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This is Camp X-Ray

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This is Camp X-Ray is an art installation created by the artist Jai Redman, a member of the Ultimate Holding Company (UHC) art collective.[1] The installation was a full-scale replica of part of the United States military Guantanamo Bay detainment camp,[2] and featured actors performing the roles of guards and prisoners in cells and interrogation rooms, as well as demonstration of known interrogation techniques.[2]

This is Camp X-Ray was constructed in the Hulme area of the city of Manchester[3] and was operational from Friday 10 October to Saturday 18 October 2003. Costing approximately £3000, the Arts Council England covered[1] half the cost.[citation needed]

Due to the political nature of the project, the installation received a few complaints including from Conservative party MP Andrew Rosindell, and David Lee the editor of the arts newspaper The Jackdaw. Lee said "This is simply a reconstruction, it is bald documentary and has nothing to do with art. The Arts Council supports this kind of stuff rather than supporting good art. It is both corrupt and corrupting."[citation needed]

A DVD video documenting the live installation, entitled This is Camp X-Ray: Manchester Responds To Injustice With Art, by Damien Mahoney was released in December 2004.[4] The DVD includes an interview with the sisters of Jamal Udeen Al-Harith, a Manchester resident who was detained in the real Camp X-Ray for two and a half years without charge.[5] Al-Harith later traveled to Syria, joined the Islamic State, and was confirmed to have carried out a suicide car bombing at an Iraqi army base near Mosul in February 2017. [6]

References

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