Saturday, October 18, 2014

Re-ignition: Drop Cloth Abstraction

What better reason to wake a dormant blog than to announce that some paintings are up and available to be seen in Park Slope during Gowanus Open Studios weekend? In spite of a drama-filled road to getting this show up at Housing Works in Park Slope (at the corner of 5th Avenue and Garfield), it's there now and I'm happy with what you can see. Also, I'm donating 25% of any sales to Housing Works, so I hope things go well both for my sake and the greater good.

If you're thinking of coming to Gowanus this weekend, follow my updates as the unnamed voice of Arts Gowanus on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/gowanusopenstudios) to hear about the other art and artists of Gowanus Open Studios 2014.

I may technically be a Red Hook artist now, but after five consecutive years of doing GOS, it feels very natural to be so involved in it again this year. Here are a few of the pieces hanging in Park Slope right now.




Monday, May 21, 2012

Monday (Free Takeshi Miyakawa!)




I sent two messages today to Mayor Bloomberg and the City of New York for the sake of Takeshi Miyakawa. Imprisoning a person for an indefinite period for a misunderstood art project is cruel, wasteful and sadly indicative of what life in New York has become.

I hope that Miyakawa-San will be freed quickly, but the conversation about this incident will be prolonged. Feeling safe on New York streets is dependent upon being secure in one's civil rights.

An artist is the victim today, but there are many other less fortunate people lost in the justice system without a compelling story hook to get them attention from the outside. It's the responsibility of the courts to protect citizens from the misapplication of laws created to keep them safe.

Call a bag a bomb and something will blow up, judge. No, not literally, I hope. But courts that can't be trusted endanger us all more than any external threat ever can.




SIGN A PETITION

Criminalizing artistic expression in defiance of all common sense and spending the city's money to detain an innocent person rather than to help those in need? Two wrongs make one egregious wrong that says much about the culture of governance in this city. Make New York residents feel safe again: Free Takeshi Miyakawa!

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/525/661/531/demand-justice-for-artist-takeshi-miyakawa/


WRITE THE MAYOR

Dear Mayor Bloomberg:

I am writing to request your intervention in the case of Takeshi Miyakawa, an artist currently being detained for a project honoring our city. His arrest and subsequent treatment by the court are not simply an injustice, but also a gross waste of the city’s limited financial resources.

Mr. Miyakawa’s incarceration sends an unequivocally negative message to creative professionals living in this city, as well as to highly skilled immigrants in all professions who might choose to make New York their home. A simple misunderstanding that may involve a minor civic infraction should not result in loss of personal freedom and mandatory psychiatric evaluation. Artists working in New York face enough hardship; they should not have to fear that creative expression will be frivolously criminalized.

Moreover, economic resources that could be used to support education, senior care, or other essential services, are squandered when a case like this is not swiftly and sensibly adjudicated. Even viewed in the most absurdly pejorative light, this act of artistic expression (in conjunction with a design event generating revenue for NYC) could at worst be labeled vandalism, but even so, the so-called perpetrator is the epitome of a nonviolent offender. Takeshi Miyakawa does not belong in the custody of the state.

Please take all measures at your disposal to facilitate Mr. Miyakawa’s release and clear him of any pending charges. Please also consider the negative consequences that overzealous application of “broken windows theory” policing can have on civic life in a place that aspires to maintain its renown as a creative world capital.

Respectfully,
Justin Neely