The group behind an effort to bring a 45-foot-tall sculpture of a naked woman to the National Mall says it is “looking to formalize litigation” after the National Park Service denied approval of the statue.
“We need a law firm willing to take on overly restrictive NPS rules that inappropriately seem to value the preservation of the perceived aesthetic of the National Mall over First Amendment activities,” Natalie White, spokeswoman for Catharsis on the Mall, said in a statement. “Historical use of this public space includes free-speech demonstrations that continue to shape the character of our country.”
In a letter to the group dated Oct. 25, the National Park Service said aspects of the group’s request “is likely to significantly damage the underlying turf” and “is likely to have an adverse effect on the aesthetics, including the identity of the area.”
You are invited for the third annual Catharsis on the Mall: A Vigil for Healing in Washington, D.C., from 11/10-12: https://t.co/7isu4xABVg pic.twitter.com/azh8ziMacG
— MAPS (@MAPS) October 17, 2017
The group has held an annual event on the National Mall that looks to marry art and activism by providing “space for arts, healing, culture, and activism to come together, mediated by radical inclusion, participation and self-expression,” its website says.
This year, the group had requested a permit to bring the sculpture, “R-Evolution,” to the mall for the event, “to bring awareness to violence against women and the Equal Rights Amendment.”
“We originally applied for this permit in December 2016 and had every reason to be hopeful that the National Park Service would allow R-Evolution to be installed,” Robert “Roman” Haferd, an attorney and board member of the group, said in the statement.
Haferd, who managed the permitting process, said the National Park Service “spent a month reviewing before it gave written approval of the project in September” after the group provided various plans and requirements for its installation.
The National Park Service also issued a statement on the matter, saying the request for the statue to remain up for 91 days and an accompanying temple for 119 days, “is significantly in excess of the five-day time restriction set forth in the National Mall Turf Management Guidelines.”
In addition, the total height of the “R-Evolution” structure, which goes above 45-feet when including its base, “introduces a visual element that would diminish the property’s significant historic features by altering the setting and historic character of the National Mall landscape,” the statement reads.
“R-Evolution” is one of three monumental sculptures dubbed “The Bliss Project” by the creator, artist Marco Cochrane, according to Cochrane’s website.
“They are intended to challenge the viewer to see past the sexual charge that has developed around the female body, which has been used for power and control, to the human being,” a description of the three sculptures reads. “They are intended to de-objectify women and inspire men and women to take action to end violence against women, thus allowing both women and men to live fully and thrive.”
This will be the third year of the event and will run from Nov. 10 through Nov. 12.
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