CARTOONISTS RIGHTS NETWORK INTERNATIONAL
  • Latest News
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Testimonies
    • Board of Directors
    • Regional Reps
    • Major Support
    • 990’s / 501(c)3
    • Privacy Policy
  • Our Clients
    • Cartoonists Under Threat
    • Legal Guidance
    • Award Winners
      • Where They Are Now
  • Blog
  • Contact Us
  • DONATE

Badiucao wins CRNI’s Courage in Cartooning Award 2019

0

CRNI announces its annual prize, now dubbed the Robert Russell Courage in Cartooning Award.

Badiucao unmasked
Badiucao, China’s Artful Dissident

In recognition of his bold defiance and courageous decision to remove the literal mask of anonymity under which he has worked for a decade, Cartoonists Rights Network International bestows its award for 2019 to the Chinese dissident, campaigner and visual artist Badiucao.

Earlier this year we wrote about China’s Artful Dissident, the documentary film made by Danny Ben-Moshe and broadcast on ABC in Australia, which covers the period prior to Badiucao’s first major exhibition of work in Hong Kong. The show was set to proceed in November last year but was cancelled at the last moment when it became apparent that Badiucao’s family in China were being harassed by police. This meant that the CCP had successfully discerned Badiucao’s true identity and led to many months in which the artist withdrew completely from public life.

In April 2019 China’s Artful Dissident aired with a coda in which Badiucao removed his mask. This heralded his return to artistic practice and was soon followed with a number of public artworks as well as online cartoons to mark the 30th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Since then, the whole world’s attention has been galvanised by the massive public protests in Hong Kong over extradition to China, and the horrifying brutality with which police – and, apparently, organised criminals – have cracked down on demonstrators. Badiucao has been energised by the campaign and created cartoon after cartoon, variously inspired by the “Lennon Wall”, the accoutrements that protestors have carried with them to protect themselves from tear gas and other crowd control measures, and most of all the persona of the city’s chief executive Carrie Lam. Lam recently announced the controversial bill on extradition that sparked the unrest will be fully abandoned from consideration.

I drew a pair of cartoons earlier to address this extraordinary political art phenomenon, which featuring China's President Xi Jinping and Hong Kong‘s Chief executive Carrie Lam covered by sticky notes. pic.twitter.com/ZVEQyINexv

— 巴丢草 Badiucao (@badiucao) July 16, 2019

Like an increasing number of cartoonists from whom we receive testimony, Badiucao has had cause to complain about his work being removed from social media for supposed violations of rules pertaining to content while at the same time receiving threats of violence via those same platforms. The number of abusive messages aimed at Badiucao have spiked this year, perhaps unsurprisingly given his higher profile.

3/Yesterday, Instagram notified me that one of my art was removed from it platform for going against its guidelines. However,in the mean time, Instagram has not addressed my report on death threats against me on its platform for many times. pic.twitter.com/eX0s7lZINO

— 巴丢草 Badiucao (@badiucao) August 18, 2019

Badiucao has also been actively engaged in the debate that has arisen in his adopted nation of Australia, where visiting Chinese students in particular have clashed with those expressing their solidarity with the protesters in Hong Kong. He has publicly asked Twitter to add a “Tank Man” emoji to their platform in time for next year’s Tiananmen anniversary and most recently unveiled a flag design inspired by the post-it note covered “Lennon Wall”, intended to express a clean break with the past and the hope of a democratic Hong Kong.

1/ #LennonWallFlag My art design for HK. Hope it fly as a new icon for #FreedomHongKong
Great support from Denise Ho @hoccgoomusic ,a gift for her to return HK after Melb meet.
Read more from linkhttps://t.co/YPI8UCFwoA
Get the design via link or QR codehttps://t.co/On79WyJfxY pic.twitter.com/1iaMCPci58

— 巴丢草 Badiucao (@badiucao) September 9, 2019

Please note that this beautiful flag design, like a great many of Badiucao’s past cartoons and graphics, is available for download free of charge for use by activists and campaigners everywhere.


WILL YOU FLY THE FLAG FOR HONG KONG?
Teaser Images for #LennonWallFlag performance in Washington DC.
Film version is in editing.
photos credit to @owenschurchill
华盛顿挥舞 #连侬墙旗 #FreedomHK #StandwithHK pic.twitter.com/ymgR5GtRZB

— 巴丢草 Badiucao (@badiucao) September 19, 2019

“Badiucao is an exemplary cartoonist of courage. He was specifically targeted by a censorious regime — in person, online and, most disturbingly of all, via pressure applied to family members — but has persevered and removed the leverage his adversaries thought they could exploit by actively dismantling the anonymity they assumed he cherished most.
Thankfully Badiucao is an Australian resident and so cannot be abused as readily as some other cartoonists seized by China in recent years, most notably Jiang Yefei and Zhang Dongning, both of whom have been arrested, criminalised and essentially disappeared. However he is not immune and believes he has been followed, hacked and even had his home invaded by agents of the state. As China celebrates the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic it’s worth contemplating how far they have come in terms of economic development and international relations, weighed against the minimal progress made on fundamental and individual freedoms.
Reporters Sans Frontieres places China 177th of 180 nations on its Press Freedom Index. Committee to Protect Journalists places it 5th in its Top 10 Most Censored Countries. It is ironic that so many modern Chinese citizens enjoy the trappings of middle-class life — abundant consumer goods, lavish weddings, pampered pets and much foreign travel — while they are denied the simple act of expressing dissatisfaction with their government. China is mighty. It has nothing to lose and everything to gain by loosening its grip on discourse.”

Terry Anderson, Acting Executive Director, CRNI

Cartoons by Badiucao as well as the previous Courage in Cartooning Award winner PX Molina are on display at the Sorbonne Art Gallery, Sorbonne University, Paris as part of the Cartooning Global Forum this week and tomorrow evening he is the guest of our friends Index on Censorship at a special screening of China’s Artful Dissident in London along with the documentarian Danny Ben-Moshe and introduced by cartoonist Martin Rowson.

Badiucao will receive our Courage in Cartooning Award later in the year; more details to be announced nearer the time.

 To Report a Cartoonist in Danger  Email Cartoonists Rights Network International

Previous
Robert Russell retires, award named in his honor
Next
CRNI at second Cartooning Global Forum
CRNI
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
TOOT US ON MASTODON!


Our awards-giving partners, Freedom Cartoonists Foundation, Geneva


Categories

GDPR

Visitors to this site based in the EU – please be aware this site uses Cookies. Full details in our Privacy Policy.