How to spark serious social change, using art

Six tips from ACT UP — Legendary ACT UP founding member Avram Finkelstein combined art and activism to combat the AIDS crisis. Here, he shares the invaluable lessons he’s learned.

During the early years of the AIDS crisis, when an HIV positive diagnosis meant certain and gruesome death, Avram Finkelstein became a pivotal figure in ACT UP, the direct action advocacy group that worked tirelessly to combat U.S. government silence around the disease.

“Power structures count on our silence, but that doesn’t mean we’re obliged to give it to them,” Finkelstein remembers. “Raising your voice is a tremendous threat, and it’s the only threat you ever have to make.”

As co-founder of the collective Silence = Death and member of the art group Gran Fury, Finkelstein worked tirelessly to raise awareness and fight the power through a powerful combination of art and activism. “When words and images are combined, their power increases exponentially,” Finkelstein explains. “We thought: Why not just sell political agency the same way everything else is sold to us?”

During his years in the trenches, Finkelstein kept a journal documenting his work, which became the basis for After Silence: A History of AIDS Through Its Images (University of California Press). “I wrote After Silence so activists in the middle of the 21st century might be able to reinvigorate the political lessons these images contain, and see them as acts of strategic resistance that relate to struggles we have yet to imagine,” Finkelstein reveals.

Here, Finkelstein shares tips for artist-activists working today to fight the power.

AIDSGATE,  The Silence = Death Project, 1987, poster, offset lithography

AIDSGATE, The Silence = Death Project, 1987, poster, offset lithography

 

IDENTIFY YOUR AUDIENCE

“Effective communication means understanding your audience. In mixed-use public spaces, pay attention to regional vernaculars. Humour is the fastest way to draw an audience in. Avoid political jargon, unless academia is your target audience. We live in an image culture, so you already know how they work. Pay close attention as you scroll through that state-of-the-art computer in your pocket, your smartphone.”

DON’T WORRY ABOUT YOUR SOCIAL REACH

“You’re an activist, not Apple. Big audiences and dramatic gestures are one way to move the boulder up the hill. But don’t discount actions that inspire activism in someone else. They might be the individual the pushes the boulder over the top.”

Read My Lips (men’s version)s, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988.

Read My Lips (men’s version)s, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988.

 

TRAVEL IN A PACK

“If you’re posting agitprop in public spaces, travel in packs. Each social space has different rules of engagement and research will help you determine the level of risk. If it’s illegal to wheat paste posters, plan on two people to post it (one to brush, the other to place the poster and smooth it), plus one to look-out for the authorities, and one to observe from across the street and call a lawyer or track you through the system if anyone is picked up.”

NEVER ASK PERMISSION

“The political agency is yours. Seize it. If you ask for permission for a political act, the answer will always be no.”

FORM A COLLECTIVE

“Collectivity is everything. There is no idea that can’t be improved by multiple brains.”

Silence = Death,  The Silence = Death Project, 1987, poster, offset lithography.

Silence = Death, The Silence = Death Project, 1987, poster, offset lithography.

The Government Has Blood On Its Hands, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, offset lithography, ACT UP, FDA Action.

The Government Has Blood On Its Hands, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, offset lithography, ACT UP, FDA Action.

Read My Lips (women’s version), Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988.

Read My Lips (women’s version), Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988.

Women Don’t Get AIDS, They Just Die From It, Gran Fury, 1991, bus-stop shelter sign. Public Art Fund, New York. The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Courtesy of  the New York Public Library.

Women Don’t Get AIDS, They Just Die From It, Gran Fury, 1991, bus-stop shelter sign. Public Art Fund, New York. The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Courtesy of the New York Public Library.

Sexism Rears Its Unprotected Head, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988. Courtesy Fales Library, New York University.

Sexism Rears Its Unprotected Head, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, photocopy on paper, ACT UP, Spring AIDS Action 1988. Courtesy Fales Library, New York University.

The Four Questions, Gran Fury, 1993, poster, offset lithography.

The Four Questions, Gran Fury, 1993, poster, offset lithography.

Art Is Not Enough, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, offset lithography, For the Kitchen, New York.

Art Is Not Enough, Gran Fury, 1988, poster, offset lithography, For the Kitchen, New York.

Follow Miss Rosen on Twitter.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.


You might like

Three smiling women wearing glamorous dresses and fur coats posing together.
Culture

The Getty Center’s first exclusively queer exhibition opens today

$3 Bill: Evidence of Queer Lives — Running until September, it features paintings, ephemera, video and photography to highlight LGBTQ+ histories, culture and people from 1900 to the present day.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Family of 6 people, including 3 children, standing together in front of a wooden fence.
Activism

Meet the Kumeyaay, the indigenous peoples split by the US-Mexico border wall

A growing divide — In northwestern Mexico and parts of Arizona and California, the communities have faced isolation and economic struggles as physical barriers have risen in their ancestral lands. Now, elders are fighting to preserve their language and culture.

Written by: Alicia Fàbregas

A person wearing a red bandana and denim jacket, looking directly at the camera.
Activism

A new book explores Tupac’s revolutionary politics and activism

Words For My Comrades — Penned by Dean Van Nguyen, the cultural history encompasses interviews with those who knew the rapper well, while exploring his parents’ anti-capitalist influence.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Dimly lit underground carpark, long winding corridor with concrete walls, floor, and pipes above.
Activism

Youth violence’s rise is deeply concerning, but mass hysteria doesn’t help

Safe — On Knife Crime Awareness Week, writer, podcaster and youth worker Ciaran Thapar reflects on the presence of violent content online, growing awareness about the need for action, and the two decades since Saul Dibb’s Bullet Boy.

Written by: Ciaran Thapar

Red shop frontage with "Open Out" branding and appointment-only signage.
Activism

Meet the trans-led hairdressers providing London with gender-affirming trims

Open Out — Since being founded in 2011, the Hoxton salon has become a crucial space the city’s LGBTQ+ community. Hannah Bentley caught up with co-founder Greygory Vass to hear about its growth, breaking down barbering binaries, and the recent Supreme Court ruling.

Written by: Hannah Bentley

Skate

Mark Gonzales

City Dreaming — Living skate legend Mark Gonzales radiates with imagination as he roams about the busy New York streets.

Written by: Jay Riggio

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members. It is also made possible by sponsorship from:

Accessibility Settings

Text

Applies the Open Dyslexic font, designed to improve readability for individuals with dyslexia.

Applies a more readable font throughout the website, improving readability.

Underlines links throughout the website, making them easier to distinguish.

Adjusts the font size for improved readability.

Visuals

Reduces animations and disables autoplaying videos across the website, reducing distractions and improving focus.

Reduces the colour saturation throughout the website to create a more soothing visual experience.

Increases the contrast of elements on the website, making text and interface elements easier to distinguish.