Library in Tillsonburg backtracks on censored art exhibit
ONTARIO NEWS / Sculptures covered with bed sheet, gay artist outraged
Andrea Houston / National / Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Share |

A library in the small community of Tillsonburg, near London, Ontario, has removed the bedsheet covering a display case featuring the sculptures of a local gay artist.

London-based artist R Bruce Flowers says he is disturbed and saddened by what he sees as blatant homophobic censorship of his work. He says it’s horrifying this still happens in 2010.

His sculptures in the foyer of the Tillsonburg Public Library, four intricately carved pieces, spent weeks covered with a bed sheet. One sculpture depicts two men laughing in a joyous embrace, an image that could just as easily be two close friends or siblings, he says. The exhibit is part of the Oxford County Art Project: Art in Public Spaces initiative.

“These are very innocent images,” says the retired teacher and full-time sculptor. “A child would just see a warm hug or two hands.”
"Making Love"
(R. Bruce Flowers)

"Dreamer"
(R. Bruce Flowers)
The display case at the Tillsonburg Public Library covered
(R Bruce Flowers)
(R Bruce Flowers)

He says the curators of the exhibit chose “exceptionally family-friendly” pieces from his extensive body of work.

The exhibit was unveiled on Nov 29 and at first everything seemed fine. There was tremendous response from library patrons, Flowers says, and reviews were very favourable.Then a local newspaper published a positive review of the work in a story about the public art initiative, he says.

“[The article] mentions that I’m an artist that creates celebratory images of same-sex partners,” he says. "The local Baptist church took great offence to the work as soon as they found out I was a gay sculptor. It seemed to have contaminated the work. Suddenly it was all negatively eroticized.”

Soon after, the curators noticed that someone had covered the exhibit with a bed sheet. On the sheet is a sign inviting people to “view the sculpture behind the sheet.”

Flowers doesn’t know who is responsible for covering his work. “I know some of the librarians were very upset because they saw this as a censorship issue,” he says.

On Dec 10 library manager Richard Sulkers, who was not available to comment to Xtra, met with curators to examine the Oxford County Art Project contract with the library.

“The contract clearly states that the space in the foyer of the library was donated for an art in public spaces initiative,” he says. “So they removed the sheet. But when they left, the sheet went right back up again.”

Then, on Dec 14, the town’s mayor and a local councillor attended a meeting to discuss the next steps, he says. At the meeting, the library board passed a unanimous motion to host the exhibit – uncovered – until Feb 28.

“What was really frightening about this whole thing is, it’s not like they came and studied the work, analyzed it, and then were offended by it,” he says. “No. It’s just because I’m a gay sculptor.”

Throughout the controversy, letters and calls from shocked locals continued to roll in to the library and the local newspaper, creating a scandal in the town of 14,822 people, he says.

Coming to his defence, London area gay, lesbian and trans rights activists began rallying around Flowers and putting pressure on the library to end the censorship.

“But so many in the queer community in this area couldn’t speak up because they’re closeted,” he says. “It’s created this enormous dialogue in the community. It’s really all just homophobic censorship coming out of this New Hope Baptist Church.”

Tillsonburg’s New Hope pastor John Friesen says he hasn’t actually seen the exhibit in person, but knows it’s not “reflective of family values.”

Friesen evaded Xtra’s questions, saying he doesn’t think he had any influence on the library’s decision to censor the work.

“People in the community I talk to, they are not pleased either,” he says. “It’s not portraying family values. Do you see a man and a woman and children?”

Tillsonburg News letter-writer Greg Friesen – pastor John Friesen’s son – said he finds it “appalling” that the library would be so insensitive to put something “as controversial as homosexuality” in the public library.

“Since when did a public library become a place to showcase any sort of sexuality?” Friesen asks. “When I go to the library with my children, I don’t want to be seeing, let alone explaining, homosexual intimacy to my children.”

Friesen did not return calls from Xtra.



Share |


Reader Comments


 
So...
can we get an update. Who was responsible for covering up the exhibit and posting that ridiculous note!!
J Roman, Toronto ON
01/05/11 7:58 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Fear of intimacy
Presumably Mr. Friesen never gets closer to other males than a handshake? It is deplorable that a man who hasn't actually looked at a piece of art can influence others to hide it away so that he won't have to "explain" it to his hyper-sheltered children in the unlikely event he might set foot in a place devoted to the public dissemination of knowledge and the encouragement of independent thought. This is not something confined to Canada -- we see it more and more all over North America, where one lone voice seems able to set the wheels of willful blindness and ignorance in motion.
Pieter Bach, Oakland California
01/19/11 10:56 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Remove the sheets.
Remove the sheets, and proudly tell your children that they are viewing works of art at the library. I wonder what the congregation tell their children when they see a fresco or painting of God creating Adam. They are two men, no mistake about it--both naked. And doesn’t God have his left arm another male? There happens to be a shortage of females at this time. And hasn’t anyone noted that all these males are flying around naked. Naked males. Unashamed in His image. So, when they take their children to see the creation, do the townsfolk tell their innocents that this is an off-day for God, as He usually flies around in a tuxedo and top hat? Let’s cheer for new hope for the pastor, and his followers of the New Hope Baptist Church. May he adjust his simple narrow mind to some clear and educated thoughts. May he initiate compassion and refreshing wholesome guidance for the people of Tillsonburg and Oxford County. Remove those sheets and apologize for his rash tongue.
M Arthur, Reston VA
01/19/11 11:00 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Blatant Censorship
It never ceases to amaze me that one lone voice out of many can cause a place such as a library that is suppose to disseminate information in all forms to censor an artist. I wish the person that had put up the sheet had been caught and punished. The censorship reminds me of a group of people that recently wanted to "sanitize" 'Huckleberry Finn' as it had the word n***** throughout the book. In the instance of the book, I think people needed to teach their children that the book was from a different viewpoint in history and that the word is bad and teach their children right from wrong. With the artwork teach your children that while you as an individual might not agree with the artwork, everyone has the right to express themselves in whatever art form they choose to do so with.
Roger Howell, Warner Robins USA
01/20/11 3:07 AM EST
Report this comment to moderator.
Does there need to be a Family?
The thing about this that bothers me the most is the pastor's comment "Do you see a man and a woman and children?" Since when does art require a family? Do pieces such as "Discus Thrower", "Winged Victory", "The Fates", "David", or "The Thinker" have less value because there is no "family represented. That's just sculptures. What if you include paintings? Does "The Birth of Venus" need a husband added to make it better art? Do we need to add a child to "The Mona Lisa"? There are thousands of examples in the greatest of artworks where there is only a single subject, or just two men. Even naked men as M Arthur pointed out. Just the level of arrogance and ignorance it takes to censor art simply because you suspect the artist might have a message in it you do not approve of is staggering. It saddens me that people are still like that to this day.
Chris McDaniel, Fairborn USA
01/20/11 2:58 PM EST
Report this comment to moderator.