Exhibition title: “(UN)censored, Rules, Responsibilities, Restraints: Women’s Pursuit of Equity,”
Show dates: Friday, March 7 – Sunday, March 23, 2025 | 630 Flushing Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Visits by appointment; contact artefleur@gmail.com
Closing Reception March 22, 2025 4pm-8pm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ARTISTS FIGHT BACK AFTER CANCELLATION OF ART EXHIBIT AT UN HEADQUARTERS
NEW VENUE FOUND & EXHIBIT OPENS MARCH 7, 2025
Community rallies around women’s rights exhibition; now opening in Brooklyn as a symbol of resistance
Exhibition opening: Friday, March 7
Press & VIP 5-6pm | Reception 6-9pm
630 Flushing Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Exhibition title: “(UN)censored”
Show dates: Friday, March 7 – Sunday, March 23, 2025 | 630 Flushing Ave, Brooklyn, NY
By appointment; contact artefleur@gmail.com
New York, NY – March 2, 2025 – Just weeks before its scheduled debut at United Nations Headquarters, “Rules, Responsibilities, Restraints: Women’s Pursuit of Equity,” an exhibition about women’s labor and rights—was unexpectedly stripped of its previously secured endorsement from the European Union Delegation. This was not a financial sponsorship, but an official endorsement—a necessary requirement for the exhibition to be shown at UNHQ. Without this backing, the exhibition, which was meant to be displayed in the highly visible UNHQ Visitors’ Lobby, was shut down. “This decision takes away a chance to bring global attention to human rights, artistic expression, and freedom of speech,” says Sawyer Rose, an artist with works in this exhibit.
With their UNHQ exhibition silenced, Rose and Fleur Spolidor, a French artist with paintings in the exhibition, raced to find a new venue in New York City—at the very moment these conversations should have been front and center. Refusing to let their work be censored, the community rallied behind Spolidor and Rose to make sure the exhibition found a platform where it could be seen and heard. In response to the situation, they have rebranded the exhibition as “(UN)censored,” a powerful statement against the suppression of free speech and challenging artistic work.
The exhibition, featuring work by American sculptor Rose (The Carrying Stones Project) and French painter Spolidor (The Swimsuits Series), was set to open alongside the 69th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW69) and the 30th anniversary of the Beijing Declaration on women’s rights—a moment meant to celebrate progress toward gender equity. Yet, in a striking contradiction, the EU Delegation pulled its endorsement just two weeks before opening, citing the 'challenging global context.'
"It’s getting harder to have honest conversations about equity and human rights," Rose says. "If even an exhibition about women’s labor and rights is considered too risky, that tells you everything. These are exactly the kinds of discussions we should be putting front and center, not shutting down."
"This is beyond frustrating," Spolidor says. "Nothing about our exhibition has changed since it was first approved. We spent years planning this, got our endorsement, followed every rule—then, at the last minute, it’s pulled. This isn’t just about our work being canceled; it’s about who gets to have a voice in these spaces. If art can’t challenge people, what is it for?”
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The Bigger Picture: Art, Politics, and Free Expression
The artists are also calling on journalists, arts organizations, and advocacy groups to help amplify this story and raise awareness about the growing restrictions on artistic expression in today’s political climate. With the NEA directing more 2025 grant funding toward projects celebrating the nation's 250th anniversary, and recent shifts in the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts’ board under the current administration, the arts are increasingly being shaped by political influence.
These developments highlight a troubling trend: the narrowing of creative spaces where freedom of speech and artistic expression can thrive.
“The cancellation of this exhibition is part of a much larger fight for artistic freedom,” Spolidor says. “When art that challenges the status quo is silenced, it’s not just the artists who lose—it’s all of us.”
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How You Can Help
📰 Press & Media: Journalists interested in covering this story can contact us for interviews, images, and additional details.
📢 Advocacy & Outreach: If you work with a museum, nonprofit, or advocacy group that supports artistic freedom, we’d love to connect.
For all inquiries, contact:
📩 sawyer@sawyerrose.com | 📞 415-806-2458
🔗 More information: artforwomensequity.com
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About the Team
Fleur Spolidor is a French painter whose work explores themes of women’s rights, its history, and cultural representations. The Swimsuits Series is a visual representation of the surreal challenges that women face in society.
Sawyer Rose is an American sculptor and activist recognized for The Carrying Stones Project, a body of work that blends sculpture with data visualization to highlight the disproportionate labor burdens placed on women.
Karen M. Gutfreund is the Curatorial Producer of “(UN)censored.” An artist and curator with a focus on “Art as Activism.” Gutfreund has created more than forty-five national exhibitions with self-identified women artists, on feminist and social justice themes.
NLraamkunst
Window art Show/Win my work.
Win the original artwork for the price of an art reproduction
My work “Love and Sunshine” was selected with the work of 2 other artists for this fun event. 200 posters of each artwork were printed and signed. As a collector, you can purchase the prints. You only have to hang the art reproduction of the artwork of your choice in front of your window for a chance to win the original artwork. How? For all information and an order form, visit www.NLraamkunst.nl .
It’s a great way to bring art to your home at a time when museums and art galleries are still closed and at the same time discover and support local visual artists.
Good luck!
“Love and Sunshine” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on paper,
size A1(23”x 33 inches or 59,4cm x 84,1cm) Framed
850 euros
Kunsthek
Window art show
During this month of February my work will be on display in the 7 windows attached to the fence of Oosterpark.
Location: Linnaeusstraat, Ooosterpark East gate.
For the occasion, I printed 7 posters size B2. They are available on demand.
Contact me directly for a reprint. Poster size B2: 60 euros. VAT incl.
Midnightin.Amsterdam
Window art show
I have the great pleasure to show my work in the window of Midnightin.Amsterdam during this month of January. Come take a look if you’re in the area.
Location: Daniel Stalpertstraat 106 Amsterdam
Acrylic on Canvas
Lets’s start the show with 5 acrylic paintings on collage of recycled materials.
“Stretching” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on canvas, 100 x 76 cm ,39”x 29”, 1950 €
“The Dream” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on canvas, 40x30.5 cm, 16”x12” 450 €
“Summer” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on canvas, 40x30.5 cm, 16”x12” 450 €
“Time to be safe at Home” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on canvas, 40x30.5 cm, 16”x12” 450 €
“Home sweet home” Acrylic on collage of recycled materials on canvas, 40x30.5 cm, 16”x12” 450 €
Digital work
These 4 little artwork are digital sketches made on my iPad and printed on photo paper.
“With love” Digital art, 28 x 21.5cm, 11” x 8.5”Framed, 145 €
“Fashionable” Digital art, 28 x 21.5cm, 11” x 8.5”Framed, 145 €
“Essentials” Digital art, 28 x 21.5cm, 11” x 8.5”Framed, 145 €
“Our house is burning” Digital art, 28 x 21.5cm, 11” x 8.5”Framed, 145 €
Tiny work
These 3 little oil paintings are only 15x15cm.
“Delft" oil on canvas, 15 x15 cm, 6”x6”, 125 €
“Sisters” oil on canvas, 15 x15 cm, 6”x6”, 125 €
“Pedicure” oil on canvas, 15 x15 cm, 6”x6”, 125 €
Ride to art
Window art show
Ride to Art is a free plain air exhibition of original art posters created by 15 artists of the neighborhood to support and entertain the residents of Amsterdam Oost and make the whole neighborhood more colorful in a moment of physical distancing. more info www.ridetoart.nl