Showing posts with label A.R.T.I.S.T.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A.R.T.I.S.T.. Show all posts

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Judge Denies Temporary Injunction Against City In Park Artist Fight: Crack Down Begins Monday

Artist Market In Union Square.  The Bloomberg administration - and  the various park conservancies and BIDs that run the four parks affected by the new vending rules - claim the parks have become too crowded necessitating the change.  The lawsuit argues that greenmarket and holiday commercial vendors create more congestion in the parks than the artists. (see below) Beginning Monday in Union Square Park, 18 artists will be allowed to sell their work each day on a first come first serve basis. An additional 40 vendors will be allowed to sell in the park on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays.

The rules will also push the artists to the perimeter of the park to within six inches of the street, according to Robert Lederman, a plaintiff in the suit.   "They're creating a dangerous situation where there wasn't one before." 
(photos:  © Geoffrey Croft/NYC Park Advocates)  Click on Images to enlarge.

Manhattan

By Geoffrey Croft

On Friday afternoon, Federal District Court Judge Richard J. Sullivan declined to issue a preliminary injunction to block the enforcement of the new Park rules designed to dramatically reduce the number of artists working in four parks in Manhattan. The City will begin enforcing the new rules on Monday July 19th.  

The  Bloomberg administration,  the conservancies and the BID who collectively run the four parks, have said the parks have become too crowded. The lawsuit argued that the greenmarket and holiday commercial vendors create far more congestion in the parks than the artists.

Robert Lederman, president of Artists' Response to Illegal State Tactics (A.R.T.I.S.T,)  one of the plaintiffs,  pointed out that artists have previously been denied injunctions in all of the cases that they eventually won. He said his lawyers will immediately be appealing the decision.

Greenmarket Conjestion. The park conservancies and the BIDS that run the four parks argue that the parks have become too crowded,  but the lawsuit contends that greenmarket and holiday commercial vendors create more congestion in the parks than the artists.



City lawyer Mark Muschenheim said he was pleased with the decision, saying the rules reflect a careful balance between the rights of, vendors and the public's right to enjoy the parks, according to The Associated Press.

The new rules place a cap on the number of "expressive matter vendors" selling in Union Square Park,  the High Line, Battery Park and six areas around Central Park.  Spaces will now be granted on a first-come-first-served basis. Artists maintain these restrictions are impeding their first amendment rights while also greatly impact their livelihood.

In Union Square Park, 18 artists will be allowed to sell their work each day. An additional 40 vendors will be allowed to sell  in the park on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays. In Central Park 8 artists will be allowed at at Columbus Circle, 5 on Central Park South, 10 by the Plaza Hotel, 13 along Wien Walk leading to the Central Park Zoo, 16 on the south side of the Metropolitan Museum, 12 on the north side. In Battery Park, 9 will be allowed only on the perimeter of the park. On the High Line, artists will be limited to 5 spots.

Artists will be allowed into Union Square Park on Monday morning beginning at 6am. The artists argue they are being unfairly targeted because the general public face no time restrictions as to when they are allowed to enter the park. 

According to Mr. Lederman, artists will begin protesting "and otherwise resisting the new Park rules.... for the foreseeable future,"  beginning Monday at 9AM in the South Plaza (by 14th Street), in Union Square Park.  


Read More:

Artists Planning A Work of Protest

Wall Street Journal - July 19, 2010 By Lauren Fedor


The Examiner - July 18, 2010 - By Leslie Koch

July 17, 2010 - By Peter Walsh 

New York Times - July 16,  2010 -  By Javier C. Hernandez 

A Walk In The Park - July 15, 2010

A Walk In The Park - June 18, 2010

A Walk In The Park - April 10, 2010

A Walk In The Park - December 18, 2009  - By Geoffrey Croft

A Walk In The Park - November 21, 2009 

Friday, April 16, 2010

City Set to Give Park Art the Brush Off

Artist-in-residence Elizabeth James of Australia paints New York Harbor from Governors Island with the Manhattan skyline behind.
Getty Images

Manhattan's most famous parks are lined with artists selling their sculptures, paintings and photographs — often of quintessential New York scenes — but city officials say the vendors have grown out of control and are trying to force many of them off the streets.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg's administration wants to shrink the vendor population by up to 80 percent in some areas — dramatically altering a colorful part of the cityscape that has for decades served as an outdoor gallery popular among tourists in a city known worldwide for its arts.

"If they do this, it will be war in the city because so many people will lose money and a place to show their work," said Alex Basansky, a photographer who sells his prints of city scenes at the southeast entrance of Central Park.

The regulations would also severely limit the number of vendors in parts of Central Park, plus all of Union Square and Battery Park in downtown Manhattan and the High Line Park, a new elevated park along Manhattan's far West Side.

Painter Robert Lederman, President of A.R.T.I.S.T (Artists' Response To Illegal State Tactics), told NBCNewYork that his some 2,000 members will fight the new rules if they pass.

"We will resist, we will be arrested, and we will sue," said Lederman, who believes the new laws are unconstitutional.

Read More:

NBC  News - By Andrew Siff and Hasani  Gittens - April 16, 2010


Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Anti-Bloomberg/Benepe Poster Unveiled In Fight Against New Parks Department Artist Vending Rules

New York City street artists are escalating their fight against the proposed Parks Department regulations on expressive matter vendors, according to Examiner.Com.   
In Union Square Park, vendors started displaying "Artist Power!" signs on their stands last weekend. Many plan to attend the community board hearings tonight and tomorrow.


Robert Lederman, president of the street art advocacy group A.R.T.I.S.T., unveiled a new poster today that accuses Mayor Bloomberg of violating street artists' First Amendment rights.

"Bloomberg is killing New York City street art," reads the headline. "He wants to steal our First Amendment rights of free speech."

These bold statements appear over the jarring image of a skeleton.

The proposed Parks Department restrictions would limit the number of vendors who sell "expressive matter" in four popular Manhattan parks.

The "expressive matter" label includes street artists selling their own work, as well as vendors selling books, writings and other protected materials.

>>Learn more about the proposed Parks Department restrictions by reading the first article in this series: "Union Square artist market threatened by new Parks Department rules"

Defiant message

Lederman emailed the poster to Parks Commissioner Adrian Benepe on Tuesday afternoon. His message read:

Dear Commissioner Benepe,
Exactly as predicted, you will be seeing a lot of creativity unleashed in USP 
[Union Square Park], Central Park and elsewhere thanks to your latest misguided efforts against street artists.

See attached sign by one of many USP artists now getting busy on this. It is being printed in the hundreds right now. You have awakened the artists.

Keep up the good work!

Read More:

Examiner.com - April 6, 2010 - By Leslie Koch




Saturday, November 21, 2009

Artist Arrested on Highline, DPR's Mea Culpa

(Left): Robert Lederman's display of artwork on the High Line on Saturday afternoon.

Robert Lederman, president of the street artists rights group A.R.T.I.S.T. (Artists Response To Illegal State Tactics) was arrested for selling art at the High Line esplanade from the display (left). The High Line is located in the heart of the city's art community.

The arrest was made on Saturday afternoon by Park Enforcement Patrol (PEP). It has long been established that selling art in NYC Parks is protected by law. Mr. Lederman has won 5 Federal lawsuits on street artists First Amendment rights for which millions of dollars has been paid out in legal fees and settlements. According to Mr. Lederman, he was repeatedly threatened with arrest by Friends of the High Line (FOHL) employees. FOHL did not return a call for comment.


Below is a Press Release from Robert Lederman and a follow up statement from the Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR).

Press Release
November 21, 2009

Robert Lederman, president of the street artists’ rights group A.R.T.I.S.T. (Artists’ Response To Illegal State Tactics) was arrested on the 14th Street section of the Highline Park on Saturday, at approximately 3:30 PM. Lederman was issued 5 summonses, handcuffed and taken to the 6th Precinct by PEP (Park Enforcement Patrol) officers, after employees of the Highline Park called police. This is Lederman’s 42nd arrest.

Lederman was on the Highline displaying and selling original fine art prints of his NYC scenes. Between 1994 and 2001 Lederman won 5 Federal lawsuits on street artists’ First Amendment rights. Among them was a 2001 Federal Appeals court ruling (Lederman et al v Giuliani), which established that visual artists can sell in any NYC park without a license or Parks permit, based on First Amendment freedom of speech.

Summonses were issued for the following: Vending without a Park permit; failure to comply; disorderly conduct; failure to comply with directions of officers and unauthorized vending.

Lederman was released from the 6th Precinct around 6:30 PM and made the following statement:

“The Parks Department has done a very poor job of educating their employees about the legal issues involving First Amendment rights, artists and parks. Before any of these summonses were issued or any arrest was made I repeatedly explained to Highline employees and PEP officers that a court order was in effect and that artists freely and legally sold in all NYC Parks without a license or permit. I also showed them articles from the NY Times and NY Post describing this exact court order.

The wealthy people who paid to create the Highline seem to have forgotten that it is still a public park. The US Constitution remains in effect there, as do the street artists’ rights described in numerous 2nd circuit Federal Court orders. These court orders are constantly being violated by the Parks Department. This is a blatant example of contempt of court, false arrest and chilling of free speech in the name of privatization.”

Contact:
Robert Lederman
artistpres@gmail.com

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nycstreetartists/

The usually press-friendly Friends of the High Line refused to comment on the incident and instead left the DPR to fend for itself.

Parks Department Statement

“The High Line is a unique public space, a thin elevated corridor at less than three acres with pathways as narrow as eight feet wide in some places. Many activities are prohibited. These include biking, skateboarding, throwing a baseball or a Frisbee, or walking a dog. The High Line can receive as many as 25,000 visitors on a busy day, walking along its long linear surface surrounded by fragile new plantings. Mr. Lederman and other vendors are able to ply their trade in hundreds of New York City parks and on hundreds of miles of city streets, where visitors can linger and enjoy their wares.” —DPR Statement issued November 23, 2009.

Our prediction - All the tickets will be dismissed and Mr. Lederman will sue for false arrest and city's taxpayers will forced to pay, again.

Background

Judge Bars Permit Requirement for Art Vendors
NY Times - August 11, 2001


NY Times on Parks Dept artist permit ruling

NY Post on street artist Federal Court ruling

Street artist Federal court rulings