The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention

This article examines violent protest in art museums. There is a long history of art museums being used as sites of protest. As spaces full of meaning, they represent ideal locations for people to try to shape the present and the future. From peaceful demonstrations to terrorist attacks, the current...

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Main Author: John Kerr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/7/4/61
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spelling doaj-c34cae3543db4994b48737b0631679722020-11-24T21:17:50ZengMDPI AGArts2076-07522018-10-01746110.3390/arts7040061arts7040061The Art of Violent Protest and Crime PreventionJohn Kerr0Department of Social Sciences, University of Roehampton, SW15 5SL London, UKThis article examines violent protest in art museums. There is a long history of art museums being used as sites of protest. As spaces full of meaning, they represent ideal locations for people to try to shape the present and the future. From peaceful demonstrations to terrorist attacks, the current risks of protest to art museums is high. Motivated by ideological, political and social reasons, these protests include those that specifically target art objects within the art museums, as well as others that use the sites as stages on which to protest. This article is based predominantly on secondary sources; however, it also uses empirical research data collected by the author during observation research at art museums in London in March 2017 and July 2017. The article begins by considering why art museums attract so many protests. It argues that as ‘sites of persuasion’, art museums can be battlegrounds on which people look to shape how society is constructed and perceived. It then examines contemporary and historical case studies in Brazil and the UK to help our understanding of violent protests and the challenges they pose to art museums. Following this, the article proposes that as art museums are important sites of persuasion, there must be more awareness of the threats they face from violent protests in order to shape crime prevention approaches. The article finishes by arguing that although protests can be highly problematic for people involved with art museums, the ongoing appeal of these spaces as sites of protest shows the significance of art museums as important locations of cultural meaning.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/7/4/61violent protestart crimeart museumssituational crime preventionterrorism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Kerr
spellingShingle John Kerr
The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
Arts
violent protest
art crime
art museums
situational crime prevention
terrorism
author_facet John Kerr
author_sort John Kerr
title The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
title_short The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
title_full The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
title_fullStr The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
title_full_unstemmed The Art of Violent Protest and Crime Prevention
title_sort art of violent protest and crime prevention
publisher MDPI AG
series Arts
issn 2076-0752
publishDate 2018-10-01
description This article examines violent protest in art museums. There is a long history of art museums being used as sites of protest. As spaces full of meaning, they represent ideal locations for people to try to shape the present and the future. From peaceful demonstrations to terrorist attacks, the current risks of protest to art museums is high. Motivated by ideological, political and social reasons, these protests include those that specifically target art objects within the art museums, as well as others that use the sites as stages on which to protest. This article is based predominantly on secondary sources; however, it also uses empirical research data collected by the author during observation research at art museums in London in March 2017 and July 2017. The article begins by considering why art museums attract so many protests. It argues that as ‘sites of persuasion’, art museums can be battlegrounds on which people look to shape how society is constructed and perceived. It then examines contemporary and historical case studies in Brazil and the UK to help our understanding of violent protests and the challenges they pose to art museums. Following this, the article proposes that as art museums are important sites of persuasion, there must be more awareness of the threats they face from violent protests in order to shape crime prevention approaches. The article finishes by arguing that although protests can be highly problematic for people involved with art museums, the ongoing appeal of these spaces as sites of protest shows the significance of art museums as important locations of cultural meaning.
topic violent protest
art crime
art museums
situational crime prevention
terrorism
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/7/4/61
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