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Date: November 7, 2011 Dear Mark Di Suvero, We are artists and art workers forming the Arts &

Culture working group of the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement. OWS is a people-powered movement inspired by popular uprisings in the Middle East, Europe and South America. OWS is now in 100 cities in the United States, with actions in over 1,500 global cities. We are working to create new social forms to supplant the obsolete models currently in place, holding banks and corporations accountable for buying out democracy, and sacking the economy. OWS is organized horizontally to bring participatory democracy. The "people's assembly" is a forum used all over the world to facilitate collective decision making, with shared roots in the history of democratic movements, dating back centuries. The OWS General Assembly welcomes people from all ethnicities, genders, sexualities and beliefs to attend and participate in direct democratic decision making. Your sculpture, Joie De Vivre, at Liberty Plaza (Zuccotti Park) has served as a visual backdrop for the movement in New York. The area underneath and around the sculpture has hosted meetings, rendezvous points, teach-ins and concerts. We are conscious of your role in the creation of the Peace Tower (1966 and 2006), and your public opposition to the wars in Vietnam and Iraq. Your work is an integral part of our collective history, and the tradition of artists who exercise their responsibility as public citizens. Recently, after one individual climbed the sculpture, city authorities placed barricades around Joie De Vivre, cutting off access and separating it from the politically activated space of Liberty Plaza. Some of the barricades carry Metropolitan Museum of Art signage as well as NYPD stickers (see attached photos). This was an unnecessary overreaction in light of OWS' track record as a peaceful, proactive movement, generating conversation and fostering community and engagement. Recently, Community Board 1, which consists of the neighborhoods residents, voted to request the city to remove unnecessary barricades from the area, especially in light of the OWSs stated commitment to nonviolence. We believe that cordoning off your gift to the people of New York goes against your intentions for the work, as well as the very spirit of public art. Joie de Vivre is especially poignant as this movement actively fights to empower people of marginalized economic status. Indeed, that struggle is the joy of life. OWS is now in Day 52. This movement will only continue to grow and evolve. It is our wish, and we believe yours as well, that the sculpture be integrated spatially with the activities taking place at Liberty Plaza. Therefore, we ask you to make a public statement urging city authorities to keep all barricades away from this and other public sculptures in the area, allowing free access to the area under and around public sculptures. We would also like to invite you to speak at a teach-in related to the political role of artists. We would be happy to host such a teach-in at Liberty Plaza, including a conversation about the history of the Peace Tower and other socially engaged public art. We are interested in sharing with you the past actions and future goals of the Arts and Culture committee, and listening to your thoughts on the movement. Sincerely, Arts & Culture Committee Contact: arts_culture@nycga.net

Joie De Vivre: before barricades (transgender teach-in)

Joie De Vivre: before barricades (construction worker talks to media)

Joie De Vivre: after barricades (with Metropolitan Museum of Art signage)

Joie De Vivre: after barricades (with NYPD sticker)

Joie De Vivre: after barricades (with NYPD guards)

Joie De Vivre: after barricades (with NYPD Community Affairs guard)

Photos: Arts & Culture committee member

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