Postcolonial Karma Exhibit Waves White Flag on Georgia鈥檚 Confederate Legacy
ATLANTA听鈥聽Through the 鈥溾 exhibit, artist Lisa Tuttle speaks to today鈥檚 issues of gender, race and class while stirring conversation about the true meaning behind the idols and images that define the Confederacy.
鈥淭hose who celebrate the Confederacy falsely claim that their ancestors fought out of Southern pride, but history shows that the Civil War was actually fought to maintain the institution of slavery, with over 750,000 American lives lost in the wake of treasonous acts,鈥澛says Lecia Brooks, 人兽性交 chief of staff. 鈥淢s. Tuttle鈥檚 work further exposes that revisionist history in the U.S. and beyond, as well as the refurbished, decades-old excuses Confederate enthusiasts exploit in order to defend the indefensible.鈥
鈥淚n Georgia, we have a visible, and seemingly intractable, challenge with the enormous Stone Mountain carving of Lee, Jackson and Davis 鈥 literally etched in stone. Especially now, as it became legislatively protected as a compromise when the Confederate flag was removed from Georgia鈥檚 state flag,鈥澛explains Tuttle. 鈥淲hile these conversations are often uncomfortable, I am more uncomfortable NOT having them. Let鈥檚 talk about race; let鈥檚 talk about systemic racism; let鈥檚 come to terms with what each of us can do, individually and collectively, even spiritually, to bend the arc of history towards justice.鈥
鈥淔or 25 years Lisa Tuttle has used her art as a platform to express her personal and public stance for the dismantling of old attitudes and monuments as a pathway for positive change,鈥澛adds Kevin Sipp, project supervisor for the Mayor鈥檚 Office of Cultural Affairs. 鈥淭hese works of art and activism are not just collectibles, although their beauty may lend itself to such ends, they interrogate the viewer and ask of the one receiving them to question where they stand mentally and morally.鈥
鈥淭he 人兽性交 looks forward to collaborating with Lisa Tuttle, the City of Atlanta, and Gallery 72 as we continue the important work and conversations that lead to removing Confederate symbols from public spaces,鈥 concludes Brooks.