A life-size sculpture of a naked Britney Spears kneeling on a bearskin
rug as she gives birth will be on display at Brooklyn's Capla Kesting Fine
Art gallery in April, 2006.
The Britney Spears sculpture is to appear next to a display case filled with
anti-abortion materials. It was created by Daniel Edwards, who said he never
spoke to the 24-year-old pop star or met her, and fashioned her face and
figure from photographs.
"I admire her. This is an idealized figure," Edwards said Tuesday in a phone
interview from his home, which is near his studio in Moosup, Conn.
"Everyone is coming at me with anger and venom, but I depicted her as she
has depicted herself _ seductively. Suddenly, she's a mom."
Britney Spears, who is married to her former backup dancer Kevin
Federline, gave birth to their son, Sean Preston, last year. He is the
couple's first child.
Britney Spears's publicist, Leslie Sloane Zelnik, didn't immediately respond to
a request for comment from The Associated Press.
When some bloggers heard about the exhibit "Monument to Pro-Life: The
Birth of Sean Preston" the gallery said it received about 3,000 e-mails
from around the world in just a week, split between anti-abortion and
abortion rights opinions.
"We also got calls from Tokyo, England, France. Some people are upset that
Britney Spears is being used for this subject matter," said gallery co-owner David Kesting. "Others who are pro-life thought this was degrading to their
movement. And some pro-choice people were upset that this is a pro-life
monument."
The gallery, located in Brooklyn's artsy Williamsburg neighborhood, said it
would hire extra security guards for the free exhibit, which will open April
7 and run for two weeks.
Edwards, whose sculpture of Ted Williams' decapitated head which was
frozen in the hope that medical science could one day revive the baseball
great stirred up an artistic storm, said the sculpture of Spears was a
"new take on pro-life."
"Pro-lifers normally promote bloody images of abortion. This is the image of
birth," he said.
When Edwards was asked why he creates art that generates publicity by
selecting subjects hyped in the media, he said: "You're bombarded with these
stories. And there's a thread that winds back to the art. That's not a bad
thing. People are interested in these topics, and it works for art as well."
Asked whether he's anti-abortion, Edwards said, "You nailed me. I'm not
saying that I am. I wouldn't march with either pro-life or pro-choice
advocates. This is not meant to be political."