It's official, The "Free Speech Art Movement" is on. Led by artists who accuse the City of Chicago of enforcing illegal Municipal Codes that deny artists and citizens their complete free speech rights. A rally is planned for at the Daley Center Plaza under the Picasso from 11-2 on Friday, October 3th 2008.
It began with artists and concerned citizens are urging Chris Drew, the host of the cable TV show -
"Printing T-shirt Art" (on cable Channel 21), to call for a rally in support of artists 1st Amendment rights. Mr. Drew has promoted a basic understanding of artists' First Amendment rights on "Printing T-shirt Art." He has contrasted the 1st Amendment rights of newspapers to sell their speech on the public sidewalks and parks, with the rights of artists in Chicago. One need only look for the artists in Chicago to realize they are unseen in most of the city on a daily basis. He compared the bleak reality for artists in Chicago with the rights of New York City artists to sell in parks and on streets where flourishing art scenes exist.
It is not an accident that Chicago artists are absent from Chicago
streets and parks. Chicago Municipal Code has denied artists
significant 1st Amendment rights. Even after losing two Federal court
cases (see art-teez.org/free-speech.htm for links to cases), the city persists in demanding that artists must obtain a Peddler's License, which classifies them as "Itinerant Merchants," to sell their speech in Chicago. In the second lawsuit the city lost, Chicago's policy of requiring a Peddler's License for speech sales was shown to be unconstitutional.
Presently, with a $165 Peddlers License in hand the artist must submit
the art they intend to sell a month in advance to have its political
content confirmed as worthy of a “Speech Permit.”
Once this
has been done the artist is provided a letter-label sticker to put on
the back of their Peddlers License which restricts the artist to a
single corner of the Loop for the entire month applied for. The artist
is still restricted from selling speech anywhere else in the vast
banned areas of Chicago. When people gather in other places for events
in many of the banned zones the artist is rooted to a corner unable to
reach those audiences. This is the nature of “free
speech” in Chicago.
The actual “Speech Permit” regime the Municipal
Code sets
up is a bureaucratic nightmare. Almost no one uses it. It is not even
followed by those who administer it. The artists and political
activists on the street have accommodated themselves to several
locations around Grant Park where police are informed to leave most
people claiming “political” 1st Amendment rights
alone.
Others take their chances selling where they will, bending with the
mood of police and the moment. Only the most ardent artists/citizens
are ever seen.
Emerging artists are banned from most commercial areas, the Loop and
any open activity in the city parks. This ban has acted to prevent
artists from finding the public and each other and eliminates the
logical opportunities for artists to create art scenes around Chicago.
This leaves only the art fairs and neighborhood festivals in which
artists can sell their art. These fares & festivals are too
expensive for emerging artists who do not yet have a large enough
following to afford the $150-500 festival fees to which the City adds
an additional $25 tax as a final insult. Art scenes need free sales
spaces for emerging artists to flourish. It is the emerging artists who
have the energy and mission to create art scenes. It is the emerging
artists toward whom Chicago is heartless. It is the citizens who lose
the art scene possibilities this policy suppresses.
Artists are demanding their 1st Amendment rights to free speech. On
Friday, October 5th under the Picasso they will begin to change Chicago
- to make Chicago friendly to emerging artists. This is the same day
the T-shirt Art Harvest Festival opens in Chicago at the American
Indian Center at 1630 W. Wilson Avenue. Produced by the Uptown
Multi-Cultural Art Center – the T-shirt Art Harvest Festival
displays art by Chicago area artists from 18 years of exhibits with new
t-shirt art added every year. Musicians play all weekend at the
festival in a union of popular culture. Bands will exhibit their
t-shirt art but only visual artist, Robert Wapahi, will sing. The
festival’s theme is “Human Rights in
Chicago.” Visit
art-teez.org for details.
On Saturday a speak-out on artists 1st Amendment Rights at the T-shirt Art Harvest Festival is 1-2pm. Musicians, actors, visual artists and activists who have found themselves (their speech) discouraged or banned at any time from the parks or streets of Chicago are encouraged to speak-out.
Artists who can not attend are requested to send their statements in support of their 1st Amendment rights to umcac@art-teez.org. Artist statements will be collected into a testimonial booklet and read from at the speak-out.
On Sunday, October 7th, a Speak-out on Police Brutality is 1-2pm. From 2-3pm, a meeting of activists in support of the Chicago Free Speech Art Movement (Free SAM) will plan strategy surrounded by t-shirt art. Following this comes more music.
Every Sunday until the T-shirt Art Harvest Fest after UM-CAC's free Screen Print Workshop for Artists volunteers will prepare for this rally from 5-7pm. Call 773/561-7676. Give us a call if you can help out.
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