USF's Contemporary Art Museum is the First National Participant in Public Art Campaign
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
The is the first national participant in , a public art endeavor consisting of the exhibition of 16 flags created by prominent artists working with the New York-based public art organization Creative Time.
The Contemporary Art Museum's participation in the project marks its commitment to
               employing the arts as a channel for encouraging a sense of community and facilitating
               important dialogues through art.
In Pledges of Allegiance, a new flag by one of the 16 participating artists is flown
               each month in New York City at the Creative Time headquarters and at 67 Hudson Street
               in the New York City neighborhood of TriBeCa facing Freedom Tower. Additionally, the
               flags are to exhibit at a network of partner sites, the Contemporary Art Museum being
               the first. The project's participating artists include Alex Da Corte, Jeremy Deller,
               LaToya Ruby Frazier, and Yoko Ono.
On view for July is artist Tania Bruguera's flag, Dignity Has No Nationality, which
               illustrates a vision of dignity for all peoples with the image of a unified global
               continent. Nato Thompson, artistic director of Creative Time, elaborates on the implications
               of this work and the reason for its deliberate showing in the month of July.
"For July, a month of national pride and a celebration of freedom, Tania Bruguera's
               flag proposes a vision of dignity, inclusive of all peoples — regardless of citizenship
               and national territorial belonging," said Thompson. "Dignity Has No Nationality reminds
               us that we are part of a global society," says Nato Thompson, Artistic Director of
               Creative Time. "This flag clearly pushes back not only on xenophobia, but also misguided
               notions of social inclusion."
Dignity Has No Nationality is on view through the end of July at the facade of the
               Contemporary Art Museum on USF Holly Drive.