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"An exhibit opening Saturday at the University of Virginia Art Museum will be missing one colorful piece a short film and sculpture that depict a pile of orange and blue dog poop. Sculptor Irwin Berman, a 1962 graduate of UVas School of Medicine, created the scatological artwork as part of his exhibit titled Sedentary Pleasures: UnCommon Stools. The showing, which runs through June 15, showcases Bermans wood, metal, plastic and glass sculptures in the shape of stools (of the sitting kind). UVa Art Museum officials rejected Bermans submission of the fecal-themed sculpture and a three-minute animated film that tells the story of UVas second mascot, a 1940s-era cross-eyed mutt named Seal. According to UVa lore, Seal won the love of students after he pooped on the megaphone of an opposing schools cheerleader at a football game. In the surrealistic film, The Great Seal of Virginia: A Dreamscape, the ghost of Seal rises from his grave after the Cavalier, UVas current mascot, pokes at a puppy dog with his saber. Seals specter angrily devours the Cavalier, flies into the night sky and then, through the miracle of digestion, deposits the orange-and-blue remnants of the Cavalier onto a massive wooden stool. A crowd of cheering UVa football fans then hoists the dog who is wearing a Virginia football helmet onto their shoulders in celebration. The Latin phrase Nanos gigantium humeris insidentes flashes upon the screen, followed by the translation: We stand on the shoulders of our forebears. [see note, below] An off-kilter version of UVas The Good Old Song plays as the credits roll. Accompanying the avant-garde film was Bermans sculpture, a wooden stool covered in fake orange and blue dog droppings. One of Bermans three collaborators on the project, UVa alumnus and New York City-based animator Michael Wartella, said the artists were deeply disappointed that the university opted against showing the work. Its not defecating on the school at all, he said. We were totally taken aback. Its so ridiculous. OK, sure, theres defecation involved. But its an art film. You dont have to like it. UVa spokeswoman Carol Wood stood by the universitys rejection of the film and sculpture. Berman, she said, submitted the pieces as an add-on to the approved stool exhibit a month ago. Museum officials told him that they decided it was inappropriate for the exhibition, she said. The museum looked at it and decided that it didnt fit within the parameters of the exhibit, Wood said. Wood added that she was personally unimpressed with theartistic merits of the piece. A dog pooping? You can see that by going around the block, she said. Except in that case, its not orange and blue. Wartella pointed out that the film is not overly graphic. Theres not a close-up, he said. Its not a John Waters film. Berman, who is a longtime benefactor of the museum, sought to downplay the kerfuffle in an e-mail late Thursday. The Great Seal was but one of four of my works that were edited out of the university museum exhibit, on grounds which I believe reflected sound curatorial judgments by the museum director and curator, he wrote. Along with Berman and Wartella, UVa art professor William Bennett and Los Angeles-based musician Sam Retzer also contributed to the work. Retzer, also a UVa alum, wrote and performed the soundtrack. Retzers past film score credits include Stomp the Yard and Garfield. The piece was conceived as a fundraising tool for UVas McIntire Department of Art. The idea was that the artists would sell DVDs of the film for $100 and would then donate the proceeds to the university. Its outrageous that three alumni could come together to create a film to benefit the arts at UVa and the university just poo-poohs it, Wartella wrote in an e-mail. Youve heard of Dadaism? Well, this isnt da-da, its doo-doo right in the face of the administration for being so nearsighted as to reject this gift to future students. UVas rejection of the art has not scuttled the artists fundraising plans. The sculpture is on display at the Les Yeux du Monde gallery off the Downtown Mall. Copies of the animated film will be offered in exchange for gifts to the universitys art department, Berman said. Laura Jones, co-owner of Migration: A Gallery and a Charlottesville art blogger, said UVas actions set a bad educational example. UVa is trying to straddle between public and private. We have to be very watchful of anything they do that smacks of censorship, said Jones, who stipulated that she has not seen the piece in question. Once you invite an artist, stand behind them." (Brian McNeill, The Daily Progress, May 1, 2008) Editor's Note: A more accurate translation is included in this
quote, translated from John of Salisbury, 1159: "Bernard of Chartres
used to say that we are like dwarfs on the shoulders of giants, so that
we can see more than they, and things at a greater distance, not by virtue
of any sharpness of sight on our part, or any physical distinction, but
because we are carried high and raised up by their giant size."
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