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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Art > Southern Poverty Regulation Middle Backs Removing of For Freedoms Billboard
Southern Poverty Regulation Middle Backs Removing of For Freedoms Billboard
Art

Southern Poverty Regulation Middle Backs Removing of For Freedoms Billboard

Last updated: February 4, 2025 6:13 am
Editorial Board Published February 4, 2025
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The Southern Poverty Regulation Middle (SPLC), a civil rights authorized advocacy nonprofit headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama, declared its help of Mayor Steven L. Reed’s name to take away a billboard designed by the humanities collective For Freedoms final week.

Put in forward of an exhibition of works by photographer Spider Martin on the Montgomery Museum of Superb Arts, the billboard art work featured Martin’s well-known picture “Two Minute Warning” (1965). The picture captured Alabama state troopers charging towards Hosea Williams and John Lewis on Bloody Sunday, when a police mob attacked tons of of marchers in Selma advocating for voting rights. In For Freedoms’s design, the picture is overlaid with the Trump marketing campaign slogan “Make America Great Again.”

A spokesperson for the mayor’s workplace stated that the billboard was posted alongside the I-85 freeway in Montgomery however couldn’t affirm its actual location.

Tafeni English-Relf, director of the SPLC’s Alabama State Workplace, stated in an announcement that the slogan goals to “undo the progress Black Americas marched and died for” and that its inclusion within the picture “disrespects John Lewis’ legacy and contributions to the Civil Rights Movement.”

The unique For Freedoms billboard put in in Pearl, Mississippi, in 2016 (picture by and courtesy Wyatt Gallery)

English-Relf famous within the assertion that the unique For Freedoms design was created in 2016 and put in in Pearl, Mississippi, the place it “continues to spark conversation.”

“Now, the discussion has shifted from a historical and political one to a debate over intentionality. No one wants that. This recent billboard may have been well-intentioned, but meaningful conversations about race, injustice and the ongoing fight for civil rights cannot be left to inference alone,” English-Relf wrote.

For Freedoms has not but responded to Hyperallergic’s most up-to-date request for remark. Co-Government Director Woo stated in an announcement final week that the group “understand[s] the pressures that cultural institutions are under right now.”

Tracy Martin, daughter of Spider Martin, advised Hyperallergic that she had given permission to For Freedoms Co-Founder Hank Willis Thomas to make use of the enduring {photograph} as a part of an ongoing collaboration. She disagreed with the mayor’s choice, calling it a “violation of freedom of speech.” 

“These boards ask the question: When was America great?” Martin stated in an announcement to Hyperallergic final week. “The MAGA slogan has been clear for many years, and as far as we know, the person who coined it doesn’t think America is great now but rather that it was great during some other time in the past.”

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TAGGED:backsBillboardcenterfreedomsLawPovertyremovalSouthern
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