|  |  | 
               
                |  |   
                | 
                     
                      | Sarah 
                          Kanouse: Art makes revolution by shooting 
                          holes in the social fabric. Through these holes, glimpses, 
                          visions and plans for other possibilities can be perceived. 
                          Art for revolution is a window, not window-dressing. 
                          Art for revolution disrupts the inevitability of social 
                          and economic assumptions that have been normalized to 
                          appear unassailable, unchangeable, even "natural" 
                          and, "natural," then obviously "good." 
                          The "naturalness" and "goodness" 
                          of these conditions are reinforced daily by images and 
                          representations which art for revolution counters, parries, 
                          provokes. Existing social conditions emerged over time 
                          not through divine intervention or some process of Darwinian 
                          evolution but through human action that found patriarchy, 
                          white supremacism, heterosexism, and anthropocentrism 
                          helpful for the extraction of resources, coercion of 
                          labor and accumulation of wealth. Most of the images 
                          we see every day, from the obvious products of the entertainment 
                          industry to artworks - even revolutionary artworks - 
                          purchased by the targets of their critiques, are deployed 
                          by those who benefit from these social constructs in 
                          order to mask power and obscure the answer to the question 
                          "Cui bono?"
 Images deployed in the service of capital reinforce 
                          existing social hierarchies by constantly reiterating 
                          and simultaneously obscuring them. Images serve as visual 
                          and visceral points for mobilizing personal desire and 
                          political will not to imagine alternatives but to support 
                          ideologies that may not actually be in the interests 
                          of those consuming them. "High art" legitimizes 
                          the elite by underscoring their commitment to a patronizing 
                          form of "cultural enrichment," and even 'revolutionary' 
                          images can excuse the powerful by pointing to their 
                          roadmindedness in supporting critical artwork through 
                          collectors and art institutions that effectively control 
                          the ways such critical images are displayed and seen.
 Art for revolution disrupts the manners in which images 
                          serve capital. Art for revolution interjects questions, 
                          provides missing information, and creates linkages that 
                          are obscured by conventional images and the ideologies 
                          they serve. It is almost inevitable that images with 
                          revolutionary implications or intent will be appropriated 
                          and commodified as soon as they become effective; appropriation 
                          is the most effective form of censorship. The revolutionary 
                          artist will simply keep making art, finding new ways 
                          and new variations to use the subtle persuasiveness 
                          of images to invite viewers to question that which was 
                          not understood to be subject to question. Art for revolution 
                          heals the inevitable wounds of social and economic institutions 
                          by wounding their inevitability.
 |  |  | On 
                        September 11, 2001, two hijacked commercial airliners 
                        were flown into the World Trade Center. An estimated 6,000 
                        people were killed in the collision and subsequent collapse 
                        of the twin towers. |  |   
                      |  |  |  |  |   
                      |  |  | On 
                        August 6, 1945, the US army dropped an atomic bomb on 
                        Horoshima. The ruins of Sei Hospital lie directly beneath 
                        the epicenter. |  |   
                      |  |  | 
 
 |  |   
                      |  |  |  Bexa: 
                          Art is probably the main reason I am still alive. Other 
                          peoples’ or my own. Activism’s okay and necessary, but 
                          it isn’t particularly satisfying or sustainable for 
                          me (is it for you?). Assert yourself: put your body? in front of the corporate-machine 
                          gears? I exist in the merging place of despair and pleasure; 
                          caught on the about-to-explode planet, looking for ways 
                          to keep going despite The World. I don’t think things 
                          are gonna change too much in my lifetime, and nowadays 
                          they are worsening in this country, and affecting everywhere 
                          else disastrously (channeling Bushie’s brain: "Lets 
                          not sign the Kyoto Protocol: We do love our SUVs!") 
                          I have some joy with friendships and dance and visual 
                          art and masturbation and massage.
 Also, I think "Happiness" is overrated, kind 
                          of a cultural construct, as if it’s something you can 
                          just buy or work hard enough to get, as though it’s 
                          normal or healthy to be happy on a globe full of atrocity 
                          and inequality.
 I like feeling connected to the long history of protest 
                          art; I can be an activist with what I make. I like feeling 
                          connected to ancient human history, art being integral 
                          to all cultures. Art carries the stories of a culture, 
                          whether it is propagating racist beliefs and turning 
                          them into truths, or spreading anti-racist demands. 
                          Art grieves and bleeds and passions and processes and 
                          dies and sleeps. Art can be anti-capitalist; don’t be 
                          tricked into thinking it is a bourgeois thing. It keeps 
                          you alive; it is survival. Art’s healing and wrenching 
                          and fucking ecstatic and wants to destroy this whole 
                          sickening system of torture and oppression, suffering 
                          and loneliness. Art is a question that can’t be answered. 
                          Keep asking.
 |  |  |   
                      | 
 |  |  |   
                      |  Chris 
                          Evans:  In the 60's, millions of people listened 
                          to what Bob Dylan had to say (they probably still do). 
                          What no one heard in 1966 was that Rubin "The Hurricane" 
                          Carter was innocent of all charges that put him on death 
                          row. Bob Dylan, the artist, was inspired to release 
                          a song in 1976 that spelled out Mr. Carter's innocence. 
                          Despite the same millions of people listening to that 
                          song, Rubin Carter stayed in jail another 9 years. And 
                          I doubt the appellate judge that released Carter from 
                          jail in 1985 cited Bob's tune as a reason to overturn 
                          the verdict. I say all that to say I am ambivalent about 
                          the word "art" and "revolution" being in the same sentence. 
                          I live in a time where the television show "Bart Simpson" 
                          is my country's favorite to watch, yet George Bush's 
                          son was able to get enough actual votes to allow the 
                          Supreme Court to select him as president. I see corporations 
                          using art more effectively nowadays to squash revolutions, 
                          not propel them. I still do art, however, that seeks 
                          "revolution" (or put another way, a "better solution") 
                          because it's the only thing I know how to contribute 
                          at the moment.
 |  |  George Mullen, Freedom and Tyranny, 
                        1997, 24" x 36", barbwire and oil on canvas.Copyright 
                        © 1997 George Mullen. All Rights Reserved. Private 
                        collection. www.studiorevolution.com
 |  |  |   
                      |  |   Art 
                          is not a mirror to reflect reality, but a hammer with 
                          which to shape it.- Bertold Brecht
 In 
                          art, all who have done something other than their predecessors 
                          have merited the epithet of revolutionary; and it is 
                          they alone who are masters.- Paul Gauguin
 Art 
                          is a step from what is obvious and well-known toward 
                          what is arcane and concealed.- Kahlil Gibran
 All 
                          that I desire to point out is the general principle 
                          that Life imitates Art far more than Art imitates Life.- Oscar Wilde
 |  |   
                      |  |  |  |  |  |  previous 
              page |