A Confederate Flag Taken Down… By Neo-confederates

Confederate Flag Art Removed After Complaints

Apparently the guardians of the Southern Myth didn’t like a painting by Gainsville State College, located in Gainsville, Georgia by  Professor Stanley Bermudez. Seems Professor Bermudez made the mistake of painting what he felt when he saw the flag…

Neo-confederate and hate groups promptly voice their ire, intimidating the College to remove the flag from the Art Exhibit.

GSC professor teaches the importance of art as his own work comes under fire

“When I was growing up in South America, we had the freedom of expression in my country. But when Hugo Chávez came into power, he started manipulating that freedom. Everything from the media to art was being censored,” said Bermudez, who is from Venezuela.

“Anyone who made a negative comment about the government … was being attacked or repressed. I don’t agree with that kind of censorship.”

As an artist, Bermudez often takes to canvas to express his feelings and thoughts. One of his most recent works, “Heritage?,” illustrates what comes to his mind when he thinks of the Confederate flag.

The red flag, with the blue St. Andrew’s Cross emblazoned across the front adorned with white stars, was carried onto the battlefield by Confederate soldiers during the Civil War. While some people argue that the flag represents Southern heritage and pride, other people — Bermudez included — see it in a less positive light.

“In school (in Venezuela) we learned about the United States’ Civil War and slavery. I learned to have a negative view of the flag — I basically associated the image of the flag with slavery, racism and the KKK,” said Bermudez.

“In 1983, I was a college student in Texas and saw a group of KKK clansmen in their hooded robes, standing on a street corner yelling and waving the (Confederate) flag. My English was limited at the time, so I’m not sure what they were yelling, but I probably wouldn’t want to know.

“It only happened once in the 12 years that I lived there, but that image stuck with me.”

For his 7«-foot long painting, Bermudez used the traditional Confederate flag image, but added depictions of a hooded clansmen bearing a flaming torch, a hanging and an angry women in the background of the acrylic painting.

“This is very much what I feel and think about when I see that flag. It’s just my personal feelings about it. It’s an accumulation of the things I’ve seen, studied and read over the years,” Bermudez said.

“When visiting the KKK website, the (Confederate) flag is used often. Recently, the KKK has had public meetings near (my home), which scares me because of their anti-Latino immigration sentiments.

Although the finished piece is how Bermudez sees the flag, not everyone agrees with his views. Public response to the piece was so strong that Gainesville State’s administration asked that the picture be removed from the faculty showing in the Roy C. Moore Art Gallery on the college’s Oakwood campus, Bermudez says.

“I wasn’t expecting that kind of feedback. I’ve been an artist for 25 years. I’ve always known that artwork can be powerful, but I never dreamed it would be this powerful to the point that I would be censored,” said Bermudez.

Instead of a painting, his artist’s statement explaining what inspired the absent piece is now hanging in the gallery.

The college declined to share with The Times any of the feedback that prompted the removal of the painting; however, at least one “Southern heritage” website described the painting as “despicable” and prompted visitors to contact Martha Nesbitt, the college’s president, about the picture. Site administrators even posted her e-mail address and telephone number.

Now…What does that Georgia State Flag look like again?

2003 Georgia state flag

2003 Gerogia State Flag

First National Flag

Original Confederate National Flag Upon Which Georgia Flag Is Designed

 

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4 Responses

  1. Some people just can’t handle the truth.

    • Speaking of folks who can’t handle the Truth, Roderick – looks like I have another illiterate conservatroll over on my Alan West thread…

  2. [...] A Confederate Flag Taken Down… By Neo-confederates « Btx3's Blog [...]

  3. Perhaps we shoudl alos take the American flag down as well. It was native Americans who have truely bore the brunt of society. Yet the are forced to look upn a flag that stole their freedom, land and dignity.
    I hope people there watch for any other flag that flys there and then file a lawsuit since the local government would be denying equal accessibility for any public organization. The Christian flag will be next since the KKK used it and it offends Muslims.

    My own relatives who fought for the south and rode with John Hunt Morgan didnt own any slaves. But to so many thats the only reason for the war.

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