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Letter to the Editor

Issue date: 5/6/09 Section: Opinion
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Dear Editor,

I would like to respond to the letter submitted by John Gordon in the April 20 edition of the St. Norbert Times. As a religious studies and fine art student who respectfully disagrees with several of his points, I felt inclined to respond.

Gordon first advises that the Art discipline should have banned one student's photograph containing a nude penis from display in the senior art show. In contrast, I argue that Art appropriately encouraged the exhibit. Having casually observed the artist's sincere artistic process towards the completion of this final portfolio, it was evident to me that this work was not an impulsive, ephemeral result of a momentary thought. The artwork resulted from years of artistic process and development.

Consequently, I suggest that the work is not immature but is actually courageous. When it becomes comfortable to ignore certain topics, provocative artwork invites us to honestly reflect and converse, inciting a process of growth. Though the criticized artwork did make me uncomfortable, it was anything but immature; when asked to confront our own fears and insecurities, however, it is natural that we all become diffident and defensive. This response is helpful in gaining knowledge and understanding of ourselves and our world.

In addition, the objection focused on the image that contained a penis, although the display was a series of six images and contained nude women and men. Only the male genitalia elicited Gordon's attention, suggesting a qualitative difference in the acceptability of male and female nudity.

Gordon suggests that the photograph should not be exhibited at a Catholic institution. As a religious studies major and art minor, I recognize that much of Catholic art has prophetically challenged social norms and made people uneasy. It pushes the viewer into the ground between comfort and discomfort; rather than making artwork inappropriate, the middle ground is an ideal opportunity for conversation and learning. If St. Norbert College promotes true academic freedom, our Catholic identity should encourage rather than limit the endeavors of a student who authentically pursues her artistic questions. Consequently, I am inclined to wonder if the objections raised are guised as a superior morality and defense of true artistic expression but implicitly promote a personal agenda.
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John Patrickus

posted 5/08/09 @ 9:11 PM CST

Your letter brought up many good points. However the question is not the process used but the product produced. When this is considered as "art" and "anything" is "art", then art becomes nothing. (Continued…)

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