The Twelve Labors of Hercules (Spafford)

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Year1981 (1981)
LocationCentralia, Washington, U.S.
The Twelve Labors of Hercules
ArtistMichael Spafford
Year1981 (1981)
SubjectLabors of Hercules
LocationCentralia, Washington, U.S.
OwnerCentralia College

The Twelve Labors of Hercules is a series of murals by Washington State artist Michael Spafford commissioned in the early 1980s for the State of Washington. The works were completed in 1981 and permanently installed on the walls of the House of Representatives' chambers at the Washington State Capitol in Olympia;[1] the building was designed in the 1920s to accommodate murals, but they were not funded until the 1970s.[2] The "stark, black-and-white, modernistic" paintings depict "the mythic tasks performed by the Greek hero Hercules".[3]

The murals were covered by the state government a few weeks after their initial installation by plywood sheets behind a curtain pending their removal after a 1982 House vote,[1][4][5][6] when some lawmakers[according to whom?] objected to their content, perceived by some[weasel words] as sexually suggestive[clarification needed]. The murals were separated from the House chamber walls in 1993 and put in storage.[7][8] The dispute between the state legislature and the artist, becoming a lawsuit for breach of contract against the state, gained note in art and legal journals,[5][9] and law reference books;[10] the Columbia Law School's Journal of Law & the Arts called it "striking example of suppression of artistic freedom".[11] The Seattle Art Museum said the question of Spafford's artistic freedom became "a state-wide debate".[12]

The murals were eventually acquired by Centralia College in 2002 following a decade of negotiations with the artist, and installed in the college's Corbet Theatre.[13] They were put on display in October 2003 following a symposium on "the legal, ethical[clarification needed] and emotional[clarification needed] issues" surrounding their history.[6] The history of the Spafford murals and another set by Alden Mason removed from the capitol in 1987,[14] is documented in From Capitol to Campus: The Alden Mason and Michael Spafford Murals.[15]

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