FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
New York, September 30, 1999
The free expression and arts community today strongly supported the Brooklyn Museum of Art in its
decision to challenge Mayor Rudolph Guiliani's threat to withdraw city financial support over a
controversial art exhibit, scheduled to open this weekend. Sensation: Young British Artists from the
Saatchi Collection, is on a world tour, and has been shown in Germany and England. This is its only
scheduled showing in the United States.
The Mayor has made no secret that his objections are based on a his personal dislike of the
contents of the show, which he has called "sick" and offensive to Catholics. In particular he has
criticized Chris Ofili's work, The Holy Virgin Mary, because of its use of elephant dung. Ofili, a
prize-winning British artist of Nigerian heritage, places elephant dung in his paintings "in an effort to
ground them physically in a cultural as well as natural landscape," according to the catalog for the
exhibit. An observant Catholic, he denies that his work is anti-Catholic or anti-religious.
"The entire arts community should be grateful to Director Arnold Lehman and the BMA's Board of
Directors for standing firm on the right of artists and museum-goers to make their own decisions
without interference from the government," said Joan Bertin, Executive Director of the National
Coalition Against Censorship. "If the city chooses to fund the arts, it simply cannot pick and choose
what art is 'offensive' and what is not."
"That judgment varies so widely and is so subjective that, if it were the test, publicly funded art
institutions would likely have little of interest to offer beyond the most inoffensive and conventional
art," according to Michelle Coffey, Program Director of the National Campaign for Freedom of
Expression. "Every major art collection contains something that someone will find offensive." In this
case, the Mayor and other critics may simply be revealing their own misinterpretation of the varied
cultural and artistic traditions on which artists draw.
The Mayor's action flies in the face of settled First Amendment law. First Amendment scholars and
advocates predict that the Museum's position will be upheld in court. In a case decided last year, the
Supreme Court cautioned that the "power to award subsidies on the basis of subjective criteria"
cannot be used to impose a "penalty on disfavored viewpoints." Speaking almost precisely to this
situation, the Court noted that a "pressing Constitutional question would arise if government funding
resulted in the imposition of a disproportionate burden calculated to drive 'certain ideas or viewpoints
from the marketplace.'" The government, in addition, has a duty to remain neutral with regard to
expression of religious belief, and not to favor one belief over others, or over non-belief.
In his attack on the Brooklyn Museum, the Mayor again displayed his lack of respect for the First
Amendment rights of the residents of New York, plus his disdain for the reputation of New York City
as a world-class center of art and culture. According to Chris Finan, President of the American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, "the federal courts exist precisely to redress this kind
of abuse of official power, and to preserve the free expression rights of all - including those holding
minority and dissenting opinions. The Mayor has shown that his commitment to the rule of law is
limited to circumstances of his own choosing."
For more information, contact:
Joan Bertin, Executive Director
National Coalition Against Censorship
(212) 807-6222
Michelle Coffey, Program Director
National Campaign for Freedom of Expression
(202) 393-2787
Chris Finan, President
American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression
(212) 587-4025
Organizations endorsing this statement:
(List in formation)
Association of American Publishers, Washington, DC
Boston Coalition for Freedom of Expression , Boston, MA
College Art Association, New York, NY
First Amendment Project, Oakland, CA
Institute for First Amendment Studies, Great Barrington, MA
Institute for Unpopular Culture, San Francisco, CA
National Association of Artists Organizations, Washington, D.C
People For the American Way Foundation