A
New York artist's group called Artists & Writers Protest
published an appeal in the New York Times titled, End Your
Silence. Addressing the expanding US intervention in Vietnam,
the statement opened, "We artists of the United States are divided
in many ways, artistically and ideologically, but we are one
in our concern for Humanity." That appeal made in 1965 galvanized
my own feelings about the social role of artists, and it did
the same for many others in the arts community. Meanwhile, in
my home city of Los Angeles during the same year, a group called
the Artists Protest Committee took to demonstrating against
the Vietnam war in front of museums and galleries. They even
picketed the Rand Corporation, "to protest Rand's involvement
with American foreign policy in Vietnam."
In
1966 the Artists Protest Committee organized the Peace
Tower, which stood at the corner of Sunset and La Cienega
Boulevards. The sculpture, designed by artist Mark di Suvero
and Mel Edwards, was covered with over 400 small panels submitted
by artists from all around the world. Each panel was an artistic
antiwar statement, and some of the artists who submitted works
include Philip Evergood, Moses and Raphael Soyer, Robert Motherwell,
Jim Rosenquist, Philip Pearlstein, Arnold Meshes, and Judy Chicago.
At the public dedication of the short lived monument against
the war (dismantled after a few controversial months), there
were speeches made by art critic and author, Susan Sontag, and
Donald Duncan - an ex-Green Beret who said, "I am not here today
to protest our boys in Vietnam. I'm here to protest our boys
being in Vietnam."
US
artists once shook the national conscience and spurred debate
and awareness about war through their works of art, and as a
first year high school student in 1967, I was deeply influenced
and inspired by what I saw my fellow artists doing. As the war
dragged on and my commitment to a socially conscious art deepened,
I found that hundreds of working professional artists across
the country shared my concerns. Even abstract artists who had
no direct messages in their works were moved to get involved
with the antiwar movement. A good example of this was the 1968
showing of minimalist art at the Paula Cooper Gallery in New
York's SoHo district. Of all the artists participating, not
a single one presented artworks that had anything to do with
the war, however the group wrote a collective statement that
read, "These 14 non-objective artists are against the war in
Vietnam. They are supporting this commitment in the strongest
manner open to them by contributing major examples of their
current work. The artists and the individual pieces were selected
to present a particular aesthetic attitude, in the conviction
that a cohesive group of important works makes the most forceful
statement for peace." The exhibition was organized as a benefit
for the Student Mobilization Against the War, and the artists
succeeded in raising $30,000 for the cause.
In
May of 1970 the US expanded its unpopular war by bombing and
invading Cambodia. The home front reaction was immediate, nearly
every campus in the nation was shut down by demonstrating students.
National Guard units sent to quell protests ended up massacring
4 students of Kent State. The nation was tearing itself apart.
Also in May, nearly 2,000 artists gathered at New York University
to organize a day long Art Strike. It was agreed that May 22nd
would be the target date for the strike. A statement explaining
the action was drawn up and distributed to museums, galleries,
and the press. On the actual day of the shutdown, the Jewish
Museum, the Whitney Museum, and fifty private galleries shut
their doors. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) stayed open but
ran an antiwar film festival free of charge. Frank Stella closed
his MoMA exhibit for the strike. The Guggenheim Museum remained
open - but waved entry fees and removed all paintings from its
walls. Meanwhile, the Metropolitan Museum of Art had been targeted
for a major demonstration by artists for refusing to participate
in the Art Strike. For nearly the entire day, hundreds of artists
carrying signs reading "Art Strike Against Racism, War, Repression"
leafleted those entering the museum.
Throughout
the Vietnam war, artists contributed their works, skills and
names to the antiwar movement. Pop artists Claes Oldenburg,
Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist, and Ed Kienholz made
works that referenced the war. Alexander Calder designed a button
for the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam,
a national mass protest held in Washington D.C. in 1969. Many
African American artists like Cliff Joseph of New York's Black
Emergency Cultural Coalition railed against war. One of
the biggest influences on me personally were the radical antiwar
posters produced in the early 1970s by Chicano artists like
Rupert Garcia and the artists of the Royal Chicano Air Force
poster collective. Even the normally apolitical Andy Warhol
had created a series of silk-screens prints in 1972 for the
antiwar Presidential candidacy of George McGovern, then running
against
chief warmonger Richard M. Nixon.
When
I created my Vietnam painting at the close of the war
30 years ago, I could not have imagined that America would have
so quickly forgotten the tragic lessons of that misbegotten
imperial adventure. Yet memories of Vietnam still haunt Americans
as the US conducts a brutal occupation of Iraq. Up to 100,000
Iraqi civilians have died in the war, with 1,573 American soldiers
killed and an estimated 20,000 wounded as of this writing -
causing some to call Iraq, "America's new Vietnam." It is in
this context that I make an appeal to all artists, and offer
my commentary as a challenge. There's a war going on. Leave
behind the isolation of your studios and your focus on pure
aesthetics, and instead become engaged in the world around you.
Now is the time to confront the deadly realities that plague
humanity, and art is the best means we have to envision and
implement a new, just, and peaceful world.
___________________________________________
[
To see full color examples of artworks created in opposition
to the Vietnam war by Jasper Johns, Antonio Frasconi, Duane
Hanson and others - visit: www.art-for-a-change.com/vietnam/vietnam.htm
]