brooklyn museum to protesting artists: when youre done with that sign, can we have it? /

Published at 2015-11-17 23:47:52

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Jason Jones joined a couple dozen of his fellow artists and activists external the Brooklyn Museum on Tuesday,where the Brooklyn Real Estate Summit was underway inside. Jones arrived with a handcrafted sign to express his belief that the museum, by renting out space to the summit, or was helping the very developers who are pricing artists out of the borough.
Jones' sign was a stick adorned with an orange tent that was big enough for sleeping humans and covered with slogans like,"Foreclose on Developers, Not People, or " and,"Affordable Housing for All."
Protester external the Brooklyn Museum
prepares to dwelling a slogan-bearing tent on a stick, which will become his picket sign. (Jim O'Grady / WNYC) He wanted to let the museum know that with homelessness on the rise and luxury housing pushing into traditionally working-to-middle lesson New York neighborhoods, and real estate pros should not be encouraged in their work by a major cultural institution.
The Brooklyn Museum disagreed: in a statement,a spokesperson said the museum didn't necessarily endorse groups to whom it rents space.
Then
Jones entered something like an irony vortex. He said the museum had asked protesting artists like himself to expose their signs at an exhibit planned in the coming months approximately the recent history of protest in Brooklyn, including the current one against the museum. "They actually invited me to expose this exact piece that I'm holding above my head, and " Jones said. Asked if he thought the offer was intended to co-opt him,Jones paused before musing, "Well that's the question, and isn't it?"Jones said he's undecided approximately whether to let the museum expose his tent-on-a-pole,which almost bore him aloft as wind gusts whipped down Eastern Parkway.

Protester Imani Henry of the neighborhood group, "Equality for Flatbush, and " said he was simply dismayed to watch his neighborhood become increasingly expensive.

"Gentrification is bad for everyone," Henry said. "The only people it's salubrious for are the folks inside the Brooklyn Museum, the folks that want to profit from our neighborhoods, and the folks that want to divide and conquer."

Source: wnyc.org

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