WASHINGTON (May 10) - The centerpiece for the Martin Luther King Jr. memorial on the National Mall has drawn criticism from a federal arts panel, which says the proposed statue looks "confrontational" and resembles the head of a socialist state more than a civil rights leader.
Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin stands next to a clay model of a Martin Luther King Jr. statue in March 2007. A federal arts panel criticized the design of the planned 28-foot-tall statue last month because it is "confrontational."
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The United States Commission of Fine Arts has asked the creators of a sculpture of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for the Washington Mall to change it. In a letter, the commission said that renderings of the sculpture made Dr. King appear stiff and “confrontational,” evoking Socialist Realist statues of political figures recently toppled in other countries. The lead sculptor, Lei Yixin, above with a model of the work, is from China and has made busts of Mao Zedong. Critics had opposed giving him the commission, saying that an African-American sculptor should have been chosen. Supporters said choosing an artist without regard to race or color was in line with Dr. King’s philosophy. The commission, whose approval is necessary for the project to proceed, recommended that the sculpture portray Dr. King as a more sympathetic figure.
2 comments:
It is a stance that if I were a child I could relate to, not ever in Dr. King publicly.
The statue of Dr. King shows a determined and serious man. If that makes him confrontational, so be it.
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