The Q Society & The First International Symposium on Liberty and Islam in Australia [overland]

I wrote an article for overland on The Q Society, a fan club dedicated to celebrating the fictional character Q who appears in the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Voyager the Australian organisation of semi-pro Islamophobes and their conference — ‘The First International Symposium on Liberty and Islam in Australia’ — which took place on the weekend. You can read it here.

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antifa notes (march 5, 2014)

RRTAA!

Australian Defence League

The ADL in Bendigo, Victoria — to be precise, a young neo-Nazi named Aaron Robertson — is upset that local Muslims are planning to build a mosque in town, so they’ve organised a rally to stop it. The rally is scheduled to take place midday on Saturday March 22 at Queen Elizabeth Oval … though I doubt the oval will be overflowing with protestors.

Australia First Party

Several weeks ago in Sydney, some anarchists redecorated the headquarters of the Australia First Party in Tempe, the site of numerous meetings of fascists and White supremacists: read more on indymedia. Nicknamed ‘The Bunker’, the party headquarters also hosted a notorious murder in 1991, in which one bonehead, Perry Whitehouse, shot to death another, Wayne “Bovver” Smith, after a drunken argument. The horrific incident, which took place on Uncle Adolf’s birthday, was recorded by ASIO. Otherwise, the address has served as one of the main centres for far right activity in Sydney for over three decades. As Greg Bearup writes, “In his 10th straight year at university but flush with his dead father’s cash, Jim Saleam bought a house at 725 Princes Highway, Tempe, for $90,000. It was 1983 and this grim little terrace, along the main trucking route to Port Botany and just beyond Sydney airport’s runways, has been the Australian headquarters for hate politics ever since.”

Last Friday, February 28, AF held a small demo outside the Greek consulate in Sydney in support of the Greek neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn. Word on the street is that the party is also organising a rally in Melbourne soon.

Australian Liberty Alliance // Party of Freedom

With the announcement that the Dutchman is going to launch another right-wing micro-party next year in Perth, the fledgling Party of Freedom — itself a splinter of the Australian Protectionist Party (the APP, in turn, being a splinter of the Australia First Party) — looks set to lose its mantle as the embodiment of Geert Wilders-style politicking Down Under. That, or dissolve itself into the Alliance, who knows? Certainly, the party has struggled to achieve much. Last month its freedom-loving members tried to organise a forum to denounce Africans (genetically-inferior criminals deserving sterilisation according to party leader Nick Folkes) but after being booted from one venue to the next ended up meeting at Serio Redegalli’s lounge room in Newtown instead. This weekend, anti-Muslim activists including Pamela Geller, Robert Spencer and Bill Muehlenberg will be meeting in Melbourne to discuss the deadly trade in Muslamic Rayguns a/k/a ‘The International Symposium on Islam and Liberty in Australia’.

Fun for the whole Judeo-Christian family.

Finally, in a piece of good news, Vietnamese student Ming Duong has been allowed to reenter Australia. In 2012, Minh was assaulted by a small group of boneheads, and earlier this year was forcibly deported as a result of a supposed visa violation. A petition calling on immigration authorities to allow him to return to the country in order to complete his studies attracted over 89,000 signatures.

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Internationalists issue declaration against war in Ukraine [libcom/aitrus]

… via libcom and ait, a statement on the situ in Ukraine … note that workers world published Statement of communist, left and anarchist forces of Russia on events in Ukraine on february 27 but i haven’t been able to work out which of the 22 groups listed is anarchist …

Internationalists and anarchists from Russia and elsewhere have issued a declaration condemning both the Russian and Ukrainian governments, arguing that the working class in both countries should reject nationalism and fight for their own interests.

Here is the declaration in its entirety:

Declaration of Internationalists against the war in Ukraine

War on war! Not a single drop a blood for the “nation”!

The power struggle between oligarchic clans in Ukraine threatens to escalate into an international armed conflict. Russian capitalism intends to use redistribution of Ukrainian state power in order to implement their long-standing imperial and expansionist aspirations in the Crimea and eastern Ukraine where it has strong economic, financial and political interests.

On the background of the next round of the impending economic crisis in Russia, the regime is trying to stoking Russian nationalism to divert attention from the growing workers’ socio-economic problems: poverty wages and pensions, dismantling of available health care, education and other social services. In the thunder of the nationalist and militant rhetoric it is easier to complete the formation of a corporate, authoritarian state based on reactionary conservative values and repressive policies.

In Ukraine, the acute economic and political crisis has led to increased confrontation between “old” and “new” oligarchic clans, and the first used including ultra-rightist and ultra-nationalist formations for making a state coup in Kiev. The political elite of Crimea and eastern Ukraine does not intend to share their power and property with the next in turn Kiev rulers and trying to rely on help from the Russian government. Both sides resorted to rampant nationalist hysteria: respectively, Ukrainian and Russian. There are armed clashes, bloodshed. The Western powers have their own interests and aspirations, and their intervention in the conflict could lead to World War III.

Warring cliques of bosses force, as usual, force to fight for their interests us, ordinary people: wage workers, unemployed, students, pensioners… Making us drunkards of nationalist drug, they set us against each other, causing us forget about our real needs and interests: we don`t and can`t care about their “nations” where we are now concerned more vital and pressing problems – how to make ends meet in the system which they found to enslave and oppress us.

We will not succumb to nationalist intoxication. To hell with their state and “nations”, their flags and offices! This is not our war, and we should not go on it, paying with our blood their palaces, bank accounts and the pleasure to sit in soft chairs of authorities. And if the bosses in Moscow, Kiev, Lviv, Kharkiv, Donetsk and Simferopol start this war, our duty is to resist it by all available means!

No war between “nations”-no peace between classes!

KRAS, Russian section of the International Workers Association
Internationalists of Ukraine, Russia, Moldova, Israel, Lithuania
Anarchist Federation of Moldova
Fraction of the Revolutionary Socialists (Ukraine)

The statement is open for signature

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[#19BOS] List of Biennale of Sydney artistes w contact deets

Update (March 7) : Late this afternoon the Biennale Board announced the resignation of its chair, Luca Belgiorno-Nettis, and the immediate suspension of its contract with its major sponsor, Transfield.

Briefly: this is a potentially significant step forward in the campaign to close the offshore prison camps, the murderous hellholes to which the Australian state confines thousands of asylum seekers. The camps generate both enormous harm for their inmates and very large incomes for the companies which run them, including Transfield. They operate in violation of both international law and basic human decency. Given the massively profitable nature of the industry, bi-partisan political, elite and strong popular support for the policy of mandatory detention, however, their closure remains a distant prospect at this stage …

Update (March 5) : Today four more artists — Nathan Gray, Agnieszka Polska, Sara van der Heide and Nicoline van Harskamp — have decided to boycott Transfield’s Biennale (read their statement here). Otherwise: ABC’s Radio National has been brought on board by the corporation, while several workers employed by the Biennale have also chosen to withdraw their labour.

The Transfield Biennale of Sydney begins March 21, one day before the Sydney Anarchist Bookfair.

LOL.

The following is an A-Z list of the roughly 100 artistes scheduled to exhibit on behalf of Transfield and, where possible, contact details.

As of this date [February 28: see Update] 5 artistes — Libia Castro, Ólafur Ólafsson, Gabrielle de Vietri, Ahmet Öğüt and Charlie Sofo — have withdrawn from the Biennale, while 47 [*] have signed an open letter of complaint to the Board re Transfield’s owner/sponsorship of the event. The 5 will presumably be joined by a number of other artistes in the intervening period, though how many is an open question. In any case, given that the Biennale runs over several months, there’ll be multiple opportunities to take action against it and to draw further attention to Transfield’s billion-dollar exploitation of refugees, as well as to promote a campaign of boycott, divestment and disruption of the state-corporate machinery directly perpetuating human rights abuses.

Or not …

#Straya

Sauce : #19BOS | See : Boycott Sydney Biennale | xb Ops

A

*Meriç Algün Ringborg [mericalgun@gmail.com]
*James Angus [rep by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery: oxley9@roslynoxley9.com]
*Sol Archer [facebook // sol.archer@gmail.com]
*Benjamin Armstrong [rep by Tolarno Galleries (facebook): mail@tolarnogalleries.com]

B

*Rosa Barba
*Yael Bartana [rep by Petzel Gallery: andrew@petzel.com (press liaison)]
*Martin Boyce [rep by Tanya Bonakdar Gallery: mail@tanyabonakdargallery.com]
Broersen & Lukács
*Eglė Budvytytė [?]

C

Mircea Cantor [doubleheadsmatches@yahoo.com]
Janet Cardiff and George Bures Miller [studio@cardiffmiller.com]
*Libia Castro and Ólafur Ólafsson
David Claerbout [rep by Galerie Micheline Szwajcer: contact@gms.be]
Bindi Cole [twitter]
*Nathan Coley
Joost Conijn
Michael Cook
Henry Coombes
Hubert Czerepok [rep by Zak Gallery: mail@zak-branicka.com]

D

Kate Daw [rep by Sarah Scout Presents: info@sarahscoutpresents.com]
*Gabrielle de Vietri
Tacita Dean [rep by Marian Goodman Gallery: twitter | facebook // rep by Frith Street Gallery: info@frithstreetgallery.com]
Yingmei Duan [yingmei@gmx.de]
*Mikala Dwyer [rep by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery: oxley9@roslynoxley9.com // Anna Schwartz Gallery: mail@annaschwartzgallery.com]

E

*Krisztina Erdei [krisztina.erdei@gmail.com]

F

*Fine Art Union [facebook // fineartunion@gmail.com // sgwetten@gmail.com]
Aurélien Froment [rep by Marcelle Alix: demain@marcellealix.com]
*Søren Thilo Funder [mail@sorenthilofunder.com]
*Bodil Furu [bodil@bodilfuru.com]

G

Douglas Gordon [rep by Gagosian Gallery: newyork@gagosian.com]
*Nathan Gray [twitter // nthngy@gmail.com]
*Joseph Griffiths [josephlgriffiths@gmail.com]
*Ane Hjort Guttu [ane@anehjortguttu.net]

H

*Hadley+Maxwell [studio@hadleyandmaxwell.net]
Henrik Håkansson
*Henna-Riikka Halonen [henpros@yahoo.co.uk // hennariikkahalonen@gmail.com]
*Siri Hermansen [post@sirihermansen.com]
*Bianca Hester [facebook]
*Matt Hinkley [hinkley.matt@gmail.com]
Roni Horn [?]
*Sasha Huber [sasha@sashahuber.com]

K

Agnieszka Kalinowska [rep by BWA Warszawa: bwawarszawa@gmail.com]
*Mikhail Karikis [mail@mikhailkarikis.com]
*Tamás Kaszás
*Deborah Kelly
Eva Koch [ek@evakoch.net]
Ignas Krunglevicius [twitter]

L

Jim Lambie
*Sonia Leber and David Chesworth [wax@waxsm.com.au]
Gabriel Lester [twitter // lester@gabriellester.com]
Norman Leto [facebook]
Zilla Leutenegger
Victoria Pihl Lind [?]
Ann Lislegaard [info@lislegaard.com]
Liu Bingye and Zhang Wenhua [?]
Marko Lulić [marko.lulic@chello.at]

M

*Ross Manning [rossfmanning@hotmail.com]
Renzo Martens
*Daniel McKewen [twitter // d.mckewen@gmail.com]
*Angelica Mesiti [angelica.mesiti@gmail.com]
Laurent Montaron [rep by Schleicher Lange: info@schleicherlange.com]
TV Moore [timothyvernonmoore@gmail.com]
*Callum Morton [rep by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery: oxley9@roslynoxley9.com]

N

Susan Norrie [Norrie sits on the Board of MCA: nicole.trian@mca.com.au (media & public relations)]

O

*Ahmet Öğüt
Mel O’Callaghan [contact@melocallaghan.com]

P

Tinka Pittoors [info@tinkapittoors.com]
Mathias Poledna [rep by Galerie Meyer Kainer: info@meyerkainer.com]
*Agnieszka Polska

R

Randi & Katrine
Augustin Rebetez and Noé Cauderay
Pipilotti Rist
Ugo Rondinone [rep by Sadie Coles: info@sadiecoles.com]
Maxime Rossi [maximerossi@gmail.com]
*Eva Rothschild [rep by 303 Gallery: info@303gallery.com]
*Emily Roysdon [twitter // roysdon@gmail.com]

S

Yhonnie Scarce [twitter]
Wael Shawky [rep by Sfeir-Semler Gallery: galerie@sfeir-semler.com/beirut@sfeir-semler.com]
Ann-Sofi Sidén and Jonathan Bepler [facebook]
*Charlie Sofo [twitter]
Gerda Steiner & Jörg Lenzlinger [gjpeng@bluewin.ch]
John Stezaker [rep by Richard Gray Gallery: info@richardgraygallery.com]
Christine Streuli [rep by Galerie Rupert Pfab: mail@galerie-pfab.com]
Taca Sui
*Corin Sworn [rep by Zeiher Smith:info@ziehersmith.com]

T

*Shannon Te Ao [twitter]
Anna Tuori [anna.tuori@welho.com]

V

*Sara van der Heide [mail@saravanderheide.nl]
Nicoline van Harskamp [mail@vanharskamp.net]
Ulla Von Brandenburg [rep by Pilar Corrias // facebook]

W

*Emily Wardill [rep by Jonathan Viner: info@jonathanvinergallery.com]
*Tori Wrånes

Z

Zhao Zhao [rep by Alexander Ochs Galleries: info@alexanderochs-galleries.de]

[NB. The following artistse signed the Open Letter to the Board of the Sydney Biennale From Participating Artists: Meriç Algün Ringborg, James Angus, Sol Archer, Benjamin Armstrong, Rosa Barba, Yael Bartana, Martin Boyce, Eglė Budvytytė, Libia Castro, David Chesworth, Nathan Coley, Gabrielle de Vietri, Mikala Dwyer, Krisztina Erdei, Søren Thilo Funder, Bodil Furu, Nathan Gray, Joseph Griffiths, Ane Hjort Guttu, Hadley+Maxwell, Henna-Riikka Halonen, Siri Hermansen, Bianca Hester, Matt Hinkley, Sasha Huber, Annette Stav Johanssen (Fine Art Union), Mikhail Karikis, Tamas Kaszas, Deborah Kelly, Sonia Leber, Ross Manning, Daniel McKewen, Angelica Mesiti, Callum Morton, Ahmet Öğüt, Ólafur Ólafsson, Agnieszka Polska, Eva Rothschild, Emily Roysdon, Charlie Sofo, Corin Sworn, Shannon Te Ao, Sara van der Heide, Emily Wardill, Synnøve G. Wetten (Fine Art Union), Tori Wrånes.]

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The SUWA Show, Friday, February 28 : Interviews w Liz Thompson [#ManusIsland] & Alana Lentin [#19BOS]

Tomorrow on the ‘Floating Anarchy’ edition of The SUWA Show (5.30pm Friday, February 28 on 855AM, streaming live on 3CR) Dr Cam & I have a yarn with Liz Thompson about Manus Island and Alana Lentin on the Biennale of Sydney. You may remember Liz from such shows as I Was Told To Lie (Dateline) and Alana from The Case for Open Borders (overland).

Otherwise, see : Cross Border Operational Matters blog & Boycott Sydney Biennale website.

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[#19BOS] Transfield Money Talks, Biennale Walks …

“The Biennale of Sydney has taken the correct and only viable course of maintaining its partnership with Transfield.”
~ Matthew Westwood, The Australian, February 25, 2014

“Well I just think that there’s a lot of black noise here where the public discourse has been taken over by these people concerned about the refugee situation — and that’s fair enough that people are concerned about [the] refugee situation — but to target the Biennale as they have targetted [it] with this perceived sponsorship of Transfield Services is I find it offensive to start with and I find it misleading at best … What I object to is people that are trying to exploit, if you like, this public event for their political agenda as important as that political agenda might be. It’s not for them to take a position within the event when they actually have no particular role within the event … What I object to, strongly, is that people outside of the Biennale are now critical of the Biennale for not somehow addressing the issue of refugee rights when in fact there is such tenuous connection or indeed, not only just tenuous, but there’s an argument that nothing that the Biennale or its supporters is doing is wrogn.”
~ Luca Belgiorno-Nettis, PM, February 24, 2014

“The boycott, like the social-media protest, will work short-term just, as Milliss has it “to assuage art world feelings of powerlessness or horror”.”
~ Helen Razer, Daily Review, February 20, 2014

Blah blah blah.

‘Transfield Services shares soar after it wins offshore detention centre contract’, Ben Butler, The Sydney Morning Herald, February 25, 2014:

Investors in Transfield Services have turned a blind eye to political risk attached to a $1.22 billion immigration detention centre contract, sending shares in the facilities management group soaring.

Transfield shares climbed 24.5 per cent to 99¢ in heavy trade on Monday after the company said the Abbott government had granted it a 20-month contract to operate a centre on Manus Island in Papua New Guinea that has been beset by deadly violence.

The new deal expands on Transfield’s existing contract to run the government’s other offshore detention centre, on Nauru, and increases the amount the government will pay to run the two centres from about $39 million a month to about $61 million a month.

Transfield, which was until October chaired by Tony Shepherd, who is heading the government’s Commission of Audit, replaces UK-listed G4S. Violence at the centre last week claimed the life of one detainee and forced the Minister for Immigration, Scott Morrison, to admit he had initially provided incorrect information about the fracas…

• There have been several sources of ‘correct information’ regarding events and processes at Manus Island in the past few days. Former administration worker and interpreter Azita Bokan was interviewed by Richard Glover on ABC Sydney last Friday (February 21, 2014) while migration agent Liz Thompson has been interviewed by Marni Cordell for New Matilda and by Mark Davis on Dateline (February 25, 2014). Both were compelled to blow the whistle on conditions at Manus and should be congratulated for their courage in doing so.

• Immigration lawyer Wenny Theresia has penned a response to the letter by the Board of the Biennale of Sydney — the one in which it pledged undying loyalty to the Belgiorno-Nettis family, declared that the Biennale is synonymous with the Transfield brand, and which was in turn a response to the ‘Open Letter to the Board of the Sydney Biennale From Participating Artists’ (February 19, 2014) — which you can read on the xclnt xBorderOperationalMatters blog here. Tomorrow it will be the artists turn to respond.

• Finally, this Saturday in Melbourne there will be a rally at the State Library at 1pm to demand the closure of the prison camps on Manus and Nauru.

Bonus Chomsky on Democracy!

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Sydney Anarchist Bookfair : Saturday, March 22, 2014

[press release]

Hundreds expected to attend first Sydney Anarchist Bookfair

For the first-time ever in Sydney, dozens of anarchist groups from across Australasia will be converging on Sydney for an ‘Anarchist Bookfair.’

The State and Capital are sure to shake in their boots at the sight of so many punks, trade unionists, feminists, queers, rabble-rousers and general ratbags all browsing books and discussing ideas.

Anarchist bookfairs started thirty years ago in the UK, and have since spread to cities all over the world. The original London Anarchist Bookfair now sees over 5,000 visitors attending and engaging with the radical ideas and texts. The bookfair was infamously described by prominent UK anarchist Ian Bone as ‘the anarchist Christmas’ – where anarchists come together, meet up with old friends – and enemies – and buy presents for themselves and others.

Bookfair spokesperson Nic Neven expects attendance at this year’s Bookfair to “reflect the fact that more and more people are beginning to search for an alternative to the chaotic political system that is capitalism.”

“There’s something for everyone at the Anarchist Bookfair,” Nic Neven concluded. “You don’t have to be an anarchist or even to know anything about anarchism to come along. All you need is a willingness to explore and share new ideas. A few hours spent at the Anarchist Bookfair will indeed be a well spent few hours of your life.”

Highlights on the meeting schedule include:

Organising against the G20 summit taking place in November in Brisbane: Let’s send these state representatives packing- Direct action workshop.

Michael Schmidt, co-author of Black Flame- Revolutionary Class Politics of Anarchism and Syndicalism:

Revolutionary anarchism gained a foothold in the daily lives of the popular classes 15 decades ago in the heart of the industrialised world – but also, crucially, in the colonial and post-colonial worlds where it offered the oppressed a practical set of tools with which they could challenge the tiny, heavily armed, parasitic elites. Anarchism provided the most devastating and comprehensive critique of capitalism, landlordism, the state, and power relations in general, whether based on gender, race, or other forms of oppression and exploitation. But it went far beyond that: African historian Michael Schmidt examines the anarchist practice of running cities in Spain during the Cantonalist Revolt of 1873-1874, their control of the city of Guangzhou in China over 1921-1923, of the two-million-strong Shinmin free zone in Manchuria of 1929-1931, the anarchist-influenced free zone in Nicaragua in 1927-1933, the better-known territorial control exercised in parts of Mexico, Ukraine, and Spain, and their involvement in the Iranian Revolution of 1978. These and other examples show that far from eschewing the exercise of power, anarchists actively decentralised power into the hands of the popular classes, a “counter-power” enlivened by working class counter-culture.

* Michael is an investigative journalist from South Africa and will be representing the Instituto do Teore e Historico Anarquismo (ITHA) of Brazil.

Bookstalls carrying an array of radical literature and books, and information stalls from a huge number of campaign groups will be set up for the day. Among the organisations hosting Bookstalls and information stalls will be AK Press, Pluto Press, Jura Books, Black Rose, environmental and workplace campaigning groups and many more

Full details of the meetings, bookstalls and information stands can be found at www.sydneyanarchistbookfair.com or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/sydneyanarchistbookfair

22 March – Addison Rd Community Centre, Marrickville

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#19BOS Action: Biennale of Sydney and Transfield [5.30pm, Monday, February 24, Melbourne]

[Update (February 24) : ACCA cancelled the address by the Biennale director promoting the event citing security concerns (Melbourne arts event halted over fears of mass protest over involvement of Transfield Services, ABC). About 50 or so people rocked up anyways and had a yarn about the Biennale. My prediction? Things are gonna get worse ...]

Monday in Melbourne:

Stage a creative protest outside ACCA during their talk promoting the 19th Biennale of Sydney, in order to draw attention to Transfield’s sponsorship of the event. Please share ideas regarding peaceful, creative actions that can be undertaken outside the venue.

The Australian Centre for Contemporary Art is located at 11 Sturt Street, Southbank, Melbourne.

See also : Open letter from artists to the Board of Directors of the Biennale of Sydney [#19BOS] (February 19, 2014) | Boycott the 19th Biennale of Sydney [#19bos] (February 14, 2014) | The Biennale boycott and diversity of tactics, Matt, xborderoperationalmatters, February 19, 2014.

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Against the Boycott of the 19th Biennale of Sydney [#19bos]

[... some friendly notes in response to the reply by the Board of Directors of the Biennale of Sydney to an open letter by concerned artists ...]

Firstly, let us say that we truly empathise with the artists in this situation.

A positive beginning: seeking to establish common ground with artists whose work will be on display at the Biennale achieves two aims. First, it invites a sympathetic response. Secondly, it helps to negate the possibility that the interests of the Biennale (or, to be precise, its governing Board) and that of participating artists — especially those who’ve expressed particular concerns about Transfield’s sponsorship — are in fact in real conflict.

Like them, we are inadvertently caught somewhere between ideology and principle. Both parties are ‘collateral damage’ in a complex argument. Neither wants to see human suffering.

Again: an emphasis upon the existence of common predicaments and concerns, the re-framing of the link between Transfield, the Biennale and the prison camps in terms of its ‘accidental’ nature, and the relegation of the debate to the realm of complex questions of ideology and principle serves to obscure the real questions being posed to the Board by artists. (Note that the use of the term ‘collateral damage’, while appropriate, may also, perhaps “inadvertently”, bring to mind the conditions from which many of the asylum seekers are fleeing, and thus serve to remind the reader that, in these contexts, ‘collateral damage’ means something rather more significant than, say, negotiating awkward dinner party conversations on the matter of the relationship between art and politics or the political responsibilities of The Artist. But this is a minor criticism.)

Artists must make a decision according to their own understanding and beliefs. We respect their right to do so.

Although there is some risk in issuing banalities such as these — artists think, reflect, act upon, and have a right to act upon their considered beliefs — it tends to underline the overall seriousness which the Board would like artists to understand it adopts in reference to their support of a potential boycott. Additionally, for those artists who merely wish to have their concerns recognised, such statements may well be sufficient to placate their conscience.

While being mindful of these valid concerns, it is this Board’s duty to act in the interests of the Biennale and all its stakeholders – our audiences, government partners, staff, benefactors and sponsors, along with all Biennale artists and the broader arts sector.

Extending the domain of concern away from asylum seekers — whose plight is at the core of the artists’ open letter — to the responsibility the Board carries with regards the many parties with an interest in ensuring its success is a significant and worthwhile endeavour. It is especially so if one considers asylum seekers and refugees as being naturally excluded from “the broader arts sector”, a position for which there is of course ample evidence.

On the one hand, there are assertions and allegations that are open to debate. On the other, we have a long-term history of selfless philanthropy, which has been the foundation of an event that has served the arts and wider community for the past 40 years.

A very worthy gambit. Re-framing the relationship between Transfield and the Biennale in terms of “assertions and allegations”, and pitting these against Transfield’s demonstrable support for the arts (and by extension the “wider community” — from which, naturally, asylum seekers and refugees are excluded), serves to foreground the worthy qualities of the Biennale and, moreover, those of Transfield. In emphasising Transfield’s “selfless” philanthropy, the statement also: a) subtly underlines the precarious nature of this support (with all that that entails for artists, both participating and non-participating) and; b) draws attention to the sense of moral obligation artists and others can and should feel in exchange for this support.

The Biennale’s ability to effectively contribute to the cessation of bi-partisan government policy is far from black and white. The only certainty is that without our Founding Partner, the Biennale will no longer exist.

This is another key point, one which displaces political responsibility onto others (government) and thereby serves to depoliticise the Biennale: to effectively remove the political rationale for participating in a boycott. It also serves to further obscure the very real, material links between the profits Transfield generates from its investments in the prison industry, on the one hand, and that small proportion of these profits which it then ‘selflessly’ uses to fund the Biennale, on the other hand. In other words, the statement recasts the purpose of the boycott in terms of altering government policy rather than seeking to sever the link between Transfield and the Biennale. A more subtle (and therefore appropriate) recognition of this fact is given in the subsequent statement, which underscores the fact that, amidst a sea of assertions, allegations, ideologies, principles, complexities and so on, opposing Transfield’s investment in the Biennale amounts to a desire for the Biennale’s extinguishment.

Consequently, we unanimously believe that our loyalty to the Belgiorno-Nettis family – and the hundreds of thousands of people who benefit from the Biennale – must override claims over which there is ambiguity.

This is a risky manoeuvre, despite the reference to ‘ambiguity’ (see above). First, it explicitly ties the interests of the Biennale to one wealthy, if philanthropic, family. For those whose fortunes, artistic or otherwise, depend upon the good graces of the Belgiorno-Nettis family, such expressions of loyalty make good sense. But what of those many more people for whom such expressions make little or no sense? A partial remedy is obtained through invoking the notion of a widely extended family: the Biennale audience. Nevertheless, the statement risks allowing critics to dismiss the Board’s statement as proceeding from a vulgar (in the sense of common, material) stake in protecting its own interests; these being dependent, apparently, upon the issuance of an oath of fealty. (The fact that Luca Belgiorno-Nettis chairs the Board is a further complicating factor.) Secondly, if one is to invoke family ties in this context, the unfortunate because inescapable reality is that asylum seekers and refugees have friends and families too, and if a utilitarian argument is to be mounted on this basis, the interests thousands of families have in ensuring their loved ones are uncaged trumps the interest one family has in appearing to be selflessly committed to the arts.

While we unequivocally state our support and gratitude for our sponsor’s continued patronage, we also extend an invitation to the Working Group to engage with us in dialogue with the purpose of finding an acceptable accommodation.

The establishment of some kind of ‘working group’ is an excellent suggestion, one which has proven in the past to be an effective means of defusing criticism of alleged corporate wrongdoing. Ideally, artists will split over the issue of whether or not to enter into a dialogue, its scope, terms and conditions. Those reluctant to commit to an actual boycott are thereby provided with an opportunity to do something ‘constructive’ (perhaps even create a work decrying the situation of asylum seekers), a pose which can be usefully contrasted with the negativity of those (probably very few, if any) artists who may choose to withdraw from the Biennale. Support for dialogue and constructive engagement of this sort can also easily be obtained from other artists and commentators, and functions effectively to undermine any notion of solidarity among artists committed to a boycott.

The Biennale has long been a platform for artists to air their sometimes challenging but important views unfettered and we would like to explore this avenue of expression, rather than see the demise of an important community asset.

Drawing attention to the role of the Biennale in providing artists with an opportunity to engage in political and social critique is a crucial tool in the counter-propaganda campaign. It assumes further importance when the penalty for refusing to do so — that is, to engage in an actual boycott of the event — means, as the Board claims, the demise of the Biennale, a “community asset” which exists only as a result of the generosity of a wealthy and influential family to whom one owes a display of loyalty.

In summary: the Board’s statement is a worthy, if occasionally flawed piece, one which will hopefully contribute to the disruption of a boycott call, rally artists and commentators in support of the Biennale, create some small degree of confusion among artists, and provide a suitable basis for a continued counter-propaganda campaign. Thus while there has been a good deal of negative public relations generated by the boycott campaign’s focus upon Transfield’s links to the Biennale, the situation is far from unsalvageable, and the coming weeks will provide many opportunities for the Board and for Transfield to hammer home the points raised in its statement:

• the link between the Biennale and the imprisonment of asylum seekers is obscure;
• the Biennale provides an important platform for artists to express political and social concerns;
• support for a boycott will do nothing to ‘free the refugees’;
• the appropriate target for protesting mandatory detention is government;
• support for a boycott endangers the future of the Biennale.

Mobilising personal and professional contacts within the culture industry to support the Biennale is an appropriate task for both members of the Board and for its PR agent [art]iculate, “Australia’s leading consultancy specialising in visual arts & contemporary culture”. Appropriate care should be exercised when cultivating such support: the most useful critics of the boycott are those able to assume a perspective independent of any reliance on the Biennale or Transfield for direct or indirect funding or support.

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#19BOS : Biennale of Sydney responds to critics …


Above : 23yo asylum seeker Reza Berati, killed on Manus Island.

The Biennale of Sydney has issued the following statement in response to an open letter from concerned artists:

Firstly, let us say that we truly empathise with the artists in this situation.

Like them, we are inadvertently caught somewhere between ideology and principle. Both parties are ‘collateral damage’ in a complex argument. Neither wants to see human suffering.

Artists must make a decision according to their own understanding and beliefs. We respect their right to do so.

While being mindful of these valid concerns, it is this Board’s duty to act in the interests of the Biennale and all its stakeholders – our audiences, government partners, staff, benefactors and sponsors, along with all Biennale artists and the broader arts sector.

On the one hand, there are assertions and allegations that are open to debate. On the other, we have a long-term history of selfless philanthropy, which has been the foundation of an event that has served the arts and wider community for the past 40 years.

The Biennale’s ability to effectively contribute to the cessation of bi-partisan government policy is far from black and white. The only certainty is that without our Founding Partner, the Biennale will no longer exist.

Consequently, we unanimously believe that our loyalty to the Belgiorno-Nettis family – and the hundreds of thousands of people who benefit from the Biennale – must override claims over which there is ambiguity.

While we unequivocally state our support and gratitude for our sponsor’s continued patronage, we also extend an invitation to the Working Group to engage with us in dialogue with the purpose of finding an acceptable accommodation.

The Biennale has long been a platform for artists to air their sometimes challenging but important views unfettered and we would like to explore this avenue of expression, rather than see the demise of an important community asset.

After the Kapp Putsch of 1920 (an attempt by the radical right to violently overthrow the new Weimar Republic) clashes occurred between the army and workers in Dresden. A bullet went through the window of the Zwinger Gallery and damaged a Rubens painting. Incensed by the incident, Kokoschka – then art professor at the Dresden Academy – financed an appeal which appeared in local newspapers and as wallposters, urging the two sides to settle their scores well away from cultural treasures. Kokoschka’s elevation of art above political struggle outraged Grosz and Heartfield (political art activists) who replied with a furious polemic ‘Der Kunstlump’ (The Artist As Scab) ridiculing the idea that art could be considered more important than lives of workers. They welcomed the fact that bullets had penetrated galleries, palaces and a Rubens, rather than the homes of the poor.”

~ Photomontage: A Political Weapon, David Evans & Sylvia Gohl, Gordon Fraser, 1986

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