DPA Press Release: Artist, Activist Tony Papa to Highlight Cruel Drug War with Art Installation at John Jay College
For Immediate Release: August 7, 2007
Contact: Tony Newman at 646-335-5385
Artist, Activist Tony Papa to Highlight Cruel Drug War with Art Installation at Criminal Justice Conference at John Jay College in NYC on August 9-10
Show Visually Depicts Major Tragedies of Drug War: âTwo Years for One Jointâ; âHIV Due to Dirty Syringesâ; âRacial Disparity of Drug Warâ
Papa Discovered Art in Prison and Painted His Way to Freedom after 12 Years Behind Bars Under Draconian Drug Laws
Noted artist, activist and author Anthony Papa will highlight the casualties of the war on drugs in an art installation during a conference titled âOn the Edge: Transgression and the Dangerous Other on August 9 and 10 at John Jay College of Criminal Justice located at 899 10th Ave. in New York City. The conference will involve presentations, art and photographic exhibits, music, spoken word performances and film screenings centered around the concept of a new criminology for the 21st century.
âThe Drug Warâ is an art installation by artist/activist Anthony Papa. The installation is a multi-media presentation that visually portrays some of the most compelling drug war issues in the news. The visual narratives in the installation are powerful reminders of the raging war on drugs that ravages many of our communities. âThe use of art as a political weapon is not new,â says Papa who discovered his political awareness through his art and has used his art as a vehicle to fight the drug war. âThrough history, the role of the artist as a social commentator has been invaluable.â
âLike Picassoâs âGuernicaâ and Goyaâs âThird of May,â which both powerfully portrayed the atrocities of war, my installation follows their lead in revealing the impact of Americaâs drug war.
Papa spent 12 years in prison for a first time non-violent drug offense. While imprisoned, he discovered his artistic talent. In 1995, after a showing of his art at the Whitney Museum, his case attracted national attention. Two years later, New York Governor George Pataki granted Papa executive clemency. Papa currently works for the Drug Policy Alliance.
The installation highlights issues that affect all Americans, whether they use drugs or not. It is steeped in a continuous motif of an upside down American flag, which signifies the universal concept of the state of distress in war.
âJustice in Black and Whiteâ shows the racial imbalance of the effects of the New Yorkâs Rockefeller Drug Laws. Ninety-four percent of those incarcerated under the laws are black and Latino. Ten crying babies dress in prison garb dangle in front of their incarcerated mothers and ask âwhere are our mothers?â
âTwo Years in Jail for One Jointâ shows the madness of the drug war. Mitchell Lawrence, an 18-year-old was sentenced to two years in jail for one joint by an over zealous prosecutor in Massachusetts. A single golden joint sits in a silver jewelry box surrounded by dozens of candles
âGive Them All Dirty Needles and Let Them Dieâ - taken from the cruel quote of TVâs âJudge Judyâ - boldly illustrates how New Jersey is the only U.S. state that lacks a needle exchange program. Dozens of bloodied syringes penetrate a coffin draped with the New Jersey flag.
In âCops or Docsâ a marijuana plant asks the question who should decide what medicine we should put in our bodies.
âGot a Cold? Prove it and Sign the Logâ portrays the hoops Americans must now jump through to buy cold medicine due to the federal governmentâs desire to monitor our everyday actions in the name of the curbing the methamphetamine âepidemic.â Papa hopes the installation raises awareness for those in mainstream society who rarely think about the drug war.
âI use my art as a means of visually translating the deep emotional responses of the human condition,â Papa said. âMy life choices forced me to discover my hidden artistic talent.â
For more conference info: www.jjay.cuny.edu/ontheedge/
Permission to Reprint: This content is licensed under a modified Creative Commons Attribution license. Content of a purely educational nature in Drug War Chronicle appear courtesy of DRCNet Foundation, unless otherwise noted.