ART AS SEEN BY THE NEW YORKER AND NEW YORK
October 5, 1999
In the October 11 editions of The New Yorker and New
York, contrasting perspectives on the Brooklyn Museum of Art
controversy are offered. Peter Schjeldahl in The New Yorker
sees the dung-stained and pornographic-studded "The Holy Virgin
Mary" as "gorgeous, sweet, and respectful of its subject"; he is
taken by its alleged artistic merit and does not believe that the
artist, Chris Ofili, meant his work to be sacrilegious. But Mark
Stevens in New York sees it differently: he chastises Ofili
for not coming up "with something better than elephant dung for a
desecration." Stevens suggests, "Wouldn’t bat droppings or goat
semen be preferable?"
Catholic League president William Donohue made his thoughts
known on the two commentaries today:
"If I had been asked a month ago where to find someone who
thought it a reverential tribute to throw feces on a religious
painting and surround it with pictures of vaginas and anuses, I
would have directed him to an asylum. Now I would offer him the
option of visiting the offices of The New Yorker.
"But if The New Yorker’s take on ‘The Holy
Virgin Mary’ is bizarre, the position of New York is
certifiably bigoted. When it is said that Our Blessed Mother is
‘every good boy’s dream,’ no one can understand that without
calling it anti-Catholic.
"The comment that ‘bat droppings’ and ‘goat semen’ would be
‘preferable’ to elephant dung on ‘The Holy Virgin Mary’ proves
how deep-seated is New York’s hatred of Catholicism. That
New York admits that this painting constitutes
‘desecration’ shows that it is more in touch with reality than
The New Yorker, but it also shows that New York
has bigots on its payroll.
"The New Yorker’s capacity for self-deception
cannot be underrated, but it is still preferable to New York’s
sponsorship of hate speech."
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