Thursday, May 07, 2015

Gays, Domestic Violence Victims Excluded From "Compassionate St. Augustine" Obelisk Art 450 Project? Maybe Not.



UPDATE, 5/8 (V-E Day): Rev. Warren Clark just wrote and said it will be up to the artists! We must engage them and explain the importance of the Michelle O'Connell and other domestic violence cases, and of the 1566 garroting murder of "Guillermo," a Gay French translator of the Guale Indian language on orders of St. Augustine founder Pedro Menendez de Aviles (whose brother-in-law wrote it down -- murdered because he was a "Sodomite and a Lutheran").

Thanks to supporters like Sheriff DAVID BERNARD SHOAR and ex-Mayor JOSEPH LESTER BOLES, JR., there are going to be some 25 obelisks around the City of St. Augustine, some on City property, purporting to honor "Compassion."
Not surprisingly, they're whitewashing and airbrushing our history in the City of St. Augustine, Florida, once again.
They've left out domestic violence victims and the Gay French translator who was the victim of the first anti-Gay hate crime in North American history.
This decision was made by a small non-diverse group impervious to public participation and suggestions.
At least they've agreed to honor Mincorcans, Greeks, Corsicans, Italians and Spaniards who fled British slavery and oppression as "indentured servants" in New Smyrna Beach in 1777, after half of them died.
Shall we appeal from any city permits and leases?
Shall we take this to the Commission?
Shall we picket and alert the national news media?
Read Ed's Epistle to the Episcopalians, October 31, 2014, here.


Dear Ted, et al.
1. Please be sure to include domestic violence and anti-Gay hate crime victims in the Obelisk Art 450 project.
2. I just spoke to Patty O'Connell (Michelle O'Connell's mother).
3. Patty O'Connell, her granddaughter Alexis (Michelle's daughter), Michelle's sisters and brother, Patty's siblings, and others of us who love justice picketed the February 28, 2015 Noche de Gala in support of Justice for Michelle O'Connell.
4. Patty O'Connell and I are discussing both a potential boycott and picketing of OA 450 by GLBT and women's' groups.
5. This would likely be widely reported and televised, as on February 28, 2015
6. As Patty O'Connell just told me, OA 450 "can just build two more obelisks."
7. In the words of MLK in St. Augustine in 1964 (and General U.S. Grant a century before him), we are prepared to work to make this happen "if it takes all summer"
Thank you.


-----Original Message-----
From: Ed Slavin
To: StCypriansTed
Cc: carengoldman ; rev.jimbullock ; warren.celli ; gardner ; sceastman ; yttapatty ; critesplus3 ; chrissyocon ; nshaver ; jregan ; dbirchim ; rwc904 ; rhorvath ; tneville ; cityfreeman ; NancySikesKline
Sent: Thu, May 7, 2015 8:12 am
Subject: Re: Obelisk Art 450 locations and subjects

You left out GLBT people? Why?

Sent from my iPhone

On May 7, 2015, at 7:59 AM, StCypriansTed@aol.com wrote:

Ed,

There is a list of sites for the obelisks in the sidebar of the article in today's Record. We do have a site for the Minorcans, and we have several sites that deal with human rights issues. We had many more sites suggested than the OA450 Project could accommodate, and regret that those that you mention were not specifically included.

Respectfully ... Ted

Rev. Ted Voorhees
St. Cyprian's Episcopal Church
St. Augustine, FL
904.829.8828 (Office)
904.501.9455 (Cell)

In a message dated 5/7/2015 6:47:30 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, easlavin@aol.com writes:
Dear Ted and Caren:
1. Please send me an updated list of proposed Obelisk Art 450 obelisk subjects and locations.
2. Please include one for the 1566 anti-Gay hate crime, one for the Minorcans and Father Camp, and one for Officer Involved Domestic Violence (in honor of Michelle O'Connell). We discussed and corresponded about this last year.
Thank you.
With kindest regards,
Ed Slavin
904-377-4998



25 artists interpret compassion in St. Augustine
Posted: May 6, 2015 - 11:35pm
kimeko.mccoy@staugustine.com
BY KIMEKO MCCOY

St. Augustine residents and visitors will be seeing new art around town soon, as artists have been announced for a public art project.

A total of 25 local, national and international artists have been challenged by Compassionate St. Augustine to interpret the four foundational values of the Spanish Constitution Monument onto their own 8-and-a-half-foot-tall obelisk for the Tour of Compassion. Those foundations are freedom, democracy, human rights and compassion.

Throughout the city, 25 obelisks will be stationed at locations based on their history and cultural importance as they pertain to the four foundational values.

“Overarchingly, the purpose is that hopefully this will create a legacy of compassion to the generations as we move forward to the 500th,” said Caren Goldman, executive director of Compassionate St. Augustine.

One of the artists, Jan Tomlinson Master of St. Augustine, said she’s what is termed an installation artist.

“I usually do large installations where you can walk inside,” she said.

So using an obelisk as her canvas will be a change.

Of the 25 artists, Master scored high enough by a selection panel to represent St. Augustine in a public art artist exchange between the city and its Sister City of Aviles, Spain.

Master said it was an honor to represent the city during the exchange program.

“The city of Aviles treated me like a queen,” she said.

Master said she’d been to Spain before, but it was still a cool experience to stay in Aviles for three weeks.

In Aviles, Master had a studio, options for meals and living space. During her time there, she created an obelisk design made of fabric.

For the obelisk she will design in St. Augustine, her theme is human rights.

“I think that if we give everybody equal rights, we become a more compassionate city,” she said.

As to not give away too much information about the design, she said her obelisk will focus on reflection.

“I’m looking at my obelisk almost as a gazing ball in a garden that’s a reflection,” she said.

Her hope is that viewers will see themselves in the reflection and consider how they fit into human rights.

“Everybody goes through the same things,” she said.

The interpretation

Although he doesn’t consider himself a typical artist, Don Trousdell of St. Augustine was also selected as one of the 25 obelisk artists.

“This was an important story for me to help tell because people didn’t realize how important this story was,” Trousdell said.

At almost 80 years old, Trousdell does mostly educational shows.

“I always have a story to tell in my paintings,” he said.

As for his obelisk, the theme is democracy — another one of the four pillars of the Spanish Constitution.

Research is important to Trousdell, and he said he’ll put a lot into the obelisk as he does with his other works of art.

“This is just fun for me because it’s an extension of what I do,” he said.

Both Master’s and Trousdell’s obelisks are to be at the Visitor Information Center.

To qualify to create art on the obelisk, artists were judged on a point system, with a total of 100 points possible.

The artist’s professional resume counted for 25 points, quality of past work was 50 points and artistic intention and ability was worth 25 points.

The artists for the temporary public project were pulled together by Cabeth Cornelius, Compassionate St. Augustine curator.

She said a simple yet specific call to artists was put out in an effort to get professional local, national and international artists interested in the project.

“I think we will surprise people with the quality of fabulousness that’s out there,” Cornelius said.

The call to artists was distributed by the St. Johns Cultural Council and the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville as well as statewide and national cultural organizations. Forty-three completed applications were received by the Feb. 1 deadline.

It was open to professional artists, without geographic restrictions.

Cornelius said most applications were from professional artists in the Southerneastern U.S., but applications were also received from France and Spain.

“As a curator, I differentiate not where an artist is from but where an artist shows their work,” she said.

Of the 43 that applied, 24 artists were chosen — 18 of which have national exhibition experience and nine have international exhibition experience.

On display

The 25th artist, Pablo Hugo Rozada Vena, is participating through the artist exchange with Aviles.

The three-person artist selection panel was made up of people outside St. Augustine to add objectivity to the selection process.

One judge was Wesley Gibbon, who is the associate director of J. Johnson Gallery in Jacksonville Beach.

Another was Glenn Weiss, who is a consultant for public art, streetscapes and civic enhancements in South Florida. Constance White was also on the panel. White is a council member of Public Art Network and Americans for the Arts. She is also vice president of public art at the Arts and Science Council of Charlotte-Mecklenburg in North Carolina.

Artists selected by the panel have extensive exhibition experience that includes local, national and international museum and gallery shows.

The obelisks, paid for through grants and private donations, will be on display in Flagler College’s Crisp-Ellert Art Museum from Sept. 5-30 and on public display from October to January.

“It’s not a one-shot thing or event that lasts for a day or a weekend,” Goldman said. “They’re there to spark conversations.”

St. Augustine Mayor Nancy Shaver said she’s a huge fan of art, making this project important to her.

“I am just incredibly enthusiastic about it. As someone once said, you either make art or you collect it. I collect it,” she said.

Shaver said she doesn’t think the city has seen a project like this before in terms of experiencing art that ties so closely to the city’s history.

“This highlights, to me, a part of our community that we all know about but now it’s going to be front and center,” she said.

5 comments:

Warren Celli said...

Regarding this ...

"Dear Ted, et al.
1. Please be sure to include domestic violence and anti-Gay hate crime victims in the Obelisk Art 450 project.
2. I just spoke to Patty O'Connell (Michelle O'Connell's mother).
3. Patty O'Connell, her granddaughter Alexis (Michelle's daughter), Michelle's sisters and brother, Patty's siblings, and others of us who love justice picketed the February 28, 2015 Noche de Gala in support of Justice for Michelle O'Connell.
4. Patty O'Connell and I are discussing both a potential boycott and picketing of OA 450 by GLBT and women's' groups.
5. This would likely be widely reported and televised, as on February 28, 2015
6. As Patty O'Connell just told me, OA 450 "can just build two more obelisks."
7. In the words of MLK in St. Augustine in 1964 (and General U.S. Grant a century before him), we are prepared to work to make this happen "if it takes all summer"
Thank you."

Some thoughts...

1. You just validated and legitimized the phony compassion Obelisk Art 450 project with your attention and your clamoring to be a part of it. This faulty premise program should not exist.

2. Worse, you now urge everyone to dissipate their energies on a relatively meaningless and very widespread boycott target.

3. If you want to mount an effective boycott (and let me say it is nice to the "Boycott" word finally coming to the fore here) you have to go for the throat of the true "perps". Those who created and schooled DAVID BERNARD SHOAR as a means to their selfish goals— the Saint Augustine Saint George Street merchants.

Excerpt;

"This is repeated from the first page;
Reversing the dysfunction... The power of one. Just as you have been shunned and marginalized one at a time, over time, the solution is to reverse the process. To take one issue at a time (the most egregious issue at hand; one that has the most people upset) and all focus on it as ONE, at the expense of all other issues.

I suggest that justice for Michelle O’Connell be that ONE issue and the focus of that consolidated power of ONE should be a BOYCOTT of those who most usurped and destroyed the Rule Of Law. Those who are most responsible for creating the arrogance of County Sheriff DAVID BERNARD SHOAR. It was his collusion in usurping the Rule Of Law with the gangster government of Saint Augustine (that serves as a very transparent front for the downtown merchants) that made their cash registers ka-ching! Just as he made their downtown merchant cash registers ka-ching (at our expense by destroying the Rule Of Law), so similarly, we should stop the ka-ching of their cash registers with a BOYCOTT to restore justice for Michelle O’Connell. Money is the oxygen of corruption, without money for oxygen corruption can not breathe.
If you are not yet convinced that you have no political representation, and that your Rule Of Law has been hijacked by a criminal enterprise, I ask you to reflect on the Michelle O’Connell travesty. It epitomizes the gross disparity in law enforcement that we all now face and confirms in fact that our political power has been hijacked."

More here...

http://saintaugdog.com/sadissues/issue1/1page18sad.html

Ed Slavin said...

Liberal phonies must be exposed. Click on the word "here" above to read more about this group.

Sheriff DAVID BERNARD SHOAR is under current active FBI investigation. Everyone with information should contact the Daytona Beach FBI office.

As LBJ said after Selma, "We SHALL overcome!"

Warren Celli said...

Great article on the KKK Art group!

I do not share your enthusiasm for the FBI. I would have more faith in an investigation by Santa Claus.

And did we all notice how Nancy, the chameleon, Shaver changes her morality to suit the situation.
Yes indeed, she is solidly in favor of this exclusionary KKK Art fiasco.

"St. Augustine Mayor Nancy Shaver said she’s a huge fan of art, making this project important to her.

“I am just incredibly enthusiastic about it. As someone once said, you either make art or you collect it. I collect it,” she said.

Shaver said she doesn’t think the city has seen a project like this before in terms of experiencing art that ties so closely to the city’s history.

“This highlights, to me, a part of our community that we all know about but now it’s going to be front and center,” she said.

Yes indeed again, we have another hopey changey phony on our hands. But what could one really expect from someone who would run for office in such a transparently hijacked gangster government?

Stupidity or deception? It is your call.

Ed Slavin said...

Warren, you're one in a million.

Do you think sometimes you:
1. Overstate your case?
2. Expect everyone to agree with you?
3. Misunderstand democracy?
4. Cast aspersions (or asparagus) instead of appreciating diversity?

We can't all be perfect (like you).

We can't meet your impossible expectations.

Sorry.

Warren Celli said...


Another unimaginative Green Wall Of $ilence messenger bashing deflection Ed.

Crumbunism has you, and Nancy the chameleon Shaver, firmly in its grasp.

http://saintaugdog.com/sadarticles/murderissue.html