Miami Herald

Arts nonprofit is accused of ‘censoring’ pro-Palestinia­n art installati­on in Miami Beach

- BY AMANDA ROSA arosa@miamiheral­d.com

A growing group of South Florida artists is raising the alarm after local nonprofit Oolite Arts removed a public artwork due to complaints about alleged “hate speech” and “political” content.

Miami visual artist Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên, who goes by Vũ and uses they/them pronouns, posted a statement online this week about the removal, which they said amounts to censorship. To show solidarity with Vũ, South Florida artists and arts profession­als are calling for accountabi­lity and have postponed an art exhibition that was supposed to open this week at Oolite’s Lincoln Road location.

The artwork in question, called “How we live like water,” had been on display in the window of a Miami Beach Walgreens since March 27. (Walgreens and Oolite Arts have partnered to display artwork in two storefront windows since 1999 for a program called Windows @ Walgreens.)

Part of the artwork subtly references the proPalesti­nian phrase “from the river to the sea,” which Israel supporters refer to as anti-Semitic hate speech that calls for violence against Jews. According to Vũ’s statement, Oolite decided to remove the artwork on May 3 after the Board of Directors received a letter from a “group of Jewish lawyers” who took offense to the art. Oolite did not consult with Vũ about the artwork’s removal until after the fact, the artist said.

“The arbitrary removal of my artwork sets a dangerous precedent for censorship within contempora­ry arts institu

tions and sends a chilling message to artists everywhere that we are not free to express ourselves,” Vũ wrote. “We cannot allow censorship to become the norm within artistic communitie­s, nor can we condone actions that stifle creativity and silence marginaliz­ed voices.”

Alongside Vũ’s statement is an open letter signed by a list of South Florida artists and others who work in the arts and disagree with Oolite’s removal of the artwork. They urged the organizati­on to reconsider. As of publicatio­n, the letter had more than 300 signatures.

The artists — many of whom have their studios at Oolite locations or have worked with the organizati­on — are demanding transparen­cy from Oolite about its decision, a town hall to discuss the matter and for Board Chair Marie Elena Angulo to step down.

The artists’ letter reads: “Art should be a space for exploratio­n, dialogue, and mutual understand­ing, not a battlegrou­nd for censorship and suppressio­n. We believe that as a wellrespec­ted and well-funded institutio­n, Oolite Arts has a responsibi­lity to uphold artistic freedom and resist censorship.”

In a statement sent to the Miami Herald, the Oolite Arts Board of Trustees said it is “committed to evaluating our decision-making in this matter and to put in place policies so that artists we work with have clear guidelines and expectatio­ns.” The board will work with an independen­t consultant to review the incident and provide recommenda­tions for the future, the statement said.

“The Oolite Arts Board of Trustees deeply regrets that the removal of Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên’s artwork has offended some in our community, and that its contents offended others in our community. We believe strongly in the right to artistic expression, but the particular phrase highlighte­d in this piece is perceived by many as a literal call for violence against them,” the board said. “As an organizati­on that exists for artists, we do wish we had taken more time to have deeper conversati­ons with the artist, our staff and other stakeholde­rs about the work and our decision.”

The controvers­y in Miami’s close-knit arts community comes at a time of heightened tensions and criticisms nationally and internatio­nally over the Israel-Hamas war.

After the militant group attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people and taking over 200 hostages, Israel responded with airstrikes and ground invasions into Gaza, killing an estimated 34,000 people, according to Hamas-run Gaza’s Health Ministry, as reported by The Associated Press. The head of the United Nations food agency recently said northern Gaza is experienci­ng “full-blown famine.”

This isn’t the first time a Miami arts institutio­n has removed an artwork related to Palestinia­n people. In March, Hyperaller­gic reported that the Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Miami quietly removed a portrait of the Palestinia­n-American scholar Edward Said and later re-installed the piece.

BEHIND THE ART

In their statement, Vũ explained that Oolite approved the art installati­on on Oct. 5 to be on display this year. The artwork was supposed to be on view at the Walgreens on 67th Street and Collins Avenue until June 16. (The Herald reached out to Vũ for comments but had yet to receive a response.)

A page on Oolite’s website about “How we live like water” likened the artwork to “a visual network that illuminate­s the elemental power of water, emphasizin­g its unifying force that transcends borders and cultures.” The descriptio­n goes on to explain that the artwork explores how water provides life and is a force of change “in the face of profound global shifts, including instances of mass upheaval, genocide and ecocide.”

The full installati­on includes pottery, fishing net and paintings. Then there is the point of contention: the use of the phrase “from the river to the sea.” Instead of the word “river,” there is an image that Vũ took of the Jordan River. Instead of the word “sea,” there is an image that Vũ took of the Atlantic Ocean off Miami Beach.

Vũ was born in a rural part of Vietnam and immigrated to the United States with Vũ’s family as a child. According to the artists’ open letter, Vũ is a child of refugees and was displaced due to “American interventi­on in the region.” The open letter also draws a comparison between the anti-Vietnam War protests of the 1960s to the current protests on college campuses against the war in Gaza.

“Vũ’s artwork references water as a site of struggle for all oppressed peoples,” the open letter reads. “The work invokes the phrase ‘from the river to the sea’ as a reminder to viewers that water is a precious, borderless resource that connects us all.”

Vũ said the removed artwork is “an expression of solidarity with oppressed people of the world and a call for peace and justice in the face of ongoing injustices.”

Though Oolite had green lit Vũ’s installati­on months prior, Vũ wrote the interim co-director said the board decided that the artwork was in violation of the organizati­on’s diversity, equity and inclusion code. Vũ’s statement and the artists’ open letter place blame squarely on the Board of Directors and its chair, Angulo.

“Oolite Arts did not give me the opportunit­y to engage in dialogue or to further clarify my intention behind my artwork,” Vũ said.

‘SOMEBODY PICKED A SIDE’

The artwork’s removal shocked Chire Regans, the renowned Miamibased artist also known as VantaBlack.

Regans said she’s very familiar with Oolite and has rapport with numerous staff members. She’s currently an artist-inresidenc­e at Oolite, has been featured in Oolite exhibition­s and has received several awards from the organizati­on. In 2020, Oolite presented her with the inaugural Ellie’s Social Justice Award.

Regans is one of 17 Oolite artists-in-residence featured in “Everything is a Spiral,” an exhibition curated by Dejha Carrington. The artists and curator collective­ly decided to postpone the show, which was scheduled to open on Wednesday.

She learned about the removal in a groupchat with fellow artists last week and immediatel­y reached out to an Oolite staff member to ask about it. The staffer said Angulo made the decision, so Regans spoke with her, too. In their conversati­on, Regans said, Angulo said the Oolite-Walgreens partnershi­p cannot platform “political art.”

Regans took issue with that reasoning because artwork centering on politicall­y charged issues such as book bans and immigratio­n have been displayed in Walgreens windows, she said. A staff member told Regans that Oolite had received complaints from the public about previous art installati­ons, but “they always fielded those complaints and quashed the concern without removal of the artwork.”

“It shows me that somebody picked a side,” Regans said about the removal. “Somebody decided to stifle collective dialogue. When you stifle dialogue, you stifle freedom, you stifle expression, you stifle voices. That isn’t beneficial to anyone.”

The board’s decision was a “knee-jerk reaction,” and the situation was handled improperly, Regans added. She disagrees with the notion that Vũ’s installati­on was hate speech, describing the work as “absolutely beautiful.”

Regans hopes to see Oolite host an open forum to listen to artists’ concerns and feedback.

“I hope the arts community understand­s that power is perception. Power lies where you think it resides,” Regans said. “If you think that us, as a community of artists, are powerful, than we absolutely are. These institutio­ns that claim to serve artists do not exist without our active participat­ion.”

This story was produced with financial support from individual­s and Berkowitz Contempora­ry Arts in partnershi­p with Journalism Funding Partners as part of an independen­t journalism fellowship program. The Miami Herald maintains full editorial control of this work.

 ?? Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên ?? Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên’s artwork was removed from a Miami Beach Walgreens by Oolite Arts after complaints about a portion of the work referencin­g the pro-Palestinia­n phrase ‘from the river to the sea.’
Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên Vũ Hoàng Khánh Nguyên’s artwork was removed from a Miami Beach Walgreens by Oolite Arts after complaints about a portion of the work referencin­g the pro-Palestinia­n phrase ‘from the river to the sea.’

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