Current:Home > ContactArtist loses bid to remove panels covering anti-slavery murals at Vermont school -Clarity Finance Guides
Artist loses bid to remove panels covering anti-slavery murals at Vermont school
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:25:05
An artist has lost his appeal to remove fabric panels concealing murals he painted to honor African Americans and abolitionists involved in the Underground Railroad but that officials at the Vermont law school where they’re housed found to be racially insensitive.
Artist Sam Kerson created the colorful murals entitled “Vermont, The Underground Railroad” and “Vermont and the Fugitive Slave” in 1993 on two walls inside a building at the private Vermont Law School, now called Vermont Law and Graduate School, in South Royalton.
In 2020, the school said it would paint over them. But when Kerson objected, it said it would cover them with acoustic tiles. The school gave Kerson the option of removing the murals, but he said he could not without damaging them.
When Kerson, who lives in Quebec, sued in federal court in Vermont, the school said in a court filing that “the depictions of African Americans strikes some viewers as caricatured and offensive, and the mural has become a source of discord and distraction.”
Kerson lost his lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Vermont and appealed. The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, which heard the case in January, agreed with the lower court in its ruling last Friday.
Kerson didn’t immediately respond on Thursday to an email seeking comment.
“This case presents weighty concerns that pin an artist’s moral right to maintain the integrity of an artwork against a private entity’s control over the art in its possession,” the circuit court panel wrote.
Kerson argued that the artwork is protected by the federal Visual Artists Rights Act, which was enacted “to protect artists against modifications and destruction that are prejudicial to their honor or reputation,” his lawyer, Steven Hyman had said.
He said the covering of the artwork for the purpose of preventing people from viewing it is a modification and that Kerson “must suffer the indignity and humiliation of having a panel put over his art.”
But the school’s lawyer, Justin Barnard, argued that covering the artwork with a wood frame that doesn’t touch the painting and is fixed to the wall is not a modification.
The circuit court, in agreeing with the lower court judge, added that noting in its decision “precludes the parties from identifying a way to extricate the murals” so as to preserve them as objects of art “in a manner agreeable to all. ”
veryGood! (3945)
Related
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Duran Duran reunites with Andy Taylor for best song in a decade on 'Danse Macabre' album
- Abortion restrictions in Russia spark outrage as the country takes a conservative turn
- Abortion restrictions in Russia spark outrage as the country takes a conservative turn
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- DC pandas will be returning to China in mid-November, weeks earlier than expected
- Dalvin Cook says he's 'frustrated' with role in Jets, trade rumors 'might be a good thing'
- Hasan Minhaj responds to New Yorker profile, accusation of 'faking racism'
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Stock market today: Asian shares rebound following latest tumble on Wall Street. Oil prices gain $1
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Billy Ray Cyrus' wife Firerose credits his dog for introducing them on 'Hannah Montana' set
- Lionel Messi is a finalist for the MLS Newcomer of the Year award
- Amid massive search for mass killing suspect, Maine residents remain behind locked doors
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Tennessee attorney general sues federal government over abortion rule blocking funding
- With map redrawn favoring GOP, North Carolina Democratic US Rep. Jackson to run for attorney general
- Grand jury indicts Illinois man on hate crime, murder charges in attack on Muslim mom, son
Recommendation
Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
Mia Talerico’s Good Luck Charlie Reunion Proves Time Flies
Former Ohio State OL Dawand Jones suspected Michigan had Buckeyes' signs during 2022 game
Prescription for disaster: America's broken pharmacy system in revolt over burnout and errors
Sam Taylor
Details of the tentative UAW-Ford agreement that would end 41-day strike
Teachers’ advocates challenge private school voucher program in South Carolina
AP Week in Pictures: Asia