MASS MoCA Will Not Exhibit Büchel's Artwork

Clancco  ||   25 September 2007

After Christoph Büchel decided late yesterday to appeal Judge Ponsor’s decision to allow MASS MoCA to remove the yellow tarps and exhibit his art project, Training Ground for Democracy, without his consent, MASS MoCA decided today against removing the tarps and exhibiting it.

In effect, the Museum had this to say on their new blog:

MASS MoCA announced today that it has begun removing materials gathered for Training Ground for Democracy and will not permit the public to enter the planned installation which was cancelled on May 21, 2007. Materials and partially completed fabrications for this large-scale installation have been stored in MASS MoCA’s main Building 5 gallery since the artist abandoned the project nine months ago. The front doors to the gallery have been locked, and the materials covered by tarpaulins.

It would be simple to say that this decision--albeit the proper one--is surprising. One is left to wonder what, if anything, the Museum and Joe Thompson gained after months of expensive litigation. Although certain parties will argue that nothing was lost (at least not by artists), it is certain that the effects will be felt by all artists in the future, when in fact artists will face a narrow and very limiting application of the federal Visual Artists Rights Act.

This does not include the waste of exhibition space that could have been used for other exhibitions or programming, and with less government grants given to artists and institutions, and sans pro bono by Skadden Arps, that the Museum would rather use its limited budget to pay $400 dollar-an-hour attorneys.

It is sad to see that an institution which portends to expand and champion contemporary art and avant-garde expressions is in fact more preoccupied with winning a personal war rather than grant artists the rights they have fought hard and for so long to obtain.

In the end, nothing was was gained, but much lost. It is a loss that only those vested with legal knowledge, its history and its complex lexicon will understand. It is a loss called the seven-factor VARA test, based on a legal interpretation of art that takes us back to the 19th Century. Thank you MASS MoCA. Thank you indeed.