April 26, 2024
Artists

Artists, museum workers protest New York City institutions’ silence over Gaza genocide


Protests by artists and museum workers continue against the Israeli barbarism in Gaza, carried out with the Biden administration’s full complicity, and the silence of leading arts institutions.

The death toll mounts and famine looms for the Palestinian population, alarming and horrifying millions across the globe. Meanwhile, official government spokesmen, in Tel Aviv, Washington, Berlin and elsewhere, hands dripping with blood, hypocritically decry “antisemitism” and “apologies for terrorism.”

Last Sunday, some 350 artists and cultural workers took part in an action outside the main entrance of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) in New York City. They unfurled a 30-by-50-foot collective quilt—entitled “From Occupation to Liberation”—featuring, according to the Art Newspaper, “sewn, painted and printed designs by more than 60 artists expressing solidarity with Palestinians.”

”From Occupation to Liberation” quilt (Photo credit-Alexa B. Wilkerson (@alexabwilkerson))

“The pro-Palestine quilt’s panels, most of which feature the red, green and black of the country’s flag, vary widely in style and tone,” the online publication reported. Sara Erenthal, whose square of the quilt features two crying figures raising their hands in need, told the Art Newspaper that the “images that keep sticking in my mind are of parents holding their children, siblings holding each other—people protecting their loved ones and begging for help. … As a Jewish person it’s important that I lend my voice to this cause.”

ArtNews pointed out that the “vast quilt calling for Palestinian liberation” also “honored the poet Refaat Alareer, who was killed in an airstrike in Gaza this past December.”

The artist-led advocacy group Hope in the Art World explained in a statement that “We ally ourselves in the global movement for a ceasefire and Palestinian liberation and the acknowledgment that the history of Palestinian subjugation is upheld by occupation and U.S. military funding. … We, furthermore, object to the argument of conflating the call for a ceasefire to be a baseless accusation of antisemitism.”



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