The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Controvers­ial art stays

Paintings depict reported Chinese persecutio­n.

- By Nicholas Fouriezos nfouriezos@ajc.com

An art exhibit critical of the Chinese government will not be taken down from the lobby of a prominent state office building this week after all.

Georgia Building Authority officials had a change of heart after the exhibit’s sponsors asked them to leave the paintings up until July 5, the previously agreed-upon finish date.

The paintings portray religious persecutio­n and greet visitors of the James H. “Sloppy” Floyd Building near the state Capitol with images of torture, murder and organ harvesting. Members of the Falun Gong movement, a spiritual practice from the Buddha school, said an early exit from the building would have been expensive.

“We already made effort to continue the exhibition at another location at the end of the two-month period,” said Frank Xie, a Falun Gong member, in an email obtained through open records by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “An early terminatio­n will incur great amount of expenses to our non-profit organizati­on.”

The exhibit began May 2 after an applicatio­n from the Falun Gong Associatio­n of Atlanta was accepted.

It was approved at a time when Georgia continues to court investment and business from China, the state’s secondlarg­est export market. The Chinese government outlawed Falun Gong practices in 1999, calling the movement a “cult.”

A GBA official told Xie on Tuesday that the paintings would have to be taken down by the end of the day.

“We are completing constructi­on and have parties interested in dis- playing their items,” wrote Kashara BlakeParks, an administra­tive operations specialist.

The Atlanta JournalCon­stitution first reported on the exhibit’s planned removal that afternoon, five days after reaching out to the GBA for comment about the exhibit.

Xie emailed the GBA, urging them to allow the exhibit to continue. He said GBA Executive Director Steve Stancil called him to straighten things out soon after.

“I’m very glad that the issue is resolved,” Xie said. “The people of Georgia will be able to see this wonderful exhibit.”

Although the exhibit will remain, there was at least one state employee who thought it shouldn’t be there.

Laynea Allen, a program coordinato­r for the Human Resources Administra­tion, complained about the paintings being housed in the same building as her department.

“They’re like the Scientolog­y of China,” Allen wrote in an email to the GBA. “I’ve had to ask them to leave when I saw them proselytiz­ing at my place of business at a previous job, and they are persistent, like cockroache­s.”

about being‘dead broke’. She should have said‘morally bankrupt’. We need to let those people in Iraq, Afghanista­n and all the others deal with their own issues. We have too many here that need our attention. We are tired of losing lives, limbs and money for nothing. Can you crazy people please just commit suicide the old fashioned way, in private, in your home? We’re tired of your shenanigan­s that hurt other people.

 ?? NICHOLAS FOURIEZOS / NICHOLAS.FOURIEZOS@AJC.COM ?? A series of paintings depicting the persecutio­n of the Falun Gong movement in China has been on display in the James “Sloppy” Floyd Veteran Memorial Building near the state Capitol since May 2.
NICHOLAS FOURIEZOS / NICHOLAS.FOURIEZOS@AJC.COM A series of paintings depicting the persecutio­n of the Falun Gong movement in China has been on display in the James “Sloppy” Floyd Veteran Memorial Building near the state Capitol since May 2.

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