This portrait of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was done with acrylics to commemorate King Day at Camden NJ High School in the late 80's when I was teaching art there.
Yesterday's (January 17, 2010) Philadelphia Inquirer had a commentary by John Timpane titled The Sermon We Ignore.
His premise is that we celebrate "I have a dream," but our society ignores or suppresses the idea that King advocated that we need to reform our economic and social system.
On philly.com I couldn't find the link to this article, but the newspaper version mentions a link to a speech titled "Beyond Vietnam" (http://go.philly.com/beyondvietnam).
Dr. King says in this speech "We must begin the shift from a 'thing oriented' society to a 'person oriented' society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered."
Yesterday's article cited an April 21, 1967 editorial in Life magazine that called the sermon "demagogic slander that sounded like a script for Radio Hanoi." That type of criticism sounds like the Bush/Chaney Axis of Weasel nonsense that anyone criticizing them is un-American. This fear tactic is what caused the spineless Democrats to join the rush to war without questioning the false reasoning and phony rational. Warmongers always seem to try and paint anyone against war as weak. We need to tell our leaders we do not want our money going for the destruction of other people and places.
If instead of going to war we sent teams of educators, carpenters, electricians, plumbers, etc to Iraq and Afghanistan we could win the hearts of the people and do some real good. Right now our military is having a hard time helping the Afghans to defend themselves because so few of them are literate.
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Like the picture alot and can't wait to see more of your art work.
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