As US president Donald Trump’s administration continues to crack down on free speech within the tradition sector, the non-profit organisation Artwork at A Time Like This is addressing censorship head-on within the new exhibition Don’t Look Now within the Nolita neighborhood of New York Metropolis (10-25 October).
In bringing collectively 24 modern artists whose work has been censored or blacklisted—together with Marilyn Minter, Shepard Fairey and Dread Scott—Don’t Look Now asks massive questions on the way forward for inventive expression in an more and more surveillant political local weather. The exhibition elevates the voices of artists whose decisions in material have come at private, skilled or political prices, whether or not that be via rescinded invites, canceled alternatives or misplaced federal funding. “We’re this from the impression on the artists”, Barbara Pollack, co-founder of Artwork At A Time Like This, tells The Artwork Newspaper.
Don’t Look Now’s organisers are intimately accustomed to the problems: in 2023, Artwork At A Time Like This confronted censorship throughout its public artwork marketing campaign 8×5: Artists Responding to Mass Incarceration, when billboard firms in Houston, Texas refused to platform the undertaking.
Danielle SeeWalker, G is for Genocide, 2024 Courtesy the artist and Artwork At A Time Like This
The exhibition highlights particular person works and the tales that led to their inclusion. The Lakota painter Danielle SeeWalker had a residency alternative rescinded in Vail, Colorado, over her portray G is for Genocide (2024), which depicts a Native American lady in a keffiyeh (Vail reached a settlement with the artist final month). A quilt by fiber artist Yvonne Iten-Scott, Origin (2023), was eliminated from an exhibition for its visible references to feminine anatomy and reproductive justice. Officers in Arizona tried to take away Shepard Fairey’s print My Florist is a Dick (2023) from the artist’s touring exhibition due to its critique of police brutality.
These examples attest to an more and more harmful ecosystem for overtly politically artwork. The Trump administration has laid off workers on the Nationwide Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and the Nationwide Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) en masse, and proposed slashing funding for each companies. The president declared the Smithsonian Establishment a font of “divisive race ideology”. Exhibitions perceived to be commenting on US politics and the struggle in Gaza have both closed early or been pre-emptively canceled, together with the Palestinian artist Samia Halaby’s 2024 solo present at Indiana College and Michelle Obama portraitist Amy Sherald’s Smithsonian exhibition.
In keeping with a January 2025 survey carried out by Artists at Threat Connection, Pen America and the Affiliation of Artwork Museum Administrators, 65% of museum administrators reported experiencing stress to take away a piece or name off an exhibition not less than as soon as over the course of their careers, whereas 55% agree that censorship is a “a lot greater drawback for museums as we speak” than a decade in the past.

Yvone Iten-Scott, Origin, 2023 Courtesy the artist and Artwork At A Time Like This
“We began engaged on this present a 12 months and a half in the past”, Pollack tells The Artwork Newspaper. “We discovered an increasing number of situations of museums being afraid and pulling work, and now below Trump, canceling exhibits due to his government orders governing the NEA. We have discovered many establishments self-censoring, however we additionally discovered different issues taking place which are very troubling, like artists getting canceled due to their Instagram posts. A brand new wrinkle in censorship. There are circumstances that get a whole lot of excessive visibility, like in exhibits with the Smithsonian, nevertheless it actually hurts a whole lot of artists which are having their first college museum present or their first fee.”
The curatorial ethos of the present displays topics which are changing into more and more taboo in artwork areas, Pollack says. “There are particular subjects that now throughout the board presenting establishments do not need to take care of,” she says. “One is ladies’s rights and reproductive rights. Two is trans rights. Three is [diversity, equity and inclusion]. 4 is pro-Palestinian work. So lots of the artists are actually grateful to us as a result of they cannot get their work proven anyplace.”
The exhibition additionally interrogates the broader financial engines driving rightward developments in artwork style and manufacturing. Pollack provides: “With among the financial challenges within the artwork world proper now, now we have to ask, what sort of exhibits are going to get funded or not funded? And the way will we outline museums? Are they simply seals of approval on a market exhibiting artists as commodities, or are they supposed to impress dialogue?”
Don’t Look Now: A Protection of Free Expression, 10-25 October, 127 Elizabeth Road, New York