Detained artist is
finalist in international art award
Press Release
By
FREE ERICSON ACOSTA
November 14, 2011
QUEZON CITY
–
Artist and political
detainee Ericson Acosta is one of the three finalists in the
prestigious 2011 Imprisoned Artist Prize.
The other two
finalists are musician Win Maw of Burma and filmmaker Dhondup Wanchen
of Tibet.
The Imprisoned Artist
Prize is one of the awards given by Freedom to Create, an
international award-giving body launched in 2008 aimed to “celebrate
the courage and creativity of artists and the positive influence of
their work to promote social justice and inspire the human spirit”.
Acosta is the sole
Filipino finalist in the Freedom to Create Awards.
The Imprisoned Artist
Prize is presented to artists who are incarcerated “because of their
courage and creativity in pursuing their art, and the role of their
work in highlighting injustice”. One winner will be awarded
USD$25,000, which will then be utilized in securing the artist’s
release, and advocacies and campaigns for his or her freedom.
“In 2011, we have
received over 2000 prize entries from more than 145 countries around
the globe. A total prize fund of US$100,000 will be awarded to the
winning artists and their nominated advocacy organisations to further
the cause their artwork has highlighted,” the group’s website said.
Among the judges for
the Prize are actress Daryl Hannah, novelist Salman Rushdie and
danseur Mikhail Baryshnikov. Winners will be announced on the Freedom
to Create Award Festival on November 19 in
Cape Town, South Africa.
Acosta is an artist,
journalist and cultural worker who was illegally arrested by members
of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines
on February 13, 2011 in Barangay Bay-ang, San Jorge,
Samar province in the Eastern Visayan region. He faces trumped-up
charges of illegal possession of explosives and is currently detained
at the Calbayog
City sub-provincial jail. Acosta's counsel filed a Petition for Review
of his case before the Philippine government's Department of Justice
(DOJ) last September 1.
Even in jail, Acosta
continues to make his art and music heard despite and in spite of the
most pressing of circumstances. A raw recording dubbed “Prison
Sessions” featuring Acosta singing his original compositions in jail
instantly enjoyed thousands of hits and followers online. He also
maintains an online journal, Jailhouse Blog.
Acosta’s supporters
call on DOJ Sec. Leila de Lima to immediately withdraw fabricated
complaints against him. Among his supporters are officials of the
National Commission for Culture and Arts (NCCA), National Artists for
Literature Bienvenido Lumbera and F. Sionil Jose, Philippine Center of
International PEN (Poets & Playwrights, Essayists, Novelists),
Concerned Artists of the Philippines, University of the Philippines
National Writers’ Workshop fellows and panel, and artists from the
USA, Canada, Europe and Asia who attended the International Conference
on Progressive Culture last July.