15, 2011

Katz, Jonathan David, and David Ward. "DISPUTATIONS: Jesus! The curators of ‘Hide/Seek’ respond to Jed Perl’s article about ‘A Fire in my Belly.’" New Republic. January 15, 2011 | 12:00 am


Perl, Jed. "DISPUTATIONS: Looking for Trouble. Jed Perl responds to the curators of ‘Hide/Seek.’" New Republic, lJanuary 15, 2011 | 12:00 am.


January 18, 2011

Taylor, Kate. "Smithsonian Chief Defends Withdrawal of Video". NewYorkTimes.com, January 18, 2011, 12:36 pm.


January 29, 2011

Smithsonian Institutions. Newsdesk. Announcement of Hide/Seek Scholarly Forum on Saturday January 29, 2011


See also: Hide/Seek.org

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