DISQUS

Civil War Memory: Sons of Confederate Veterans Object To Art

  • Glenn · 2 years ago

    I could care less about the Confederate flag (and yes, I am a Southerner) but if I did, I would find the display tasteless also.


    I also find tasteless the way many merchants and even the US Olympic Organization has used the US flag. I think the low point was when the men's swim team speedos were were designed in a manner similar to that of our flag. Then there was the Old Navy t-shirts appearing after 9-11 that had their logo on the t-shirt with the flag.


    Regards,


    Glenn

  • Brooks Simpson · 2 years ago

    I guess the question of whether one finds this dosplay tasteless and offensive depends upon one's perspective. Will the SCV respect my feelings if I find other displays of the Confederate flag to be tasteless and offensive?


    Rich irony indeed.

  • Kevin Levin · 2 years ago

    I guess that what this comes down to is one's First Amendment right to freedom of expression. I actuall find the exhibit to be a clever jab at history. Of course the SCV would like us to see the Confederate flag as simply the flag that soldiers carried into battle, but anyone who looks further knows that that flag was carried and used as a symbol against the civil rights movement. It was also present during a number of public lynchings. Why not respond by lynching the flag? It may be tasteless and offensive to some while others may find the sight to be liberating.

  • Clio Bluestocking · 2 years ago

    My first reaction was to laugh rather cynically. The piece takes everything that Kevin said, plus some, and conveys it in a powerful image. I see in it an execution of the pro-slavery, anti-Civil Rights messages with which the flag has represented. Art as historical interpretation; and the viewers' interpretations seems to say something about their own understandings of the flag.

  • matthew mckeon · 2 years ago

    Symbol of defending slavery in the 19th century, symbol of lynching in the early 20th century, symbol of segregation and resistance to civil rights in the mid to late 20th century. Sims' piece ties all these meanings together, and they hang together nicely.

  • Eclectica · 2 years ago
    Hang the ConfederateFlag.

    No need to worry, I am still firmly entrenched in my leftist ideology, on this issue at least.  You see, there is more than one way to hang a flag, as American artist John Sims has demonstrated in an exhibit currently displayed at the Mary Brogan Muse...