A Gallery Owner was arrested after leaving a 10-Foot Heroin Spoon Sculpture outside OxyContin maker purdue pharma

A Gallery Owner was arrested after leaving

A Gallery Owner was arrested after leaving a 10-Foot Heroin Spoon Sculpture outside OxyContin maker purdue pharma

 

A Connecticut gallery owner was arrested after dropping a 10-foot-long sculpture of a heroin spoon in front of Purdue Pharma’s headquarters on Friday — and he says he plans to “gift” more spoons to other drug companies, as well as to politicians and doctors.

Fernando Luis Alvarez, who owns Stamford’s Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery, was charged with a criminal misdemeanor and a felony after leaving the roughly 800-pound piece, which was hand-made by Boston-based artist Domenic Esposito, in Purdue’s driveway and refusing to remove it, the Hartford Courant reports.

Alvarez told TIME that the stunt — which coincided with an opioid-related show at his gallery — was meant to send a message to Purdue Pharma and to hold the company accountable for what he says are its contributions to the country’s opioid epidemic.

“The bigger picture, which both Domenic and I really clicked on, is the importance of creating awareness for the right type of accountability,” Alvarez says. “The justice department and the country has to start putting some of these people behind bars, because they go on and make a lot of money and then they pay a fine and so be it. That is just not the way it should be.”

Stamford-based Purdue Pharma, which makes the widely prescribed opioid painkiller OxyContin, has drawn scrutiny for its sales and marketing practices, which several lawsuits allege led to improper prescribing practices that have contributed to patient misuse. Purdue has denied these allegations, but the company stopped promoting the drug in February and announced on Wednesday that it would eliminate the remainder of its salesforce.

“We share the protesters’ concern about the opioid crisis, and respect their right to peacefully express themselves,” a Purdue representative said in a statement provided to TIME. “Purdue is committed to working collaboratively with those affected by this public health crisis on meaningful solutions to help stem the tide of opioid-related overdose deaths.”

Placing the sculpture — which Esposito says would have been even bigger, had he not needed to transport it to Connecticut in his trailer — in front of Purdue’s headquarters was meant to underscore that many heroin users first get hooked on prescription painkillers, he says. Esposito’s brother, who has struggled with addiction for 14 years, is one such person.

The artist says he can remember his mother calling him, screaming, when she found burnt spoons in the house.

“The air gets basically sucked out of your body, because here you are all over again,” he says. “The spoon is a symbol of darkness. It brings back some negative emotions for me.”

The sculpture, he says, was a way to channel those feelings into something productive. And though the piece currently sits in a city impound lot after its removal and Alvarez’ arrest on Friday, the duo says they have big plans for its second act. (Alvarez is due in court on July 10; he says he expects to learn what will happen to the sculpture then.)

“We’re going to gift the spoon to cities that are suing pharmaceutical companies because of the opioid epidemic,” Esposito says.

Though a city hasn’t been picked yet, Esposito says he and Alvarez are “very impressed with Boston and the state of Massachusetts because they’ve taken a leadership role in naming [actors in the epidemic].” A lawsuit filed by the state’s attorney general on Tuesday is the first to explicitly name Purdue’s executives and directors.

Separately, Alvarez says he hopes to orchestrate more stunts like the one at Purdue, potentially leaving spoons made by Esposito at other drug companies’ headquarters or at the offices of politicians and doctors they view as complicit in the opioid epidemic.

“It will be dropped to the next company and the next company and the next company, and then the next level of actors,” Alvarez says. “We’re going to make sure that they get their gift from us.”

Alvarez adds that he’s not concerned about consequences associated with the protest, including the criminal charges he already faces.

“I’ll take the hit. I’ll take the charges. When I represent an artist, I’m all in,” he says. “I was just laser-sharp focused in seeing that sculpture there and making sure society and the media would actually get our movement going, with that spoon being a symbol of the true accountability and the true conversations we need to be having about this.”

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Comments

24 responses to “A Gallery Owner was arrested after leaving a 10-Foot Heroin Spoon Sculpture outside OxyContin maker purdue pharma”

  1. DaveDurant Avatar
    DaveDurant

    That spoon isn’t anywhere near big enough to really capture the problems Purdue created.

  2. NRGpop Avatar
    NRGpop

    Artist Domenic Esposito and art gallery owner Fernando Alvarez dropped the sculpture at the company’s Stamford headquarters. Police arrested Alvarez on a minor charge of obstructing free passage. A city worker removed the spoon with a payloader and it was hauled to a police evidence holding area.

    [Source](https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2018/06/23/drug-spoon-sculpture-placed-outside-purdue-pharma-headquarters/727997002/)

  3. rhooperton Avatar
    rhooperton

    This is such an impressive way to protest, it’s eye catching, it’s clear what it’s saying, it’s peaceful, but it’s still something you can get arrested for

  4. nodustspeck Avatar
    nodustspeck

    Public shaming with art. Gotta love it. Bonus points for getting arrested.

  5. plolops Avatar
    plolops

    Well that’s how I started then was an addict for 18 years clean now but ya fuck them

  6. IAmMrLonely6 Avatar
    IAmMrLonely6

    If anyone else is wondering why a manufacturer is being targeted for opioid addiction – it’s because they actively encouraged doctors to prescribe more of OxyContin and did not stop their products being diverted from pharmacies (I.e – missing and found on the black market).

  7. SheikhofdaStreez Avatar
    SheikhofdaStreez

    I met this dude at an art show. Total legend.

  8. Choui4 Avatar
    Choui4

    This problem exists because money in politics. Make no mistake.

    Edit :

    Please see this [Keith Olbermann on on “Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission”](https://youtu.be/PKZKETizybw)

    Entire situation we find ourselves in predicted and summarized. 2010. That’s the year corruption won.

    Thank you to u/zenchemin

  9. OlHeavyHeart Avatar
    OlHeavyHeart

    What was the charge, littering? SMH

  10. gvsteve Avatar
    gvsteve

    Why do they bend the spoon like that?

  11. Honest_Joseph Avatar
    Honest_Joseph

    The Purdue CEO will probably just use that spoon to shovel all the cash he has into his swimming pool.

  12. BrightenthatIdea Avatar
    BrightenthatIdea

    Let’s not forget the doctors and pharmacies who continued to fill prescriptions in unprecedented amounts

  13. saintbad Avatar
    saintbad

    We live in a plutocracy, a pretend-democracy characterized by complete corporate capture of our legal and policing and regulatory and media systems.

  14. KP2304 Avatar
    KP2304

    I had a college professor who has a son who took OxyContin for his sports injury years ago. He got addicted, and started doing illegal drugs. One day, he just left the house and went to the Mexico border to get drugs. The professor didn’t know anything about where he’d went or what he was doing there, but when he confronted the police, they said that they couldn’t do anything since by then the son was an adult and he could go wherever he wanted. Eventually, the son came back, and he has been signed up for anti-addiction programs multiple times. At the time the professor told us the story, he was still addicted and in jail. My professor told us he actually wanted his son to be in jail, since then he couldn’t go out, buy drugs, and just disappear. It sounds tough.

  15. WithinAForestDark Avatar
    WithinAForestDark

    Meaning of art

  16. Legitimate_Suit_3431 Avatar
    Legitimate_Suit_3431

    But luckily they didn’t grow any weed. that would be devastating for people’s health

    (I’m not from USA, but we have the mentality where these types of drugs are better than weed)

  17. NoahDoesGaming20 Avatar
    NoahDoesGaming20

    I’m a little confused, but how is this next level?

  18. MercutiaShiva Avatar
    MercutiaShiva

    Meanwhile… When my 89-year-old father broke a hip while jogging, they gave him just 2 weeks of synthetic opioid painkillers so he “wouldn’t get addicted”.

    After the pain killers ran out, he couldn’t get out of bed because of the pain; that caused a blood clot and he died.

    The pendulum has swung way too far the other way.

  19. fizzbubbler Avatar
    fizzbubbler

    their logo kinda looks like a spoon… probably just a subliminal fuck you to all the normal people out there getting screwed over by marketing strategies for addictive drugs.

  20. DrDobiMarci Avatar
    DrDobiMarci

    only a spoonful

  21. Hadescat_ Avatar
    Hadescat_

    Some context for those not in the know, please? I understand that it’s something to do with drugs, but… what’s going on with that company?

  22. duhinterrogative Avatar
    duhinterrogative

    A Lou Reed calling card.

  23. noisilymotorize417 Avatar
    noisilymotorize417

    Wrong people were arrsted!!

  24. dooneandrew Avatar
    dooneandrew

    Should be given a medal, fuck big Pharma

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