“Not My President’s Day” performances and shows will be taking to stages nationwide on Monday, using the federal holiday to highlight artistic resistance to the Trump administration.
From Baltimore to Seattle, artists, musicians, and performers of all stripes are planning to showcase responses to President Donald Trump as a way to fuel resistance. There are even anti-Trump performances planned in Europe.
The plan for artistic protests took root shortly after the election, the Detroit News reported, when Holly Hughes, a performance artist in Ann Arbor, Mich., channeled her anger and sadness over the election results into a proposal for a local cabaret-style event in which artists would showcase their response to the new president.
“I was thinking maybe we’d get 100 people at some dive bar in Ann Arbor,” Hughes told the Detroit News. “Within a couple of hours, I had almost 2,000 people contacting me through Facebook and was quickly overwhelmed by people wanting to do something like this.”
In fact, the proposal was so popular that it led to the formation of a national coalition of artists called BAD AND NASTY (also known as Bad Hombres and Nasty Women), defining itself as “a loose knit coalition of artists and activists from the U.S. and beyond who are tired of waking up every morning since Election Day 2016 feeling angry, scared, and sad.”
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