On 6 February, the College of Maryland’s David C. Driskell Middle for the Visible Arts and Tradition of African Individuals and the African Diaspora opened America Will Be!(till 8 Could), an exhibition showcasing how Black artists have “harness[ed] the facility of the US flag”. In response to the artist Dread Scott, nevertheless, there’s a vital omission.
Final February, Scott says he was “thrilled” to obtain a mortgage request from the Driskell Middle’s director, Jordana Moore Saggesse, for his work What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? (1988). In her letter, Saggesse famous that the work was “central to the historical past of how Black artists have contested the facility of this object”.
However after later rescinding the mortgage request and proposing an alternate work or an archival show about What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag?, Saggesse and her co-curator on America Will Be!, Nicole Archer, finally knowledgeable Scott in January that his work couldn’t be included within the exhibition in any respect “attributable to logistical constraints”, suggesting a future e book undertaking as an alternative.
For Scott, whose interdisciplinary follow challenges assumptions about the USA and its historical past, the exclusion of his work from the Driskell Middle exhibition is all the way down to “anticipatory censorship”, versus the problems outlined in his correspondence with the curators. He tells The Artwork Newspaper: “It’s the primary time I’ve been censored in a present 3 times.”
What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? prompted a nationwide outcry when it was first exhibited on the Faculty of the Artwork Institute of Chicago in 1989. The participatory set up options an American flag laid out on the ground, together with a photomontage on the wall of pictures of the flag on army coffins and of South Korean protestors burning the flag. Between these two objects is a shelf with a ledger, inviting guests to reply the titular query, although to take action individuals should step on the flag.
The SAIC exhibition sparked day by day protests by veterans and its non permanent closure amongst bomb and demise threats. Though the legality of flag desecration was upheld by the Supreme Court docket within the 1990 case United States v. Eichman, through which Scott was one in all a number of defendants, he now believes that What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? is “successfully banned” within the US.Scott enumerated the potential dangers of exhibiting his piece in his response to the unique mortgage request (on the time, the exhibition was to be titled Black Flags and Different Allegiances).
“With the present US administration and its deal with tradition, I’d wish to be sure you have the capability and dedication to correctly present the work,” he wrote. “For those who, the [Driskell] Middle and College of Maryland are prepared to face by the undertaking and defend the work, I’m open to discussing loaning the artwork.”
In e-mail correspondence reviewed by The Artwork Newspaper, Saggesse reasserted the centre’s dedication to exhibiting the “vital” work and guaranteed Scott that the organisers had been considering related issues.
Scott says he spoke with the curators on a video name final March and had a “very productive, critical dialog”. Nonetheless, he was “shocked” by one other name round a month later through which he was knowledgeable that the college’s provost wouldn’t allow What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? to be proven on campus attributable to issues about college students’ security. Saggesse confirmed to The Artwork Newspaper that the March name prompted additional enquiry into “in depth safety measures”, however that each one additional communication occurred through e-mail.In e-mail correspondence with Scott final November, the co-curatorsconfirmed that it will not be doable to stage What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? attributable to an absence of funding for added safety.
“This choice to not show the work is rooted in security issues, not a judgment of the work itself, or its place within the exhibition,” Saggesse and Archer wrote to Scott. They went on to recommend together with a special work of his, a picture of What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? together with textual content explaining its omission, or {a photograph} of Emancipation Proclamation (2020), through which the artist burned the US flag.
“It went from them wanting to point out the work to looking for a rationalisation to not do it,” Scott says. He provides that he first understood he might not be featured within the exhibition when, in December, a press launch concerning the present—now titled America Will Be!—was circulated that didn’t embody his title among the many listing of taking part artists. The curators knowledgeable Scott on 13 January that, following consultations with the centre’s registrar and set up staff, they’d concluded it was too late to incorporate him within the exhibition.
In response to Saggesse, there was no formal mortgage settlement and her authentic letter to Scott in February 2025 was an “preliminary inquiry”. She emphasises that What’s the Correct Approach to Show a US Flag? was one in all a number of works thought of for however not finally included within the exhibition. “We stay deeply dedicated to presenting an exhibition that engages meaningfully with the advanced histories of citizenship and democracy,” she provides, “and we’re happy with the 24 artists whose work is represented in America Will Be!.”
“The Driskell Middle is a very essential centre of Black artwork, and the curators are good individuals,” Scott says. “The actual hazard right here is that excellent persons are being compelled to censor themselves, and doing it in a manner that nearly pretends that that’s not taking place.”
He cites final 12 months’s choice by Amy Sherald to cancel her travelling exhibition American Chic’s run on the Nationwide Portrait Gallery—allegedly as a result of workers there wished to take away her work Trans Forming Liberty (2024)—and the Trump administration’s overview of actions at eight Smithsonian Establishment museums as examples of the stress going through establishments and curators. (The College of Maryland’s School Park campus, the place the Driskell Middle is positioned, sits within the suburbs of Washington, DC, simply ten miles from the Smithsonian Fort.)
June Clark, whose work From Harlem (1997) is featured in America Will Be!, says she was “baffled” by Scott’s expertise. The artist Sonya Clark (unrelated), whose work can be included within the exhibition, hopes establishments might be as “daring” because the artists whose work they present. She provides: “Should not defending the concepts that gasoline the work be as essential as defending the work itself?”
