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At Penn State Abington, it’s not easy being green
Controversy swirled before the April 28 opening of the Penn State Abington student show, “Jonathan’s Descent.” Three days prior, around 60 students and faculty gathered to hold a “” protest to discuss questions such as “Was Jesus ever a frog?” and “What does it mean to portray Jesus as a frog?” While this may sound absurd at first blush, these questions arose due to art student Ashaundei Smith’s installation of a seven-foot cross bearing a frog with a crown of barbed wire — a display that some who participated in the teach-in “anti-Christian hate speech.”
Beyond the fact that what some call hate speech is usually protected by the First Amendment, this characterization is particularly interesting in light of the installation’s context. The work is part of a larger exhibit from the university’s interdisciplinary program, which brings together students studying art, psychology, game modeling, writing, graphic novels, web development, and video production to create thematically linked projects. Smith created the work to accompany a which students, including Smith, collaborated on. The installation reflects one of the final scenes in the graphic novel, when a “man of the church,” who is slowly transforming into a frog as he pursues a selfish quest to become a savior in his own right, is crucified when the metamorphosis is complete. While the artist’s intent does not negate the feelings of the protestors, this is a prime example of how one person’s “anti-Christian hate speech” can be another person’s morality tale laden with Christian themes.
The Penn State Abington Art Program released a statement via on April 28 in support of both Smith and the teach-in participants:
We are deeply proud of how Penn State Abington has handled this controversy. Our administration has not censored artistic expression, those with divergent opinions of the work have been given opportunity to air their concerns, and the dialogue that has followed remains civil, respectful and deeply engaging, a positive educational experience we did not plan and could never artificially create in the classes we teach.
FIRE applauds Penn State Abington for cultivating a productive discussion around Smith’s exhibit without resorting to censorship of either side. This is the “more speech” approach at work, and it dovetails nicely with the educational role of the university.
Other universities that have faced similar controversies could learn from Penn State Abington’s example.
In December 2016, for example, FIREhad to step in to discourage Winthrop University from pursuing disorderly conduct charges against a student who helped produce an anti-lynching art installation that Winthrop University president Daniel F. Mahony declared “hurtful.”
This April, FIREalso wrote to the University of New Hampshire to protest the removal of a student’s anti-sexual-harassment exhibit, which displayed statistics on street harassment and real-life examples of catcalls directed at survey respondents.
And just this month, controversy hit when a professor and chair of the Africology and African American studies department successfully called for the removal of a painting by African American artist Jennifer Cruté, arguing that some faculty and students were “upset” by the artwork and found it “insensitive.” The artwork was originally part of an exhibit to critique how “Black bodies are specifically represented to children” Douglas Greenfield, the associate director of the Intellectual Heritage Program at Temple’s College of Liberal Arts.
In each of these cases, there was no question that the intent of the art was to provoke an emotional response and critical thinking about the artist’s chosen subject matter — whether it be race, religion, or gender. What one does with these emotions is up to the viewer and calling for censorship is within the rights of viewers. But what cannot stand is universities stepping in to oblige those illiberal calls. Censoring controversial works of art undermines the societal value of artistic freedom. As Ashaundei Smith told ĂŰÖĎăĚŇ:
[A]rt has historically served as a critique of its environment, whether religious, political, or interpersonal, in an attempt to enlighten the audience. I’m reminded of Francisco Goya’s and Picasso’s and the impact they had in exposing the horrors of war. Art takes many forms but has always served a higher purpose than to look pretty.
The protest at Penn State Abington and the response from the university should serve as a model for how universities should respond to controversies over artistic and political expression. Despite disagreements about the intent, effect, and message conveyed by the installation, the best response is to facilitate discussion, rather than oblige calls for censorship.
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