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Today's Stories December 2 / 3, 2006 Barucha Calamity
Peller December 1, 2006 Greg Grandin Linn Washington,
Jr. George Ciccariello-Maher Brian J. Foley Dave Zirin Joshua Frank Chris Floyd Ingmar Lee Manuel Garcia,
Jr. Website of the Day Video of the
Day
Jonathan Cook Tariq Ali Winslow T.
Wheeler Manuel Garcia,
Jr William S. Lind Ray McGovern Fidel Castro Agustin Velloso CP News Service Website of
the Day
Glen Ford Chris Sands Rochelle Gause Manuel Garcia,
Jr. Norman Finkelstein Peter Rost,
MD Gary Leupp Joe DeRaymond Christopher Fons Sibel Edmonds Website of the Day
November 28, 2006 Patrick Cockburn Winslow T.
Wheeler Michael Ratner John Ross Molly Secours Peter Rost,
MD Lucinda Marshall Website of
the Day
November 27, 2006 Kathleen and
Bill Christison Uri Avnery Nikolas Kozloff Michael Donnelly Ben Terrall / John Miller Robert Jensen Sol Littman Website of
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November 25 / 26, 2006 Gabriel Kolko Saul Landau William Blum Ralph Nader Fred Gardner Daniel Wolff M. Shahid Alam James J. Brittain George Ciccariello-Maher Contingency and Counter-Contingency in Venezuela Aseem Shrivastava Seth Sandronsky Julian Assange Christopher Brauchli Michele Naar-Obed Ramzy Baroud Christiane
Passevant / Adam Engel Jeffrey St.
Clair / Poets' Basement Website of
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November 24, 2006 Charles Glass Gideon Levy Jonathan Cook Ron Jacobs Brian McKenna Kim Ives
November 23, 2006 Alexander Cockburn
Kathleen Christison Paul Craig
Roberts Mike Roselle Dave Lindorff Greg Moses Dave Zirin Nadia Martinez Sherwood Ross David Kalbfeisch Gilad Atzmon Website of the Day
November 21, 2006 Robert Bryce John V. Walsh Luis Hernandez Navarro Kevin Zeese Peter Rost, MD Evelyn Pringle Roger Morris Don Monkerud Website of the Day
November 20, 2006 David H. Price Col. Dan Smith Katherine Hughes Dave Himmelstein Robert Jensen Joe Mowrey Mike Whitney Carl N. McDaniel Robert Fisk Ramzy Baroud Website of the Day
November 18
/ 19, 2006 Alexander Cockburn Ralph Nader Barucha Calamity Peller John Ross Dave Lindorff Fred Gardner Ron Jacobs Larry Portis Frida Berrigan Wes Enzinna Elizabeth Schulte Peter Rost,
MD Martha Rosenberg Seth Sandronsky Missy Beattie Adam Engel Jeffrey St. Clair Poets' Basement Website of the Weekend
November 17, 2006 Greg Grandin Joseph Massad Kevin Zeese Gideon Levy Bill Quigley David Swanson Sherry Wolf Jerry Beisler Website of the Day
November 16, 2006 Kathy Kelly Col. Douglas
MacGregor Norman Solomon Nikki Thanos Cindy Sheehan Lena Khalaf
Tuffaha Gloria La Riva Pat Williams Kerry Joyce CP News Service David Letterman James Ridgeway Website of
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November 15, 2006 Jennifer Loewenstein David Rosen Ashley Smith Landau / Hassen Walden Bello Sibel Edmonds Austin / Bernstein Yitzhak Laor James Rothenberg Gail Dines Website of the Day
Werther Ray McGovern John Walsh David MacMichael William S.
Lind Sharon Smith Laura Carlsen Ron Jacobs Peter Rost,
MD Carol Norris Website of
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November 13, 2006 Kathleen and
Bill Christison Bill Quigley Paul Craig Roberts Uri Avnery Joe DeRaymond Norman Finkelstein Col. Dan Smith Shepherd Bliss Dave Lindorff Missy Beattie Trenticosta / Fleming
Weekend Edition John Walsh Barucha Calamity
Peller Al Krebs Niall Meehan Conn Hallinan Patrick Cockburn Gary Leupp P. Sainath Nikolas Kozloff Lawrence R.
Velvel Fred Gardner Ralph Nader Ben Terrall / John Miller Mike Whitney Joshua Frank Mukul Dube Jason Hribal Daniel Wolff Michael Donnelly Lord Montague Poets' Basement
November 10, 2006 Alexander Cockburn Marjorie Cohn Jorge Mariscal Gregory Elich Joshua Frank Megan Boler Ramzy Baroud Farzana Versey Roberto Rodriguez Cartoon of
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November 9, 2006 Jennifer Loewenstein Patrick Cockburn Paul Craig Roberts Manuel Garcia,
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/ Jeffrey St. Clair Lawrence E.
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November 7, 2006 Michael Neumann Paul Wolf Nikolas Kozloff Eliza Ernshire William S. Lind Mike Ferner Felice Pace Chris Genovali Gilad Atzmon Dick J. Reavis Elizabeth Weill-Greenberg Website of
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November 6, 2006 Alexander Cockburn Norman Solomon Robert Fisk Marjorie Cohn Paul Craig Roberts Nikolas Kozloff Newton Garver Mike Whitney Jesse Hagopian Dr. Peter Rost,
MD Website of
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November 4 / 5, 2006 Dave Zirin Patrick Cockburn Sanho Tree Ralph Nader Lee Sustar Dr. Shepherd Bliss Adam Elkus Seth Sandronsky Fred Gardner Joshua Sperber Evelyn Pringle Mitchel Cohen Missy Beattie Michael Dickinson John Holt Dr. Susan Block Poets' Basement
Laura Carlsen Stephan Said John Stauber Mike Whitney Joshua Frank Victoria Furio Tammara~85,441 Stuart Croswaithe Missy Beattie Website of
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Winslow T.
Wheeler Paul Craig
Roberts Dave Lindorff Uri Avnery Jeff Birkenstein John Ross Zoltan Grossman Eveyln Pringle Christopher
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November 1, 2006 Alan Dershowitz
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Behan Brenda Norrell Charles Sullivan Ron Jacobs Mike Knapp Moshe Adler Walden Bello Lee Ballinger Joshua Frank Carl Gelderloos Peter Rost,
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Weekend
Edition Christie's and the Rush to "Discover" the Arab WorldDepoliticizing Arab ArtBy MAYMANAH FARHAT The May 2006 opening of Christie's Dubai marked a new era for modern and contemporary Arab art. Establishing record prices for several pioneering artists, the inaugural auction affirmed the growing popularity of art from the region. With sales reaching well over $8.4 million, many observers of the field predict the auction could generate a greater place for Arab art in the international market. Some have even gone as far to claim that the record prices will serve to further legitimize Arab artists in the global art scene. Since market values do often dictate the momentum of the international art world, there may be some truth in these remarks. Given the social history of art however, the introduction of the major international auction house to the Arab world should be measured with caution. The expansion of the Christie's conglomerate to include the Middle East is a prime example of globalization, a logical step in the latest campaign to assert American and European political and economic dominance. This attempt to corner the Middle Eastern art market is part of a larger trend, one distinguished by a sort of rush to "discover" art and cultural production of the region. Many view the field as uncharted territory and are dashing to partake in its "emergence." The notion that exhibitions of contemporary Arab art are a newly introduced phenomenon to the international art world is erroneous. Many seminal Arab artists have been exhibiting their work in Western venues since the mid-twentieth century. Evident in the abundance of exhibitions of contemporary Middle Eastern and "Islamic" art held in the United States and Europe in recent years, Arab art has emerged as a fashionable commodity among Western scholars, art institutions and the art market. An increase in institutional fellowships for academics researching Arab art and culture also appear to be on the rise, with more opportunities being presented at top universities annually. This comes as no surprise at a time when parts of the Arab world have expressed significant resistance to Western hegemony. Provided the geopolitical context in which this new found interest has materialized the profusion of academic, institutional and market interest in Arab art must be examined. Although such exhibitions as the Station Museum's Made in Palestine (2003), Noorderlicht's Nazar: Photographs from the Arab World (2004) and the British Museum's Word into Art (2006) presented the proper sociopolitical and art historical contexts needed for viewers to gain a clear understanding of Arab art, these examples are few among recent exhibitions. Reflected in the politically and culturally biased ways in which Arab art has been represented in several other major exhibitions over the past five years, it has become evident that there is an underlying need to co-opt contemporary Arab visual culture in order to censor and further suppress the Arab voice. Notwithstanding the space Arab art has been given in major American and European museums and institutions, an examination of curatorial statements and exhibition catalog essays provides clues into some of the ideological frameworks from which this rush to "discover" Arab art originates. With statements such as:
the Arab world is reduced to an "archaic" (a term used to describe the region earlier in the catalog by a different curator) land that is just emerging into modern times. These blatantly racist projections of Arabs not only maintain notions of Western superiority and Middle Eastern inferiority, they work to reduce the importance of the art exhibited and silence the creative voices of those represented. In the end the presenting of Arab art only serves to reinforce the exact stereotypes that have been used to justify the exploitation of the region for political and economic gains by several Western governments. This is not the first instance in modern history that the political sphere has been entangled in cultural activity. Since the art market has been used to define art as a luxury good, mainstream art exists as a direct reflection of a particular cultural and sociopolitical reality, one defined by dominating economic interests and the political agendas of those in power. Capable of transforming political culture, revolutionary art movements throughout the twentieth century were constantly struggling to remain autonomous. Frances Stonor Saunders's The Cultural Cold War revealed the heavy handed involvement of the American government (more specifically that of the CIA) in financially supporting and promoting the work of certain cultural and artistic practitioners during the Cold War. Besides the funding of publications and academic research, one of the most famous examples presented by Saunders is the manipulation of the art world to serve US foreign policy (mainly anti-communist political campaigns) through the co-opting of Abstract Expressionist artists and the promotion of their work. The American movement bore resemblance to the Russian Constructivist School of the early twentieth century, but was devoid of its revolutionary political content. Decades later, we find similar formulas being used to combat any evidence of political dissent from the Arab world and its diaspora. The opening of Christie's Dubai demonstrates current efforts to pacify the revolutionary aspects of Arab art in several ways. Initially, it is to gain control of the international market for Arab art so that only a specific demographic has access to the work of its influential artists. This maintains the false sense of exclusivity that is the trademark of Western art but which has been vehemently fought against by countless pioneering art movements throughout the development of modern and contemporary Arab art. The Oil-rich Gulf region is
the perfect candidate for creating this cultural divide between
the wealthy ruling and impoverished classes of the Arab world.
Not only do the governments of most Gulf nations consist of some
of the wealthiest ruling families of the Middle East, they are
also systematically aligned with American political and economic
interests. Since the 1970s the "modernization" of the
region has meant the emulation of American and European models.
The perversion of transforming cities into lavish and excessive
displays of Gulf wealth that rival those of Western nations,
while major political and humanitarian crises rage in neighboring
Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon, is the exact apathetic state needed
to depoliticize Arab art. Such work can be marketed by Christie's with ease towards wealthy Gulf art patrons. There is an existing interest in art by prominent artists from the above mentioned countries and a cultural familiarity that comes from expatriates working in the region that is coupled with a degree of exoticism of the working class and poor. This places the future of Arab art in the hands of the financial interests of Gulf States. The current construction of expansive arts facilities in cities such as Doha, Dubai, Sharjah and Muscat will lure generations of young Arab artists into art scenes unlike those that exist elsewhere in the Arab world today, the greatest emphasis will be on market value, the potential death of future revolutionary art movements. The opening of the hefty auction house forms separate classifications for Arab art. With the increasing of prices for work by certain artists, a hierarchy is formed among all artists, one that will eventually enable the controlling of the art scene. The archetypical method of manipulating visual culture today is marketing. In leading international art centers such as New York, Paris and London, the promotion of an artist's work is based on a series of market hurdles, the initial and most important step being the establishment of auction records. The capability to establish auction records for any Arab artist, allows for the malleability of content, the promotion of art to fit a particular market and the further censorship of Arab art justified by the concept of "what sells." Here lies the most dangerous aspect of placing Arab art into the international market: the depoliticizing of its revolutionary nature. To consider modern and contemporary Arab art revolutionary is not an overstatement. Over the past fifty years Arab artists have struggled to preserve artistic and cultural practice under formidable conditions. As several Arab nations have experienced the devastating effects of war and occupation, political unrest and state censorship, artistic production becomes a form of resistance to the oppression, violence, destruction and instability inflicted upon local communities. The sheer existence of Arab art becomes political. Using various modes of artistic production, all art from the Arab world and its diaspora reflects a profound sense of defiance and determination. In the 1930s, with the growing popularity of the Mexican Muralist school, which fostered the move towards politically cognizant work in international art, numerous attempts to subdue the movement were made in the United States. The commissioning of leading muralist painters to create large-scale murals with local themes by American business tycoons was one way of co-opting the politically charged visual language that was making the movement influential. Murals were painted by Diego Rivera in such places as the San Francisco Stock Exchange, Rockefeller Center and the Detroit Institute of Arts. A retrospective at New York's Museum of Modern Art for the movement's artistic giant was also a visible testimony of the art world's attempts to tame the revolutionary momentum. Yet in light of these attempts, Mexican muralists maintained their political fervor, shaping the modern consciousness of Mexican culture and countless art movements, including numerous schools of Arab painting. Similarly, as the mainstream art world (with the political agendas it espouses) encroaches upon Arab art, artists will continue to resist by fashioning their own histories. Maymanah Farhat is the editor of ArteNews,
www.arteeast.org, an online newsletter that focuses on Middle
Eastern art and culture. She recently curated the exhibition
"Three Arab Painters in New York" at the Bridge Gallery
in Chelsea.
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