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Art Show in LA closed by Police

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From Mark Vallen's weblog:

art-for-a-change.com/blog

Art Show in LA closed by Police
From Sunday, May 08, 2005

This past April I received an invite to attend an art opening at the
Transport Gallery in downtown Los Angeles.

The show, titled Mark of the Beast, was scheduled for one night only on April 23rd, 2005, at the small gallery space

located in the
http://factoryplacelofts.com/artist.html

Factory Place art colony. Graphic artist Brandy Flower curated the show, which consisted of recognizable corporate logos that had been reworked to reveal - or unveil - the truth behind the corporate propaganda. The spoof ads ranged from the GAP (transformed into GAG), to the red white and blue CHEVRON oil company emblem (transformed into SHAME ON). The promotional material advertised the show as running from 7 to 11 in the evening. I wanted to be present at this one night exhibit, but instead decided to stay at home to work on a new series of oil paintings.
It wasn't until May 8th that someone told me the Los Angeles Police Department had raided and closed down the exhibit.

To my knowledge the raid and closure was not covered by local newspaper, television, or radio news outlets (our free
press was no doubt too busy reporting on the Michael Jackson trial and
couldn't be bothered with blatant violations of citizen's First Amendment
rights). Only a few bloggers have caught wind of the story and the LA arts
community seems to be blissfully unaware - or unconcerned - that the LAPD has now become the city’s premiere agency for art criticism. Might the police raid have had something to do with the content and objective of the show? Perhaps they read the following from the exhibit's advance publicity and decided the good citizens of LA needed to be protected from artistic subversion:

Capitalist Globalization is no longer an evil threat but a dark reality in
the 21st century. Multinational companies condition the consuming masses with lies, deception and manipulation in the form of advertising tricks and fetishized logos. These mega-corporations have infiltrated the world's governments, created legislation in their favor, and become global superpowers.

Today, this misappropriation of authority has dealt us states of international conflict, a plundering of nature and its resources,
imbalances in the global economy, and a tangled web of disinformation. For one night in downtown Los Angeles, we will hold a conscious happening, aimed directly at the issues of consumerism and alternative globalization.

Please come out and support in hopes that together we can find truth
amongst the many lies. To further carry our messages to the everyday
world, there will be live silk-screening throughout the evening, "arming"
guests with protest statements in the form of logo spoofs. Attendees are
invited to bring an item of clothing to have silk-screened for free.

According to the Transport Gallery, towards the end of the night's
festivities at precisely 10:40 pm, the LAPD arrived and closed the event
due to the "aggressive and offensive" nature of the show's content.
Witnesses tell of up to four squad cars arriving at the gallery to make
sure the venue closed its doors. While this writer was not present at the
exhibit, others, including those who run the art space, attest to a calm
atmosphere where there were no drugs, guns, or violence of any kind.
Photos of the evening's festivities showing an appreciative crowd enjoying
the artworks have been posted to the Transport Gallery's website and make plain the passive nature of those gathered. Furthermore, no arrests were made, which appears to discount police claims of an "aggressive" incident needing police intervention.

What I'd like to know is, just which totalitarian country did I wake up in where police have the power to determine which art galleries and artists have the"right" to exhibit? Or perhaps I’m still asleep and just experiencing another of those reoccurring nightmares where Americans have completely lost their cherished rights while a spineless, complicit, and silent press helps assure that no one will even know.

The Transport Gallery is seeking assistance in the form of
witness testimony from people who where present at the raid. If you have
any information regarding the police action, contact the gallery at:
info@transportgallery.com

####

"Vision without action is daydream. Action without vision is nightmare." -
Japanese proverb