‘Jurgen’ exhibit on view at The Branch House
2021-2022 marked the inaugural Jurgen Banned Arts Comics Contest. The contest is named after a work by Richmond’s own James Branch Cabell, cousin to John Kerr Branch, original owner of The Branch House (currently The Branch Museum of Architecture and Design). An exhibition “Banning of Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice” on loan from VCU Libraries is now on view at the Branch House.
Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice was banned in the 1920s by the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice in accordance with state obscenity laws. Writers and artists condemned the act, and subsequently raised questions about who may censor art, what art is censored, and the moral and societal implications of this censorship.
Held by VCU Libraries, contestants were asked to submit fictional or nonfictional single-page, multi-panel comics (inspired by 1920s Sunday newspaper strips) exploring issues of art censorship surrounding the suppression of Cabell’s book. The contest will be held annually and will focus on telling the story of banned art, books, music, and film, and “encouraging discussion of the complex relationship between art and society.”
This contest was supported by the James Branch Cabell Library Associates and the exhibit is on loan from VCU Libraries.
2022 honorees are all studentds in the VCU School of the Arts.
Grant prize winner: Erin Crawford — Cabell Walks into a Bar
· Runners-up: Jay Crilley — Swear to It and Tess Wladar — The Judging of Jurgen
· Honorable Mentions: Katy Hooper — Moral of the Story, Hannah Smith — and The Banning of Jurgen, Ty Campbell — A Silent Fate
This contest was supported by the James Branch Cabell Library Associates and the exhibit is on loan from VCU Libraries.
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