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Detroit museum holds meeting on US war against Iraq
By our correspondent
18 December 2002
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The Museum of New Art (MONA) in Detroit held a public forum
December 8 on Artists and the War Against Iraq. Artists,
critics, art students and others attended the meeting held in
the two-year-old art space in downtown Detroit.
The panel included painter Peter Williams, artist and assistant
professor at the University of South Florida Rozalinda Borcila,
documentary filmmaker Travis Wilkerson and WSWS arts editor David
Walsh. The remarks from the four panelists were followed by an
hour-long discussion in which a considerable number of those present
participated.
In his comments, Wilkerson, director of An Injury to One
(screened at the recent Toronto film festival), addressed the
social and political character of the war. These days,
he commented, we hear a great deal of discussion about the
relative merits of a multilateral versus unilateral
approach to the Iraq problem. The only word that never
enters the discussion is the only word that accurately describes
American behavior: and that word is Imperialism. Its time
to call it by its name.
He went on: We stand at a juncture of unprecedented danger.
American imperialism has finally recovered fully from its historic
defeat at the hands of the Vietnamese. The Soviet Union has now
been gone for more than a decade. It seems we have entered a kind
of endgame in which American imperialism is now ready to turn
the full force of its military, economic and political might against
any and all forms of resistancewithout regard to the specific
ideological hue of that resistance. Our list of villains has in
common but one characteristic: insufficient servility to American
imperialism.
Wilkerson told the audience that Washingtons forward
drive can now be halted only by the American people
themselves.
This reality, he continued, places a particular
onus upon artists who live and work within the United States.
This isnt to suggest that our work must chiefly concern
itself with depictions of war itself. Its horrors have been well
documented. Rather, we must engage history in an active and critical
way. What precisely brought us to this moment? A different kind
of world is finally possible only when we are at last compelled
to face with sober senses, [our] real conditions of life, and
[our] relations with [our] kind. What greater use for art
could possibly be articulated?
Walsh of the WSWS termed the impending conflict a war
of plunder. Characterizing the organization of the war against
Iraq as a criminal enterprise, he said, These
are not mistaken policies. Whether it be the proposal to abduct
Iraqi scientists, or the daily bombings, or the international
campaign to bribe, coerce or intimidate other governments to go
along with its policies, the Bush administration functions like
a criminal gang. [See Great
questions confront artists and intellectuals]
Rozalinda Borcila criticized the upper echelons of the art
world for their failure to respond to the Bush administration
and the war against Iraq. She noted the eerie silence within the
circles of the best-known American artists. Borcila commented
that a great many artists had involved themselves in memorializing
the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in a manner
that fit into the agenda of the administration.
She argued that there had been, in fact, a reaction against
political art in US artistic circles in the recent
period. Critics and others have complained about the overly political
content of European art. Borcila called for a serious renewal
of political art. This would not mean didactic art,
which is so often pat and formulaic, she suggested, but art that
is critical and challenging.
Peter Williams, who also teaches at Wayne State University,
told the audience that he was present to learn and gather facts
about the present situation. He admitted to not knowing the full
story about the Bush administration and its policies. He indicated
that opposition to war was widespread, indeed he suggested it
was difficult to encounter anyone who supported the attack on
Iraq.
Williams commented that he was not present at the discussion
as a socialist or a communist, but as a painter. (An
audience member later commented that she found it unfortunate
he would consider those terms mutually exclusive.)
In the discussion that followed the opening comments, questions
were asked about the lessons of the Vietnam War protests, the
differences between the economic conditions in the US in the 1960s
and the present day, and the role of the trade unions. Speakers
were critical of the art establishment and art world, suggesting
that alternative means had to be found to organize the presentation
of critical art work. Travis Wilkerson noted that while making
films, which he associated with the means of production, had become
more and more inexpensive and manageable, the means of distribution
remained entirely in hostile hands.
The role of the Democratic Party and the media also came under
scrutiny. In response to a question as to why there had been as
yet so little response from the American people to the war, Walsh
first noted that there had been mass demonstrations that had gone
virtually uncovered by the mass media. He commented further that
the organizations to which the working population had traditionally
turned had entirely abandoned them. The ideological difficulties
had to be looked at historically, he argued. There is wide
opposition to the war and that will make itself felt in a powerful
fashion, Walsh said.
A number of statements were read to the meeting sent by artists
unable to attend. Frank Shifreen, New York visual artist, curator
and videomaker, wrote in part: The Bush administration is
pursuing a flawed policy. It is cynical, corrupt and will not
help the war on terrorism. Iraq is a country with
a rich history and a wonderful people, and has already suffered
greatly.... We are setting up our war machine for an Orwellian
spectacle of American Might, and Iraq is the goat. Our job today
is not to create a straw dog for an oil strategy that will never
work.
In a statement, Lee Brozgold, New York ceramic artist and muralist,
commented: I think our true subject is not Iraq, but America....
The most terrible impact of 9/11 is that the Bush administration
has used it to manipulate public opinion in service of repressionthe
Patriot Act, Homeland Security and the consent of Congress to
relinquish its authority to declare war to a president who is,
by the way, illegitimate. Yes, what we need to think about is
not Iraq, but America. We need to think about what to do when
the government takes the position that there is no poetry and
steadily abrogates our freedoms.
Eyal Weizman and Rafi Segal, Israeli architects and victims
of censorship by the Sharon government, relayed the following
comment: To MONAWe are against the war in Iraq. In
our work, we have studied the effects of military occupation on
the urban fabric of Palestinian towns. The Israeli Defense Forces
employ an architect or engineer as part of the crew of every bulldozer,
along with a driver and machine-gun operator, thus transforming
the science of building into the science of destruction and oppression.
During these operations, the IDF has been escorting members of
the American military who wore Israeli uniforms but were unarmed.
In this way, the IDF has been directly involved in preparations
for the assault on Baghdad and other cities. It is, therefore,
our moral obligation as architects to oppose this war. We send
our support to your meeting and look forward to reading about
your discussion of the political basis for opposing the war against
Iraq.
See Also:
David Walsh at Detroit forum: Great
questions confront artists and intellectuals
[18 December 2002]
WSWS holds New York meeting on the US
drive to war
[17 December 2002]
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