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​$10 million ‘penis’ statue is insulting ​

Author: Editors Desk Source: News Corp Australia Network:
January 15, 2023 at 20:05
Reverend Liz Walker, Reverend Jeffrey Brown and Paul English stand in front of the MLK memorial they helped to bring to Boston. (Photo by Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Reverend Liz Walker, Reverend Jeffrey Brown and Paul English stand in front of the MLK memorial they helped to bring to Boston. (Photo by Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

An incredibly-expensive tribute to Martin Luther King has been unveiled in Boston and his family has compared it to a “big old dong”.

An incredibly-expensive tribute to Martin Luther King has been unveiled in Boston and his family has compared it to a “big old dong”.

Even some kin of Coretta Scott King hate the new $10 million sculpture just dedicated to her and her iconic civil-rights-leader husband in Boston — with a cousin claiming it “looks like a penis”.

The massive bronze piece, titled “The Embrace”, features two sets of arms holding each other, an artistic interpretation of the classic photo of Coretta and hubby Martin Luther King Jr. hugging after he won the Nobel Peace Price in 1964.

“The mainstream media … was reporting on it like it was all beautiful, ’cause they were told they had to say that,” Seneca Scott, Coretta’s cousin, told The New York Post, referring to the new artwork in The Boston Commons.

“But then when it came out, a little boy pointed out — ‘That’s a penis!’ and everyone was like, ‘Yo, that’s a big old dong, man’,” said the 43-year-old Oakland, California, resident.

“If you had showed that statute to anyone in the ’hood, they’d have been like, ‘No, absolutely not’.”
 

Boston, MA – January 10: Embrace, the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. memorial sculpture at Boston Common. (Photo by Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Boston, MA – January 10: Embrace, the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. memorial sculpture at Boston Common. (Photo by Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)


He added scornfully to the Compact mag, “Ten million dollars were wasted to create a masturbatory metal homage to my legendary family members — one of the all-time greatest American families”.

Seneca told The Post that “woke” culture allowed the expensive abstract experiment to come to fruition.

Members of the King family last week unveiled the artwork near where MLK and Coretta first met in college.

Martin Luther King III approved the piece, which was designed by conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas for the organisation Embrace Boston.
 

Martin Luther King being kissed by his wife Coretta in Montgomery, Alabama in 1956.
Martin Luther King being kissed by his wife Coretta in Montgomery, Alabama in 1956.


 
Martin Luther King is embraced by his wife Coretta Scott King at Harlem Hospital in New York. (AP/Tony Camerano)
Martin Luther King is embraced by his wife Coretta Scott King at Harlem Hospital in New York. (AP/Tony Camerano)


The artwork’s funding was the result of a public/private fundraising partnership, the city of Boston said on its online site. It’s unclear how much public money may have gone into the sculpture.

“When we recognise that all storytelling is an abstraction, all representation is an abstraction, hopefully it allows us to be open to more dynamic and complex forms of representation that don’t stick us to narrative that oversimplifies a person or their legacy, and I think this work really tries to get to the heart of that,” the artist says on his website.

But Seneca told The Post: “The woke algorithm is just broke, I don’t know what else to tell you. If you went through all of that and that’s what you came up with, something’s wrong.”

Online critics were harsh, too, including some who agreed that the work was pornographic.

“This is awful,” the British rapper and podcaster Zuby added in a tweet.
 

Reverend Liz Walker, Reverend Jeffrey Brown and Paul English stand in front of the MLK memorial they helped to bring to Boston. (Photo by Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Reverend Liz Walker, Reverend Jeffrey Brown and Paul English stand in front of the MLK memorial they helped to bring to Boston. (Photo by Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Ima


Seneca’s grandfather was one of 25 children of Jeff Scott, the son of a slave who became one of Alabama’s wealthiest black landowners, Seneca said.

His grandfather’s brother, Obadiah, fathered Coretta, who Seneca said he met once at a family reunion before her 2006 death.

Seneca told The Post that while he couldn’t speak for other members of the family, he felt the 8m-wide 30,000kg sculpture was a “waste of money” that should be “melted down”.

“A solid bronze statue? Like, what are we doing here?” he asked.

“It’s doubly insulting to the black community, who still on average … too many of us are below the poverty line,” Scott said.

“You’re spending $10 million on a bronze statue without heads on it? Man, it’s a joke.”

Seneca said the best way to observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday was through “action”.

“No performative, no photo ops, put your phone down and go do (an act of service) that no one knows about,” he said.

This article was originally published by the New York Post and reproduced with permission​​​​

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