“DISARMING IMAGES”
A MULTI-CHANNEL VIDEO PROJECTION BY ARTISTS AGAINST THE WAR
Conceived and organized by Artists Against the War, it documents the upsurge
of protest in the U.S. in the post-9/11 period against the war in Afghanistan,
against the impending invasion of Iraq, and the fierce opposition to the war
itself.
DECEMBER 20, 2005 THROUGH JANUARY 7, 2006, HELD DURING REGULAR GALLERY HOURS
TUES-SAT 11-6 P.M. (FREE OF CHARGE)
The gallery will be closed on Saturday, December 24 and Saturday, December
31, 2005
IN CONJUNCTION WITH "DISARMING IMAGES," A
PANEL DISCUSSION WILL BE HELD ON FRIDAY JANUARY 6 AT 8 P.M. (RSVP
310.264.4678, FREE OF CHARGE)
Panelists include Robbie Conal, Joyce Kozloff, Erika Rothenberg,
and Paul Zaloom. Moderated by Carol Wells,
Director, Center for the Study of Political Graphics.
If you did not have the opportunity to watch “Disarming
Images,” during regular gallery hours, please arrive at 7:30 P.M. for a
pre-panel screening.
More on Disarming Images
Disarming Images presents a three screen, lucidly structured video documentation
focused on the rise of American outcries against the U.S. invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq. The work reveals the prodigious scope of domestic unrest, acts of
conscience and manifestations of rage, minimized and more often ignored by
home front media. Though it is certainly a retrospective survey, the video
also has a right to be judged as a newsbreaking event. Covering the years 2001-2005,
Disarming Images shows protest groups gathering their forces and inventively
spreading their word, within an environment manipulated by official dogma and
misinformation. The story is developed as an implied dialogue circulating between
two explanatory channels. Bulletins set forth a time line of calamities that
detail the worsening international situation, while a swirling collage of vigils,
confrontations, and marches evokes the atmosphere of indignant response to
them. The textual segment is laconic, and chronological, above all matter-of-fact;
the visual one is effusive and Baroque. Disarming Images compiles video footage
and still photographs that are spliced together from an amazingly wide array
of sources. They were orchestrated by Ann Messner, with Elaine Angelopoulos
and Debra Werblud, alongside the text written by Carole Ashley, all members
of New York based Artists Against the War, the sponsor of this project. Their
distinctive choice of materials is informed by a visual sensibility, ironic
or poignant by turns, at the service of a work that is continually exciting
to look at. This will come as no surprise, since the video accentuates many
provocations by artists who had joined in the public action. They answer to
names like Art Mob, Eyes Wide Open, and Bread and Puppet Theatre. But the list
swells with such outfits as Veterans for Peace, Women in Black, War Resisters
League, Move on, Not in Our Name, and Jazz Funeral for Democracy. In this combined
outpouring, the artists have become populists, while the activists reveal themselves
as creative spirits. A parade of flag draped coffins carried by silent figures
at the time of Bush’s second swearing in is an imaginative memorial as
well as a political accusation. Snaps of happy Baghdadis before the invasion
do not anticipate the bad fate that was in store for them. The image of the
hooded figure, tortured at Abu Ghraib, infamously substitutes for the Statue
of Liberty. Ashcroft croons while reports are heard of “extraordinary
renditions.” Someone flourishes a poster: “Dismantle Weapons of
Mass Deception. "On the streets or at their computers, the people who
contribute to this uproar at a debacle are of all ages, and come from every
race, class and culture. Disarming Images is an appropriate yet paradoxical
title for such an engaged video. Its subjects are shown at the very least to
be passionately fed up, while their collective voices give weight to a tone
that is defiant when it is not sardonic. They are no friends of Patriot Acts
that shrink their civil liberties. But at the same time, they do call for disarmament—of
ideologies, no less than withdrawal from the illegal use of U.S. force. Even
as the policy they oppose continues its dismal course, their wish for peace
upholds a consoling vision. That is the true content of Disarming Images. --Max
Kozloff
Click here to download a printable version (.pdf)
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