Art group removes pro-Palestine work from exhibit
The removal of pro-Palestinian artwork in Miami Beach has led to complaints of censorship and calls for the Oolite Arts board chair to resign.
Why it matters: The public artwork, displayed at a Walgreens storefront since March, uses the controversial phrase “From the river to the sea,” a rallying cry used by protesters against Israel’s war in Gaza.
- Supporters of Palestine say it’s a call for freedom and equality.
- Supporters of Israel say it’s an anti-semitic slogan seeking the destruction of Israel that has been adopted by militant groups like Hamas.
Catch up quick: The Oolite exhibit, “How we live like water,” pairs photos of the Jordan River with the Atlantic Ocean to “call for peace and justice in the face of ongoing injustices,” according to artist Khánh Nguyên Hoàng Vũ.
- In an online letter announcing the exhibit’s removal, Vũ says the exhibit was approved last October and opened March 27.
- Last Friday, Vũ writes, the Oolite board of directors informed them it would remove the artwork.
Vũ says one of Oolite’s interim co-directors told them the decision was in response to complaints from “a group of Jewish lawyers” who found the work’s political message offensive.
- Vũ says they were told the piece violated Oolite’s diversity, equity and inclusion code.
The latest: By Thursday, the piece was no longer displayed at the Walgreens on Collins Avenue and 67th Street.
- In its place, someone affixed multiple postage stickers on the store’s windows reiterating the “river to the sea” phrase and other pro-Palestine messages.
What they’re saying: Vũ, a first-generation Vietnamese American, says
they find their artwork’s removal troubling given that Oolite has showcased works tackling political issues like gentrification and book bans in the past.
- ”The piece was an expression of solidarity with oppressed people of the world and a call for peace and justice in the face of ongoing injustices,” they write.
- “I am disheartened to see Oolite Arts, an institution who claims to support artists, misinterpret and censor my work.”
Supporters of the artist are calling for the resignation of board chair Marie Elena Angulo “for her abuse of power and for greenlighting the censorship of Vũ’s work without due process.”
- They also called for Oolite to reconsider its decision to remove the piece and to participate in a town hall with the arts community, among other demands.
Of note: Oolite Arts did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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