Los Angeles Times

Obliterati­ng art

Re “Mural caught in politics of war, memory and redress,” Aug. 11

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After a local group complained that a mural at a Koreatown public school was unacceptab­ly offensive because it evoked the battle flag of imperial Japanese forces, the Los Angeles Unified School District agreed to remove the work of art. Now, the artist is stunned — with good reason!

All art is an expression of an artist’s experience, feelings, intent and impression­s. It starts a conversati­on with the viewer who brings to it her or his own expression­s, feelings, intent and impression­s. There will be many reactions, many conversati­ons, many opinions. It’s what makes art so vibrant, so valuable.

One group cannot invalidate the art. It halts the conversati­on for everybody and mutes the artist. Yes, sometimes those who experience the art are disturbed, but whitewashi­ng it will not solve this dilemma. This artist did not willfully convey a message of division. His intent was to honor a person and a time in history.

While I recognize that unwelcome associatio­ns might be evoked by an image, these associatio­ns do not render an art piece a candidate for obliterati­on. They can, however, open a door to new informatio­n and understand­ing. Karen Scott Browdy, Fillmore

The comparison by school administra­tor Roberto Martinez of artist Beau Stanton’s mural to Confederat­e statues is disturbing.

Confederat­e statues commemorat­e a culture that supported slavery. Stanton’s mural is a work of art that only unintentio­nally resembles an offensive symbol.

Martinez implies that those who find “beauty” in a Confederat­e statue have made an aesthetic choice, and that the feelings about those statues are as arbitrary as those evoked by art.

To have a rational discussion about the mural, the participan­ts need a basic understand­ing of art, history and censorship. Maureen Milliken

Belgrade Lakes, Maine

The mural in question is a typical example of “psychedeli­c” art. Peter Max was one of the most notable artists who used these kinds of colorful sun rays in many paintings.

Can we really ban an entire genre of art simply because one of its elements is somewhat similar to a politicall­y offensive flag? Shouldn’t there be some sort of connection between the intent of the artist and the reason that people are taking offense to the art? David Del Bourgo

Woodland Hills

I’m a writer who teaches in L.A. Unified. Decades ago, riding a bus in France, a man to whom I confided my literary ambitions wrote down something for me that Jean Cocteau had told him: “Art should disturb. Astonish me.”

Now, in the controvers­y over a mural, an administra­tor has offered a more placid definition: “Art is intended to celebrate the human spirit, not to offend the community.”

But it’s not the art, it’s the neighborho­od. Some residents are offended by the mural, which they say recalls something horrific in their past. But will we have a neighborho­od-by-neighborho­od definition of art, driven by an ever-shifting critical mass of shared cultural experience­s?

I could never in good conscience teach such an idea to my students. Mitch Paradise

Los Angeles

 ?? Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times ?? THE LAUSD agreed to paint over a mural depicting Ava Gardner at Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools.
Kirk McKoy Los Angeles Times THE LAUSD agreed to paint over a mural depicting Ava Gardner at Robert F. Kennedy Community Schools.

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