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Help the Democrats: Bid on a Warhol, a Rothko or a Lichtenstein (AP is campaigning!!!)
Associated Press via Houston Comical ^ | June 14, 2004, 1:03AM | no byline

Posted on 06/14/2004 3:18:27 AM PDT by weegee

WASHINGTON -- Andy Warhol's pop creations, William Wegman's offbeat portraits and the abstract drawings of Willem de Kooning are more than works of art to some Democrats.

The auction-block objects are a means to a desired goal -- defeating President Bush and other Republicans on Nov. 2.

Artists, art galleries and wealthy collectors are contributing more than 170 works for an auction June 29 in New York to raise money for two pro-Democratic groups, America Coming Together and the political action committee ARTS PAC, that will use the cash for voter mobilization and other election-year efforts.

"Join artists and friends in saying 'Bye-Bye Bush' and help to elect Democratic candidates at the federal, state and local levels," an event flier says.

One artist behind the auction is Chuck Close, a New York-based photorealist painter who sought the donated works. The sentiment among several artists, according to Close, is that the Bush administration's anti-terrorism efforts, epitomized by the Patriot Act, are endangering civil rights, including artistic freedom.

"The Republican Party seems to want to be perceived as having a lock on patriotism and I think it's really a mistake for Democrats to give up the whole issue of patriotism. It's just a different notion of what it is," said Close, who expects some donations will carry patriotic themes. "I think a commitment to a free and open society is the ultimate patriot act."

America Coming Together and ARTS PAC will use some of the money for direct support of presidential and congressional candidates, and other money for get-out-the-vote drives and other campaign work. Close declined to provide the fund-raising goal for the event, but estimated it would bring in several million dollars.

Paintings, sculptures, photos, drawings and other works are scheduled for auction at the fund-raiser, including pieces by Warhol, de Kooning, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Diebenkorn, Jasper Johns, Mark Rothko and Close. Wegman, known for photographs focused on canines, is donating his services as a portrait photographer to his winning bidder. Actress Meryl Streep is an honorary chairwoman of the event.

Politics and art have a history, especially in New York. Mexican painter Diego Rivera, a communist, angered industrial tycoon John D. Rockefeller's family in the early 1930s by including the image of Soviet revolutionary Vladimir Lenin in a mural the Rockefellers commissioned Rivera to paint at Rockefeller Center. After a standoff between Rivera and the Rockefellers, building workers destroyed the painting.

The Museum of Modern Art in New York housed Pablo Picasso's famous anti-war painting "Guernica" before its return to Spain after the country's move from dictatorship to democracy with the death of Gen. Francisco Franco in 1975.

Democrats previously have mixed art and politics for financial gain.

Retired Ohio Sen. Howard Metzenbaum raised money for his 1982 re-election bid by copying and selling original prints donated by more than 30 artists, including Warhol, Peter Max, Diebenkorn, Lichtenstein and wilderness photographer Ansel Adams, with whom Metzenbaum became friends. Metzenbaum said he personally asked the artists for donations.

Artists also have donated their works to raise money for 2000 presidential hopeful Al Gore, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y.; Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., former South Dakota Sen. George McGovern and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

Metzenbaum and his wife, Shirley, bought and still display some of the donated artwork from their 1982 campaign.

"We started collecting whatever we could afford, and each thing is a memory," Shirley Metzenbaum said. "And that's why when we were trying to raise money for my husband's campaign, we decided we loved it -- maybe the artists would be interested in helping."

------

On the Net:

America Coming Together: http://www.actforvictory.org/artauction


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004election; 2004electionbias; activistactors; agitprop; ap; apendorsement; ccrm; election2004; fundraising; liberalelites; mediabias
And YES this headline appears on other copies of this article (I searched news.google.com). So does the fundraising weblink at the bottom.
1 posted on 06/14/2004 3:18:28 AM PDT by weegee
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To: Timesink; *CCRM; martin_fierro; reformed_democrat; Loyalist; =Intervention=; PianoMan; GOPJ; ...
Media Schadenfreude and Media Shenanigans PING
2 posted on 06/14/2004 3:19:22 AM PDT by weegee (Government does not solve problems; it subsidizes them. ~~Ronald Reagan)
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To: weegee

Doesn't DasHole's daughter work for the AP?


3 posted on 06/14/2004 9:48:18 AM PDT by BlessedByLiberty (Respectfully submitted,)
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To: weegee

So who donated the art? And will the winning bidders be named? Or can they keep it secret?


4 posted on 06/14/2004 9:49:31 AM PDT by TX Bluebonnet
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To: weegee
Thanks for the PING weegee.

Since we know the FEC has decided not to rule on 527s until after the election, we need to keep those little bureaucratic buggers busy.

Here's a link to the "Complaints" section on the FEC website. Maybe we need to let them know what we think about this (well, maybe not exactly what we think . . . you know what I mean).
Filing a Complaint

I. Filing a Complaint

Any person may file a complaint if he or she believes a violation of the Federal Election Campaign Laws or Commission regulations has occurred or is about to occur. The complaint must be made in writing, and sent to the Office of General Counsel, Federal Election Commission, 999 E Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20463. The original must be submitted along with three copies, if possible. Facsimile transmissions are not acceptable.

A complaint must comply with certain requirements. It must:
Provide the full name and address of the person filing the complaint (called the complainant); and Be signed, sworn to and notarized. This means that the notary public's certificate must say "...signed and sworn to before me..."

Furthermore, in order for a complaint to be considered complete and proper, it should:
Clearly recite the facts that show specific violations under the Commission's jurisdiction (citations to the law and regulations are not necessary);
Clearly identify each person, committee or group that is alleged to have committed a violation (called the respondent);
Include any documentation supporting the allegations, if available; and
Differentiate between statements based on the complainant's (the person who files the complaint) personal knowledge and those based on information and belief. Statements not based on personal knowledge should identify the source of the information.

The line from the article:
Artists, art galleries and wealthy collectors are contributing more than 170 works for an auction June 29 in New York to raise money for two pro-Democratic groups, America Coming Together and the political action committee ARTS PAC, that will use the cash for voter mobilization and other election-year efforts.
cites a violation of the new regulations. PACs are not allowed to support or target a specific candidate.

The FEC requires complaints to be notarized -- just a small inconvenience, since most banks will notarize documents for their customers for a nominal fee.

5 posted on 06/14/2004 12:40:21 PM PDT by reformed_democrat
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To: reformed_democrat

BTTT


6 posted on 06/14/2004 3:53:50 PM PDT by Ann Archy (Abortion: The Human Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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