The Philadelphia Inquirer reports, "An effort to fund art instead of death row," by A.D. Amorosi.
The Philadelphia poet, painter, musician, and activist Aja Beech spent the Memorial Day weekend — whose official observance commemorates those who died serving their country — finalizing the annual "Execute Art Not People" event, which seeks to redirect state funds from prison death rows to arts and education programs.
"With everyone volunteering time and space, we had to work around some very busy schedules — quite a round-the-clock labor of love," says Beech, noting this year’s participation by Rittenhouse Square’s Ethical Society, host of Friday’s exhibition, and the Mural Arts Program, which will hold a related interactive painting session.
Interactive involvement from across Philadelphia’s arts scene has been key to expanding the event, which was started in Harrisburg five years ago by Pennsylvanians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (PADP). Beech has been the regional face of the operation since 2010.
"The interactive-art thing has always been an important aspect of the event, so that people experience the art and its relationship to the death penalty," says Beech, author of a 2011 book of poetry titled Beccaria, after 18th-century Milanese philosopher and jurist Cesare Beccaria, who opposed the death penalty.
To that end, on Friday evening "Execute Art" will screen Concrete, Steel and Paint, a 2009 documentary about the Mural Arts Program’s work inside Graterford Prison. It also will display artwork by prisoners. Among them is Charles Lawson, who is serving a life term at Graterford, works with Mural Arts’ Healing Walls program there, and is a cofounder of Art for Justice, which encourages prison artists.
And:
Screening/Exhibition Execute Art Not People Free. 6-9 p.m. Friday at the Ethical Society of Philadelphia, 1906 Rittenhouse Square. For information, e-mail [email protected], or call 267-639-6169
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