http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=13602
N.M. museum considers removing collage of bikini-clad
Virgin Mary
By The Associated Press
04.05.01
Bikini-clad version of Virgin Mary on exhibit at state Museum of International Folk Art in Sante Fe, N.M., shown April 3.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. The archbishop of Santa
Fe says a bikini-clad version of the Virgin Mary shown in a folk art museum
depicts her "as if she were a tart" and should be removed.
But Alma Lopez, the Los Angeles artist who designed the photo collage on a
computer, says she doesn't see what's offensive about showing the Virgin of
Guadalupe as a modern woman, "a strong woman, like us."
The regents of the Museum of New Mexico in Santa Fe yesterday began considering
whether to remove the work from the state-funded Museum of International Folk
Art, but ended up postponing the meeting because there was not enough room
to hold everyone who wanted to comment.
Museum officials said some 250 people were outside the standing-room-only
meeting of about 300 and were unable to attend.
The collage depicts Mary in a midriff-baring, two-piece outfit covered with
flowers. Mary stands barefoot, with arms akimbo and chin up in a pose that
could be interpreted as a defiant stance.
"It's a challenge to old images people have in their mind about Mary,"
said Jacqueline Orsini Dunnington, an independent expert who has written award-winning
books on the history of the Virgin of Guadalupe and on the Virgin Mary. Our
Lady of Guadalupe was a vision of Mary that appeared to a peasant in Mexico
in 1531.
Archbishop Michael Sheehan said he found Lopez's image insulting and expressed
frustration with Catholic images being singled out.
"No one would dream of putting Martin Luther King in speedos and desecrating
his memory by putting him in some outlandish outfit. I wouldn't want anyone
to do that," Sheehan said. "But somehow it seems open season on
Catholic symbols."
In recent years, Mary has also been shown "as a golden-haired Barbie
doll," he added.
Museum regents said they would try to find a larger meeting space to discuss
the issue and reschedule the meeting. By law, they have to advertise it for
72 hours in advance.
In 1999, the city-funded Brooklyn Museum of Art invoked the ire of New York
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani when they exhibited a painting of the Virgin Mary that
featured sexually explicit cutouts dappled with elephant dung.
On April 3, Giuliani appointed a 20-member "decency commission"
to judge the morality of public art after the Brooklyn Museum featured a 5-foot-tall
photograph of a nude black woman portraying Jesus surrounded by disciples,
titled "Yo Mama's Last Supper."
Giuliani called the photo "disgusting" and "anti-Catholic."
Both Sheehan and Giuliani argue the works are particularly offensive given
that they are displayed in state-funded institutions.
"I don't believe I'm promoting censorship," Sheehan said. "My
objection to the picture is not on the basis of morals, as if the bishop was
disapproving of a particular movie ... My objection is on the basis of the
insult to the religious beliefs of a very large number of people that look
at the Virgin Mary as being very holy. She is depicted in a floral bikini
as if she were a tart."
Lopez, in a written statement April 2, said she grew up in Los Angeles with
images of the "Virgen," as the word is spelled in Spanish, and that
Mary belongs to everybody.
"The Virgen is everywhere. She's on tattoos, stickers, posters, air freshener
cans, shirts and corner store murals as well as church walls," she wrote.
Lopez feels under attack by Sheehan and Jose Villegas, a Santa Fe resident
who said he was outraged by the bikini and by the bare-breasted female angel
included in the digital print.
"It violated the sacred boundaries of our culture," Villegas has
said.
Dunnington argued that the Virgin was invoked as a revolutionary icon for
Mexican independence in 1810. That invocation was expanded later to include
all ethnic and racial groups and genders.
"If she is an icon of freedom, the protesters then have to accord the
artist equal liberty," Dunnington said. "There has to be the right
to freedom of expression. That is what she has stood for."
Update
N.M. governor: Bikini-clad Virgin Mary should stay on display
If you take it down, then where do you draw the line on the next piece
of art? Gary Johnson asks in response to furor over artwork. 04.09.01