5 Legendary Art Trials

Taking masterpieces to court is a tradition as old as the legal system. So is letting them off the hook.

1. India Balks at Arundhati Roy’s Matchmaking

Released in 1997, Indian writer Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things won Britain’s prestigious Booker Prize. It also won the attention of outraged locals. But it wasn’t the scenes of incest or pedophilia that offended these critics. Instead, the book—a complex tale involving multiple time lines and generations along with plenty of political intrigue—drew jeers because it told a love story between members of different castes.

Roy, an outspoken political activist, was accused of “corrupting public morality” and faced obscenity charges in her home state of Kerala. According to Roy, while the judge didn’t want to punish her, he also couldn’t ignore the local government, which found the book offensive. So he put off making a decision—for 10 years!

THE VERDICT: When a new judge finally took on the case, he dismissed the charges. That may seem like a victory, but Roy’s fiction career ground to a halt in the interim, and she still hasn’t produced a follow-up novel.

2. The U.S. Government Confiscates Underwear

American artist J.S.G. Boggs makes money. Literally. Boggs draws intricately detailed bank notes, crafting whimsical takeoffs of actual U.S. currency. Unlike legal tender, however, Boggs’s bills feature his own signature as “Secret of the Treasury.” One of his works is worth “tan dollars.” Sometimes the bills are bright orange and issued from the Florida United Numismatists (they have FUN scrawled across them in giant letters). Others bear the portraits Boggs believes they should have—Harriet Tubman is featured on one, while Boggs’s self-portrait modestly graces the $5,000 bill.

What makes his art dicier is the performance component. Boggs barters with people, offering to pay for goods and services with his hand-drawn bills but only for items of lesser value—a $10 bill for a $9.75 meal, for instance. Change and a receipt must be provided. He also trades exclusively with people who are unfamiliar with his legend. Unfortunately for Boggs, U.S. law forbids color illustrations of currency unless a big NONNEGOTIABLE is slapped across the front in quarter-inch-tall letters. From 1990 to 1992, Secret Service agents raided exhibits in Boggs’s study, his home, and his Carnegie Mellon University office. They seized more than 1,000 pieces of his artwork. And not just bills—they also took “rugs, cakes, cookies, and underwear with images of money on them,” Boggs says.

Strangely, the proceedings stopped there. Even though government officials insisted Boggs was breaking the law, they didn’t prosecute. They just held onto his artwork—permanently.

THE VERDICT: Boggs was never charged with counterfeiting, but he did end up in court. In 1993, Boggs sued the U.S. Department of the Treasury to get his artwork back. District Judge Royce C. Lamberth in Washington, D.C., simply dismissed the case.

3. France Gets Outraged Over an Affair

While today’s readers wouldn’t blush at the thought of steamy French literature, public opinion of the 19th century was a bit different. Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, the tragic tale of Emma Bovary’s extramarital dalliances serialized in La Revue de Paris in 1856, apparently crossed the line.

Almost immediately after publication, Flaubert was charged with outrage à la morale publique et religieuse et aux bonnes moeurs, or insulting public and religious morality. The problem? The book suggested that the titular character might have had reasons—a cloddish husband, for one—to disregard her marriage vows.

By early 1857, Flaubert was hauled into court on obscenity charges by imperial prosecutor Ernest Pinard, an unpopular bureaucrat among artists (he later went after the Modernist poet Charles Baudelaire). The case looked grim, but Flaubert hired Jules Sénard, a brilliant defense attorney. Sénard’s defense—since reprinted in most French editions of Madame Bovary—insisted that only through looking at vice could readers be educated about virtue.

THE VERDICT: Not only did the judges buy Sénard’s argument, but the trial brought Flaubert so much publicity that he was able to republish Madame Bovary as a book, which he dedicated to his lawyer.

4. Art That’s Too Punk for L.A.

In 1985, Tipper Gore took an overeager interest in the listening habits of America’s youth. Gore cofounded the warning-label-touting Parents Music Resource Center, which drew the ire of Frank Zappa, among others. But she wasn’t the only public figure with musical morality on her mind.

Michael Guarino, a new hire at the Los Angeles district attorney’s office, was eager to make a name for himself. In 1986, on the heels of 30 wins in a row, he decided to take aim at a punk icon. His target? Jello Biafra, singer of the hardcore band Dead Kennedys.

(Image credit: Montecruz Foto)

Their album Frankenchrist caught Guarino’s attention with a special insert featuring art by Oscar-winning designer H.R. Giger. The graphic piece was aptly titled “Penis Landscape.” Guarino recalled, “I remember looking at the piece of art and thinking, just on the basis of the insert, that we had a great case. It seemed to me that is the kind of material that most adults wouldn’t want to see distributed to kids.”

Guarino prosecuted the band for obscenity. But as he told the public radio program “This American Life” in 2005, he could quickly see that his case wasn’t going his way. Biafra wore a coat and tie to the trial, hardly the wardrobe of a ratty punk. The Dead Kennedys songs played for the jurors came across as pithy and catchy. And the illustration? It was shown enough in court that the shock wore off.

(YouTube link)

THE VERDICT: The jury deadlocked, and the case was dropped. Guarino—who left the D.A.’s office soon after—and Biafra were reunited on “This American Life.” They reminisced, discovering that they agreed on politics—Biafra had tied for second in the Green Party’s vote for the 2000 presidential nomination—and ended up making dinner plans.

5. Massachusetts Refuses to Get Religion

When British colonist William Pynchon wasn’t busy trading fur or founding Springfield, Mass., he was writing religious criticism, including the 1650 book The Meritorious Price of Our Redemption. Not the most thrilling read, it argued against one particular Puritan belief—that Jesus had suffered the torments of hell after being crucified. Pynchon’s point: the “price of our redemption” was Jesus’s perfect obedience. No additional suffering should have been required.

His heretical argument pushed the buttons of the Massachusetts Bay Colony General Court, which in those days was not only a legislature but also an actual court, and it ordered every copy of the British-printed book burned in Boston’s marketplace.

Pynchon defended his work in front of the court in May 1651, but he decided against making a follow-up appearance that October. The Court ordered him to recant or “stand to the judgment and censure of the court.” Rejecting both options, he left his property to his son and hightailed it back to England, where he lived out the rest of his life writing religious pamphlets in peace.

THE VERDICT: Guilty. Only a few copies of Pynchon’s book survived—and Boston judges were just getting started. In the 1920s, they started regularly banning works, including books by Upton Sinclair, William Faulkner, and H.G. Wells. So many great works have been “banned in Boston” that some now consider it an honor!

_______________________

The article above, written by Jamie Feldmar, is reprinted with permission from the May 2013 issue of mental_floss magazine. Get a subscription to mental_floss and never miss an issue!

Be sure to visit mental_floss' website and blog for more fun stuff!


Comments (0)

As there is some evidence that WalMart intentionally engineers mob-like hysteria on Black Friday for the profits they will rake in, without taking precautionary crown-control measures, they perhaps have earned some hatin'

For some details/research:
http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/011912.html#011912
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Although it is very easy to hate on Wal-Mart. you can't place the blame entirely on them. They get the publicity becuase they are the largest retailer in the world. The black Friday incidents are not limited to Wal-Mart, every large retailer uses the same practices (to some extent) for their Black Friday sales.

The blame should sit evenly on the consumers as well as the retailers.

Crowd control is a critical factor on days like this, and these corporations don't want to lay out additional expenses for security, thereby cutting into the profits.

They should hire extra personal, just for that one day, and arm them with tasers, pepper spray or something similar (I'd go to work for Wal-mart then,and turn them loose.

but the thing most people miss is the lack of personable accountability is is frightening. Not just on this day, but throughout the year. Not to mention pure common sense...if there is 1000 people crowding into a store for the same LIMITED QUANTITY ITEM, you need to stop think, is it worth risking injury/death to save $50.00 on that Wii/X-Box/Playstation/(insert current hot toy here)? Is it really worth injuring/ killing someone else so junior can have that 1 toy he really wants?

It's truly sickening watching the news and seeing reports of this kind of crap every year.

I personally stay home on Black Fridays and miss the deals. The one time I did venture into a Wal-Mart on that day, I almost got into a fight over a bag of cat food! What the hell?

I think the Black Friday sales should be discontinued all together. There has to be simpler,safer way to maintain profits and continue to offer the best holiday deals.
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I'm with Chuck.. well except I am not down with tasers. But other than that, the onus is on both parties. The retailers KNOW that these things could happen, and so should have the proper measures in place to deal with it. If you're intentionally drawing a crowd, you HAVE to have crowd control.

On the other hand, people should not be pushing, shoving, stampeding. But again, if people were made to stand in an orderly line, then there would be less of an opportunity for a huge mob at the doors.

So, it is on everyone, but the retailers are the ones who should be in the position to control the shoppers so that they don't behave like a mob.

And I also agree that Black Friday should be discontinued - I don't really see it being worth people getting killed or permanently disabled over. We don't have it here in Canada and we don't seem any worse off for it (although we do have our Boxing Day sales, but I don't think people typically suffer any lasting injuries from them).
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I work retail. Went through a Walmart black friday about ten years ago, and last year and this I'm at Toys R Us. Those of us over on the registers laugh and cringe as everyone rushes in. At least my store has been pretty good about crowd control and forcing people into one line (makes checkout faster if they form one line until they get to register, then are pointed at the one with the shortest line)

Other then being called some nasty words for forcing people back into line I haven't had any problems.
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Ditto Mr Bigglesworth. I worked retail one holiday season- it was truly interesting. But I'm all for adults acting like adults and being responsible for their own actions.
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GET YER BULLET PROOF VESTS & STOCK UP ON WINCHESTER SILVER TIPS

and the one's that will survive will be the one's smart enough to stay the hairy heck home

and NO I won't appologize
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I am back to working in retail, but I'm out of the mainstream, so I'm not worried....we will NOT have that kind of crowd. But I think the blame game should go both ways...
1) The stores are MUCH to blame for egging the shoppers on with the deals and then NOT being prepared for the crowd with extra precautions and security measures. I doubt the managers even know what to do!
2) But shoppers do need to think about it....Come on, it's just not worth those extra few bucks to risk someones' life or have a lifelong disability....And it CAN HAPPEN TO YOU. My husband and I avoid all the major stores, malls and shopping centers on Black Friday on principle.
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Why don't people stay home and survive from crazy Black Friday Crowd? I'd rather sleep late tomorrow and
go to retailmenot or http://www.followsales.com find the best online deals. JUST leave away from the major retailers if you cherich your life!
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Personally, as a fashion lover myself, I love to shop, but I also like to make sure that I am getting the best deal. Fashion is not always cheap and the more I save, the more I can buy, right? And who doesn’t love a good sale? When I first heard about http://www.followsales.com, I was really impressed by how they really incorporate a lot of good features that really makes me excited. It really a great website!
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And why shouldn't "shoppers" be responsible for behaving like frenzied animals for the sake of material goodies that are LUXURIES to most of the world?

Greed is NOT an acceptable excuse for mobbing, trampling other human beings, etc.
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Seanette- Well said.

My brother and I went out to Best Buy one year. Got there at I think 4 or 5am and the line was already wrapped around the parking lot to the street. No stampeding, everyone waited their turn to get in. People were giving my brother and I hard glares when we snagged the last monitor that was on sale, but other than that, everything was crowded but civil.

Never doing it again though... Black Friday just is not worth it. Even though I stay up late, I still enjoy my sleep in a nice comfy bed. Not camping out in front of a store to save a few bucks.
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@LisaL, I agree that it's just not worth it. I'm not a morning person either and don't care for crowds, even when they're relatively sane (the twice I've tackled Black Friday, sanity is not a noticeable characteristic of shoppers that day). I made sure on Wednesday I had the supplies on hand I needed to make it to Monday so I can avoid stores this weekend.
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Is it just me or wouldn't it be a great idea if we combined Black Friday with Mardi Gras, where women flash their breasts for great deals? We could call it "Value Wednesday".
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The whole Wal-Mart scene is deplorable. I've been in a Wal-Mart only twice in my life, and couldn't help but notice that a.) items were not organized in a way that made it possible to find anything on purpose, and b.) the items one could find were of average to poor quality, and were not anything that could not be found elsewhere for less, and with greater ease. Being on a limited budget, my purchases are restricted, and I would not waste my time or money shopping at Wal-Mart. And I hate to generalize, but the clientele there was buying up shopping-carts-ful of junk food and the like, with kids running out-of-control, lots of shouting across the store and profanity. I'm sorry, but I find that all very unpleasant. Also, I teach, and I've noticed a direct correlation between people who think Wal-Mart is cool and people who wind up in detention or getting suspended for severe behavioral problems. I was not at all surprised to read of the greeter who was trampled.
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Wow, Nicholas, that smugly elitist attitude toward people who don't feel the need to pay twice as much for the exact same item (or cannot afford to) or find that WalMart is about all that's open at times that fit their WORK schedules must get you SO much "romance".
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@Seanette

The amount of people that go to Wal-Mart for the sake of convenience is very small compared to the bulk of people that go there. Convenience is the only reason that I would go there, like late at night when I wanted to buy a USB recharger for my Nintendo DS, or another night when I needed to pick up some AAA batteries. As for cost of merchandise, these people aren’t really saving on the crap they are buying, it's just they have bought into the belief that they are. They are paying cheap shopping mall prices for overpriced dollar store items. Most people don’t want to look for deals; they just want to be told where they can get them no matter what budget they are on.
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spent about 4 hours at the wal-mart in douglasville georgia in order to purchase a rockband for $50 for my son for christmas this year. long story short, the "new and safer" way that wal-mart set things up this year caused a huge explosion as the shoppers launched themselves onto the sale items ten minutes before the sale was to start at 5 a.m. i was slammed into the freezer section, my sister ended up with two broken fingers and my boyfriend has bruises and scratches all up and down his sides from the man who physically attacked him to take the rockband from his hands. i just don't get it. it's christmas, for God's sake. it's for the children. where has the decency of humanity gone?
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