recent news//

LATEST NEWS AND UPDATES

Rules of Engagement
Marcia E. Vetrocq, Art in America
June/July, 2008


A Call to Arms
Maureen Davidson, Metro Santa Cruz Weekly
October 8, 2008


Buy into It
Michael Leaverton, SF Weekly
May 20, 2008

Kamler also asked South Africa's infamous Clinton Fein to contribute. You remember him: last year, his wall-sized photographs re-creating Abu Ghraib torture scenes reverberated like mortar bombs throughout the 49 Geary art complex. Imagine what he could do with a white dove.


Billboards bring peace message to city streets
Heather Tirado Gilligan, Bay Area Reporter
May 29, 2008


San Francisco billboard display peace messages (video)
Heather Ishimaru, ABC News
May 27, 2008


Wheatpaste for peace: SF Peace Billboards Project launches
Ariel Soto, San Francisco Bay Guardian
May 26, 2008


Night + Day: Calendar Picks
Janine Kahn, SF Weekly
May 26, 2008


READ THE PETER SELZ REVIEW OF CLINTON FEIN'S 'TORTURE' IN THE DECEMBER 2007 ISSUE OF ART IN AMERICA CURRENTLY ON NEWSSTANDS


Bridge: Chicago fair launches first London edition
The Art Newspaper, London
October 12, 2007

Fein Downfall
Artron.net, China
September 2007

Iraq inspires surge of protest art
By Peter Beaumont, The Observer
September 9, 2007

TORTURE: EXHIBITION 2007
BEIJING..LONDON..MIAMI


POINTING FINGERS

Clinton Fein's blog on SFGATE, the San Francisco Chronicle's new experiment with community blogging. An irreverent look at what's happening in the world of pop culture. Check it out...


Listen to Clinton Fein talking to Richard Kamler on his radio show, Art Talk

'NY Times' and the WCHA Dinner
By Clinton Fein, Letters, Editor & Publisher
May 1, 2007

The Horror of Torture, Reinterpreted through Art
By Kenneth Baker, The San Francisco Chronicle
January 20, 2007

Precision Strike
By Michael Leaverton, SF Weekly
January 17, 2007

The Bigger Picture: 'Torture': Photographer restages
infamous images from Abu Ghraib

By Reyhan Harmanci, The San Francisco Chronicle
January 11, 2007

Looking at Torture
By Andrew Sullivan, Time Magazine
January 2, 2007

TIME MAGAZINE: NOTEBOOK, Verbatim

"Who says what's officially annoying? Is that a business we really want our government to be in?" -- Clinton Fein, purveyor of the website Annoy.com, complaining about a bill in Congress that would make it a federal crime to "annoy" someone over the Internet.

Time Magazine, February 26, 2006


Cyberstalking law opens debate on what's annoying


"It's a stupid law that has slipped in under the radar," says Clinton Fein, a San Francisco-based artist who runs annoy.com, a website that he says offers "unique and irreverent" commentary on politics and culture.

Richard Willing, USA Today, February 14, 2006


New cyberstalker law raises criticism


Clinton Fein, who runs the Annoy.com Web site, is also aghast. His site is specifically set up to annoy people through, among other means, anonymous postcards sent through the mail that direct the recipient to read the sender's message at the Annoy.com site. Fein calls the new legislation annoying.

Reid Goldsborough, Philadelphia Inquirer, January 29, 2006


Is it illegal, or just annoying?


The nation's new cyberstalking restrictions started this month. The legislation updates laws designed to protect people from harrassment. The updated law makes it illegal to use the Internet to harrass someone. But a provision of the legislation also adds the word "annoy" to the types of communication that's illegal.

Listen in RealAudio

One of the people who picked up on this new language is the creator of the Web site annoy.com. Clinton Fein calls himself a political artist. He's based in San Francisco. He photoshops irreverant and frequently offensive digital postcards for users to send anonymously to whomever they want--the attorney general of the United States, for example, or perhaps your boss. Fein readily admits to pushing legal boundaries. But he wonders who, under the new law, decides what is legally annoying.

Art Hughes Interview, Future Tense, January 20, 2006


Does New Cyberstalking Law Criminalize Free Expression?


First, we will discover what Section 113 truly means when someone challenges the law. A candidate being mentioned on the Internet is Annoy.com; the site offers a "service by which people send politically incorrect postcards without being required to furnish their identity."

The site owner Clinton Fein has a history of "seeking declaratory and injunctive relief" against the Communications Decency Act of 1996 through which "indecent" computer communication that is intended to "annoy" was criminalized. Fein believes Section 113 "warrant[s] a constitutional challenge."

Wendy McElroy, Fox News, January 17, 2006


PERSPECTIVE: CREATE AN E-ANNOYANCE, GO TO JAIL.


Annoying someone via the Internet is now a federal crime. It's no joke. Last Thursday, President Bush signed into law a prohibition on posting annoying Web messages or sending annoying e-mail messages without disclosing your true identity.

Clinton Fein, a San Francisco resident who runs the Annoy.com site, says a feature permitting visitors to send obnoxious and profane postcards through e-mail could be imperiled.

"Who decides what's annoying? That's the ultimate question," Fein said. He added: "If you send an annoying message via the United States Post Office, do you have to reveal your identity?"

Declan McCullagh, C|Net, January 9, 2006


WITH INTENT TO ANNOY!


Clinton Fein responds to new legislation making it a crime to send anonymous email with an "intent to annoy."

Read more


US criminalises cyber-harassment


Civil liberties groups have vowed to fight the legislation in the courts under the First Amendment, claiming that it would make it impossible for whistleblowers to operate without putting themselves at risk.

Clinton Fein, a South African activist who runs Annoy.com, was scathing about the new law.

"It appears that one is guilty of a crime if one were simply to 'utilise' a telecoms device 'with intent to annoy' a person regardless of the content or even in its absence," he said. "A conduct rather than a content crime; perhaps waving a BlackBerry in someone's face."

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com, January 10, 2006


ART BEIJING 2007





Download Torture Beijing Promotional Video

Real Media
Windows Media



艺术家陈述

2004年4月发生的一件事,将会改变美国和其他地方人的美国观。阿布格莱布的画面即刻撼动了我们,使我们认识到道德是一个相对的概念,在这个被简单设计成善与恶的世界上,人们有能力彼此作的事,不论我们智力高低,就是证实我们骨子里还是动物,是原始而卑劣的动物。

不论你是浑身涂满凝固汽油,赤裸身体,尖叫着奔跑,被迫伸出双臂站立,爬上赤裸的战俘组成的人体金字塔的顶端,被迫在粪便中爬过,还是面对一只离你的脸只有几英寸的狂吠的猛犬,一切都指向了暴力,虽然程度不同。

来自阿布格莱布的影像,虽然图像很小、画面光线微弱,而且分辨率很低,又被五角大楼和媒体故意虚化了,以便遮掩其中令人侧目的裸体,不知为何对生殖器的刻画似乎比残害的行为本身更令人不快和更下流猥亵。

现代世界有着愈加活跃的交流、瞬间产生的愉悦、肤浅的名人崇拜、集体注意力障碍、信息过载,不愿意反省或面对我们在这些粗颗粒照片中看到的人物,这一切都缓和了来自阿布格莱布的原始影像具有的冲击力。

正因为这些原因,我所关注的,在于清晰度、缩放和分辨率,以及残害刻意的性化,包括囚犯的影像,赤身露体,带着头巾或沙包,被迫用令人苦不堪言的姿势站立,模仿性别歧视的举动,被粪便薰得头昏眼花,忍受着极端恶劣的羞辱。这些影像提供了一个机会,来审视——也许是首次——这些影像实际刻画出的事件。

我们的社会,尤其是一种伪装出来的、极度男性化的军事文化,根本无法明白,还有什么比一个异性恋的人被迫违背自己的意愿,去做同性恋的事更恶劣的了,更不用说是穆斯林了,但如果这座人体金字塔是由女囚犯用同样的姿势组成的,它有可能被钉在多少学校储物柜里,它又会给仍然暴露在色情文化之下的少年人什么样的养料?

这些事情没有一个人愿意谈论,甚至在认真审视阿布格拉布丑闻的时候如复如是。 然而,由于那种略带虚伪的深恶痛绝,美国军方和媒体将阿布格拉布称之为令人震惊的、虐待的、可耻的,是令人厌恶的,是一种侮辱,是不名誉的,卑劣下流,诸如此类等等等等,但始终没有一个人敢于说出这两个字:残害。

美国对于布什现政府之下的残害的态度,就是不觉得有何不可饶恕之处。本次展览中的影像,无非是想振聋发聩地提醒我们,我们究竟是谁。不仅是作为一个国家,而且作为人类的种群。   我们还要让这样的事来界定我们多久呢?

克林顿•费因(Clinton Fein)
2007年8月