Le Lézard
Classified in: Covid-19 virus
Subjects: CPN, AVO

Artists Use Trump's Own Words to Call Out GOP Atrocities in Emotionally-Charged New Billboard, Street Art Campaign


DETROIT, Aug. 28, 2020 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Several of the nation's most critically acclaimed, award-winning artists created unique works focused on Trump's failed leadership on issues like police brutality, racism, hate speech, immigration and the Coronavirus pandemic, overlaid with controversial statements from Trump and his allies. Viewers are urged to go to RememberWhatTheyDid.com, where they can pledge to vote, register to vote, learn about early voting or crowdfund more billboards in battleground communities across the country. The RemememberWhatTheyDid.com and #VoteThemOut Campaign is part of a get out the vote and voter registration drive focused on often overlooked and underrepresented communities, including African American, Latinx and young people who are frequently underrepresented at the polls and not reached with traditional political advertising.

See the art and learn more here: https://rememberwhattheydid.com/

The RemememberWhatTheyDid campaign is launching in four battleground cities: Detroit, Michigan; Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and Phoenix, Arizona. The jarring and emotionally-charged images will be featured on five billboards in each city as well as in a poster street art and GOTV campaign led by local partners in neighborhoods and businesses.

The campaign is organized by Robin Bell, known for his video projections on the Trump Hotel in DC, and Scott Goodstein, a veteran of the Obama 2008 and Sanders 2016 campaigns and brings together some of the most critically acclaimed social justice artists of our time, including Shepard Fairey (creator of the iconic Obama poster), Nekisha Durrett, Nate Lewis, Rafael Lopez, Robert Russell, Rob Sheridan, and Swoon (Caledonia Curry). A partner on the effort is Collective Super PAC, the SuperPAC affiliate of The Collective PAC which is dedicated to building Black political power with candidate support and nationwide voter registration and education campaigns. The Collective is working to create an America where Black people are equally represented at every level of government.

"The Covid pandemic coupled with continued police brutality brought to the surface inequities across race and gender in every facet of American life. This reckoning with America's racist legacy has been led by young activists who have taken the movement for Black Lives to the streets. The artwork embodies the energy of these young activists in an effort to connect to communities on a visceral level and to move everyone to the voting booth in November," said artist Nekisha Durrett.

"These images are a stark reminder of the atrocities perpetrated by this President and his allies. We are connecting what has been said and done with the importance of voting. Our message is simple: Remember what they did and vote them out," said Bell.

"Some forty percent of voters aren't reached by the usual voter-file matched political advertising and many of these voters are in communities that are underrepresented at the polls. In an election year this important, we cannot allow any of our communities to be overlooked," said Goodstein.

"Life imitates art, and the images we see have a direct impact on our democracy. The Collective is proud to work with the Artists United for Change community as they depict what we are all feeling ? the need for change and realizing that change come November 3rd," said Quentin James, Founder and President of The Collective.

In his piece, artist Shepard Fairey takes on police brutality in a shocking way.

"My art piece is a reminder that while the American public was protesting in the streets, in record numbers, against racism and police brutality, Donald Trump was encouraging police brutality against the protesters, reinforcing the very same problems within law enforcement and the criminal justice systems the protesters were demanding to be reformed. This image implies that the police are supposed to be peacekeepers, not warriors, and that Donald Trump is on the wrong side of social justice and the wrong side of history!" -Shepard Fairey

The RemememberWhatTheyDid campaign is a project of Artists United for Change.
Follow us on twitter at: @rememberin2020
On Instagram at: @rememberwhattheydid
https://www.facebook.com/RememberWhatTheyDid/

KEY VOTING FACTS:

Black voter turnout fell in 2016 and latino turnout was flat, even as a record number of Americans cast ballots (Pew Research)

 

SOURCE Artists United for Change


These press releases may also interest you

4 mai 2024
The Better Business Bureau Serving the...

3 mai 2024
CMC Metals Ltd. (CMCXF:OTCQB) ("CMC" or the "Company") announces that as a result of a review by the British Columbia Securities Commission ("BCSC"), the Company is issuing the following news to clarify previous...

3 mai 2024
The Board of Trustees of First Trust Energy Infrastructure Fund (the "Fund") , CUSIP 33738C103, previously approved a managed distribution policy for the Fund (the "Managed Distribution Plan") in reliance on exemptive relief received from the...

3 mai 2024
FGI Industries Ltd. ("FGI" or the "Company"), a leading global supplier of kitchen and bath products, today announced that it will issue financial results for the first quarter 2024 after the market close on Wednesday, May 8, 2024. Management will...

3 mai 2024
WHY: Rosen Law Firm, a global investor rights law firm, reminds purchasers of common stock of QuidelOrtho Corporation between February 18, 2022 and April 1, 2024, both dates inclusive (the "Class Period") of the important June 11, 2024 lead...

3 mai 2024
University of Phoenix College of Nursing is pleased to highlight the recent publication by alumna Gloria Littlemouse, Ph.D. in Nursing, MSN, RN, WCSI Scholar, whose dissertation study informed an article, "Lived Experiences of ICU Nurses During...



News published on and distributed by: