|
| South Africa's Goodman Gallery to remove painting from website after thousands protest |
|
|
South African ruling party supporters sing during their protest in Johannesburg, South Africa on Tuesday May 29, 2012. The African National Congress and its alliance partners march to the Goodman Gallery to protest against a now-defaced painting depicting President Jacob Zuma. AP Photo/Themba Hadebe.
By: Donna Bryson, Associated Press
|
|
|
JOHANNESBURG (AP).- A handwritten sign that said "whites hate blacks" and was carried by one of more than 2,000 protesters in Johannesburg on Tuesday shows that a fierce national debate over a painting depicting the president's genitals is about more than art and the constitution.
Mapule Kgomo, a black woman from the outskirts of Johannesburg who wrote the sign, said she drew her conclusion about fellow South Africans who are white after seeing the painting, titled "The Spear," that a white South African had made of President Jacob Zuma, who is black.
"I hate whites passionately after that painting," she added. "I'm so hurt."
On Tuesday, a spokesman for the Goodman Gallery said it has agreed to remove images of the painting from its website. The painting itself had already been removed from the gallery after it was defaced last week.
But the passionate feelings about the painting don't seem ready to subside. If anything, the protests and comment have been amplified because much of it is taking place on social network sites.
The debate is part of an ongoing discussion in this young democracy about whether white South Africans are insensitive and to what extent black South Africans still feel they are treated as second class citizens, even though the country is governed by Zuma's African National Congress. The ANC led the fight against apartheid before becoming a political party.
Zuma has asked the High Court to rule that his constitutional right to dignity was violated when the gallery put the painting on display earlier this month. The gallery and artist Brett Murray argue they are defending the constitutional right to freedom of expression.
"I am not a racist," Murray said in an affidavit filed in the court case, which is still under way. "I do not produce art with an intention to hurt, humiliate or insult."
Liza Essers, owner of the Goodman Gallery, says she regrets "the divisiveness that the exhibition has caused.
"It was never my intention to cause hurt to any person," Essers said in a statement last week.
The issue is not black and white.
Black artists filed affidavits supporting Murray. And a white man and a black man entered the gallery to deface the painting, saying they were acting independently of each other and wanted to defend Zuma. The two were arrested and face trespassing charges.
Murray said in his court affidavit that the intention of his Zuma painting, part of a show that criticized the ANC, was to express a sense of betrayal that some post-apartheid leaders were greedy or corrupt. He also said that details of Zuma's sex life had become part of the public debate in South Africa.
Zuma, 70, has been married six times he currently has four wives, as his Zulu culture allows. He has 21 children, and acknowledged in 2010 that he fathered a child that year with a woman who was not among his wives.
Tuesday's protest wound about a kilometer (half mile) from a usually quiet park in an upscale Johannesburg neighborhood to a corner just south of the gallery. Along the way, black women in maid's aprons and black men in gardener's overalls stood on the balconies of homes in the largely white residential neighborhood to cheer on the marchers.
The gallery had replaced pieces from Murray's show in its windows with signs reading: "The Goodman Gallery respects your right to protest."
ANC spokesman Jackson Mthembu addressed the crowd outside the gallery, saying, "We refuse to be painted as inferior citizens of this country."
South African Communist Party leader Blade Nzimande, a Zuma ally, compared the case to a hate speech suit a group that lobbies for white South Africans brought against an ANC leader who had insisted on continuing to sing a song from the apartheid era that calls for killing whites. The judge in that case banned the song.
Nzimande said some have asked why Zuma supporters went to court, as the white group did, instead of trying to speak to the artist and the gallery to find a solution.
"You can't have a dialogue with a person who is actually insulting you," Nzimande said.
Kgomo, the protester, said that despite the division vividly on display Tuesday, a resolution was possible.
"If they apologize to our president, then it will be enough for us," she said.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
|
Today's News
May 30, 2012
Frieder Burda's collection on view for the first time in France at Musée Granet
First exhibition on the work of eighteenth-century court goldsmith opens at the Frick Collection
Baroness Carmen Thyssen Bornemisza to sell "The Lock" by John Constable at Christie's
Greek experts find Roman-era shipwrecks nearly a mile deep off an island
Archaeologists discover One thousand years of history in a Sicilian farmland estate
1,600-year-old mosaic at Israeli city of Tiberias synagogue damaged by vandals
Sotheby's to offer a fully functioning Apple I; First Apple Computer made by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak
Scottish auctioneers to sell the collection of a U.S. media family in Edinburgh
China Guardian Auctions Co.'s 2012 Spring Auctions season yields over $337mm USD in sales
Andy Warhol's take on the Queen, from the Reigning Queens series, for sale at Bonhams
Christie's Hong Kong Spring Sales of Chinese Paintings achieve HK$782,284,000/US$100,758,179
South Africa's Goodman Gallery to remove painting from website after thousands protest
"Goin' Home, Goin Home": Mike Kelley's mobile homestead to be built in Detroit
Susanne Ghez steps down at The Renaissance Society after 40 years
Fundacion Mapfre presents the exhibition Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938)
Historic New England awards prize for collecting works on paper
Author's son seeks Malcolm X letter at Syracuse
Julien's Auctions to resent Sports Legends/Music Icons Auction on June 23rd and 24th
Galleri Lars Olsen presents two video works by Swiss artist Jessica Faiss
1908 Summer Games set the stage for other Olympics
|
Most Popular Last Seven Days
1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina
2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum
3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong
4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism
5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art
6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator
7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern
8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum
9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors
10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD
|
|
 |
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
 |
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|