[Reader-list] San Francisco Ban Bill after Abdessemed show @ SFAI

Naeem Mohaiemen naeem.mohaiemen at gmail.com
Mon Jul 28 02:27:00 IST 2008


New law proposed in response to exhibition
It would criminalise those who harm animals when making art
Charmaine Picard | 24.7.08 | Issue 193

NEW YORK. A committee in San Francisco's city government has
introduced a bill that would allow misdemeanour or felony criminal
charges to be brought against any artist or financial backer who
causes "the death, abuse or suffering of an animal" when making a work
of art.

San Francisco city commissioner Christine Garcia, who wrote the bill,
told The Art Newspaper: "If you allow forums that find this type of
work acceptable, more people will produce it and can gain fame from
the suffering of animals." The bill, which is still in the process of
being drafted, must go before the city legislature before it can
become law.

The proposal comes in response to a recent video installation by
Algerian-French artist Adel Abdessemed at the San Francisco Art
Institute (SFAI) showing the killing of six farm animals. The Art
Institute was forced to close the show in late March after only one
week when Abdessemed, curator Hou Hanru and staff members received a
series of death threats from animal rights extremists (The Art
Newspaper, May 2008, p3). The SFAI says that Abdessemed was
documenting traditional methods of food production in Mexico and that
no gratuitous violence took place to make the videos.

In mid-March, the California-based animal rights group In Defense of
Animals, which has testified before the city commission, sent an
"action alert" email to 30,000 of its subscribers asking that members
demand the immediate closure of Abdessemed's exhibition.

At the time Okwui Enwezor, dean of academic affairs at SFAI, told us
that the exhibition's sponsors, including the Andy Warhol Foundation
and the Peter Norton Family Foundation, had sent letters in support of
the show. The same exhibition attracted no protests when it was seen
in Grenoble, France, earlier this year but was cancelled by curators
in Glasgow in April.


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