Playwright and artist Brett Bailey has spoken about the protests against Exhibit B
                                    
                                    This morning, in a video clip on an online forum, I watched close-up footage of protesters engaging in  struggle with French ‘robocops’ outside last night’s performance of  EXHIBIT B in St Denis, Paris. Someone fell. Someone was dragged away.  The camera zoomed in on a splash of blood on the white paint of a road  marking, and my blood ran cold. 
   On Thursday night, during the  premiere, five protesters breached the barricades, smashed through the  glass doors of the theatre lobby, and charged into the auditorium before  they were intercepted. 
    I watched the metal barriers being  unloaded from trucks on Friday afternoon, dozens of them; I watched the  battalions of black-clad riot police mustering; all with a sense of  unreality.     How is this possible? That a performance work that  decries the brutal policing of Fortress Europe is relying on the  machinery of its uniformed protectors? 
   Before and during the  performances of EXHIBIT B the lobby of the Théâtre Gerard Philipe (TGP)  is like an operations room. The management and staff of TGP and Le 104  (the next presenter of the piece here in Paris) are abuzz;  representatives from several anti-racist forums are in attendance in  support of the performance, and ready to offer support to spectators who  are deeply moved by it. Security guards, the mayor of St Denis,  policemen, journos, audience …    I try to keep the cast calm. 
Almost all of them are from Paris. They are upset. Angry that people are  so violently against their work. Angry that people want to stifle their  voices. EXHIBIT B relies on a gentle, intimate regard between  performers and spectators. Anxiety and excitement are  counter-productive.
Outside, as darkness falls and the  performers prepare to take up their positions, the protesters mass  outside and the gendarmes line up: 250 policemen. We watch  apprehensively through glass doors across 20m belt of zigzagging  barricades.    These protesters are people, as human and feeling  as any of us. Many of them – and their defenders – are protesting  because they are fed up with being second class citizens, fed up with  institutionalized racism, fed up with racial profiling and humiliation  in the streets and in the media, fed up with lack of access to  opportunities, fed up with not having platforms to express themselves,  fed up with being represented as ‘other’. 
    They demand to make  their views known: EXHIBIT B is racist; it reinforces stereotypes of  black people as passive victims of colonialism; it is made by a racist  South African. It must not be allowed.    Many others in the  crowd, it would seem – and just as human and angry – are those who have  been whipped up by manipulators whose intentions are violent. 
    In EXHIBIT B I investigate the way in which black people have been  represented, objectified and dehumanised by racist systems in order to  indoctrinate people; the way in which these racist systems continue to  operate today, here in Europe; around the world. 
   I choose to  portray black people in objectified form to demonstrate the violence of  these systems. 
I opt to perform the work in utter silence, to emphasise  how the voices of the colonised, the marginalised, the subjugated, are  stifled. 
   I choose to depict some of the terrible atrocities of  colonialism so as to expose the realities of what really went on during  the so-called ‘civilization of Africa’ by Europe. 
   I choose not  to represent the white perpetrators of these crimes directly, because  white people have never been the dehumanised objects of such  systematised racism. 
    In EXHIBIT B I instruct the performers  not to take on the horrors and humiliations of the characters that they  are playing, but to bring dignity to these people from whom dignity was  stripped; to become monumental icons of remembrance to these people,  communicating their power through their posture, their endurance and  their unfaltering gaze.     I ask them to envision themselves as  the spectators in this exhibition, gently watching the audience grapple  with the horror of realizing the brutality of such a system. I want them  to explode from the inside the stereotype of the passive, victimized  black body.    
But out there on the floodlit street, beyond the  barricades, this is not understood. Those people have not attended the  performance.    None of this is really about Brett Bailey or  EXHIBIT B. This work is merely a sharp needle that pricks a skin bloated  with fury, frustration and pain. The ‘multicultural utopia” of Europe  is a myth. 
The history textbooks still disguise the brutal systems of  colonization and dehumanization as glorious endeavours of salvation,  progress and philanthropy. Africa is plundered, raped, looted by global  multinationals, just as it was by the imperialists of the 19th century.  People have had enough. 
    Do I continue to stage the work in  cities such as London and Paris? So many of those who have attended the  work – black, white, brown – emphasize the importance of EXHIBIT B. 
Call  it ‘imperative’, ‘vital’, ‘life changing’; luminaries such as former  French World Cup star Lilian Thuram, founder of the Lilian Thuram  Foundation, Education Against Racism.    But having accumulated so  much contagious online polemic from London it is now polarizing people,  enflaming the far left and reconfirming the prejudices of the right. Is  its presentation really justifiable? 
   A public debate at TGP,  scheduled for last night, which would have featured viewpoints from  across the spectrum – and in which I was to have participated – was  cancelled because of the security situation.    We have managed to  persuade a very small number of those who stood against the performance  to attend it. They have emerged disturbed, moved, but acknowledging the  value of the work and that it should not be closed down. 
The vast  majority of those declaiming against EXHIBIT B, however, refuse to see  it.    One of them apologises to me for the misunderstanding.  Another, a member of the militant “Anti Negrophobe” group, says he wants  to see the perpetrators of colonial crimes, but otherwise he “detects  no vulgarity” in the piece, says that he can see it’s not racist. He  rambles at length about the lack of solidarity and community amongst the  local black population, rootless, bewildered.     The outrage  against EXHIBIT B is misdirected. Why oh why wouldn’t these people  attend the performance when we reached out to them time and again?  
I empathize with the people outside there, raising their voices and  their banners. My art stands for what they stand for. The installations  in EXHIBIT B of racial objectification, dehumanization, marginalization  and brutality are their stories.     Many of the 150 plus  performers that have participated in the work in 17 cities stand for  what they stand for. They have similar grievances and experiences. They  are those people. Their testimonies of prejudice suffered are typed up  and displayed in the final chamber of the exhibit. 
   I empathize,  and I am saddened and horrified and angered at the violence playing out  on the other side of the barriers. And I despise the unworldly  platitudes of support posted on my face book page by white suburbanites  who see confirmation of their prejudices in the actions of the  protesters.     But I also believe in the right of artists to  speak uncomfortable truths, and to challenge status quos. And to  disturb. And to offend. I don’t want to live in a society in which we  silence ourselves in response to every politically correct outcry; in  which artists are struck dumb by self-righteous mobs. 
   I regret  that EXHIBIT B has polarized people. 
I regret that a multidimensional  performance piece, which has meaning in the intimate dynamic interaction  between performers and spectators, has been judged on the basis of  2-dimensional photographs. 
    I acknowledge that seeing a  photograph of a shackled black woman and reading that it is the work of a  white South African man can cause deep offence.     I wish that  photographs of EXHIBIT B had not been published, and that the only  access that people had to the work is through the living, vibrating,  profound experience of recognizing the equality and humanity in us all,  and the horrors of systems that continue to stifle this. 
   And I  wish I knew that the man or woman who shed blood on the tarmac of St  Denis on Friday night for what he or she stood for is okay.