About FORCE:

FORCE, the recipient of the 2016 Sondheim Prize, was founded in 2010 by and for survivors as an art and activist collective dedicated to constructing a culture of consent. FORCE is an intersectional, LGBTQ focused, multicultural, pro-black and anti-white supremacist collective, who has done our deepest organizing work in Baltimore and Mexico City, and has planted seeds globally. With a focus on local organizing in our home bases, we strive for our visual… more
The Monument Quilt
The 50th and final display of the Monument Quilt was May 31-June 2, 2019. The 3,000 collected squares were displayed an additional 49 times in 35 different cities across the US and in Mexico (read more on CNN and MSNBC).
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The Monument Quilt on the National MallI co-founded FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture in 2010 and was part of the collective until 2020. By and for survivors, FORCE is an art and organizing collective. Pictured here is our largest project to date, The Monument Quilt -- a collection of over 3,000 stories by survivors of sexual and intimate partner violence and our allies, painted and stitched onto red fabric. Our stories blanket highly public, outdoor places to create and demand space to heal, and resist a singular narrative about sexual violence. In June 2019, we organized the 50th and final display on the National Mall.
This video tells part of the story from our weekend.
Learn more: app.themonumentquilt.org
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Image from first Monument Quilt workshop, August 2013Individuals from across the country are making their own square for the Monument Quilt. Each square is 4ftx4ft, red, and contains a survivor's story. Allies who submit squares to the project can write their own personal story or a message of support. Learn how to submit your square, or how to host a workshop, by visiting themonumentquilt.org
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The Monument Quilt Displays in Baltimore, 2014 and 2016In 2014, the Monument Quilt was displayed on Federal Hill at the conclusion of our 2014 tour. In 2016, FORCE organized Not Alone Baltimore, in which the Monument Quilt closed down 2 blocks of North Avenue for a day-long healing event. The display came at the conclusion of a month-long campaign, where messages of support for survivors blanketed Baltimore on buses and billboards.
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2015 Oklahoma City Tondalo Hall.jpgProtest at Oklahoma Dept of Corrections to free Tondalao Hall. June 2015, organized with UltraViolet. Tondalao Hall is a woman who served prison time for a law called "Failure to Protect," which often criminalizes domestic violence survivors like Tondalao. She was finally released from prison in November 2019. Photo by Rebecca Nagle
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2017 2US_Mexico Border.jpgNuestra Tierra, Mi Cuerpo, display at the US/Mexico Border in Ciudad Juarez and El Paso, TX, April 2017, Organized by FORCE with leadership from Mora Fernandez, Lorena Kourousias, Juan Ortiz, and Eva Ixchel Villareal, in collaboration with: La Casa Mandarina, Feminismo Consciente, UTEP- Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Center Against Sexual and Family Violence, Violence Intervention Program,Inc., Mujeres en Movimiento, and Make the Road NY. Photo by Hannah Brancato.
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The Monument Quilt at Ohio UniversityOctober 2017, the Monument Quilt at Ohio University. The event was organized by Women’s Center; Ohio University Multicultural Center; Ohio University LGBT Center; Bscpb Ohio U; Center for Law, Justice & Culture; Diversity Studies Certificate Program; Ohio University Division of Student Affairs; Ohio University Department of Social and Public Health; United Campus Ministries; Ohio University's Manasseh Cutler Scholars Program; Ohio University Honors Tutorial College; Multicultural Faculty In-Residence; Ohio Athletics; Ohio University College of Fine Arts; Department of Political Science, Ohio University, Athens OH; Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Ohio University; Psychology; and Between Love and Hate Theme. Photo by Hannah Brancato
Pink Loves Consent
This project was a collaboration with web developer Dan Staples. The models pictured are Brittney-Elizabeth Williams and Alexa Richardson.
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About PageThis is a screenshot from the "About" page of our pretend Victoria's Secret website.
“PINK loves CONSENT” was a web-based prank that made consent go viral and sparked an internet revolution. FORCE pretended to be Victoria’s Secret promoting a new line of consent-themed, anti-rape panties. The action and internet aftermath got millions of people talking about consent, rape culture, and the sexual empowerment of women.
This is the home page. The project was designed by FORCE. Brittney-Elizabeth Williams is the model pictured here; the web designer was Dan Staples; and the photography is by Philip Laubner.
"PINK loves CONSENT is more than a style. It's a revolution. PINK loves CONSENT is our newest collection of flirty, sexy and powerful statements that remind PINK panty-wearers and their partners to practice CONSENT.
From the page: "CONSENT is a verbal agreement (say it out loud—no "body language") about how and when people are comfortable having sex. "Ask first", "No means no" and "Let's talk about sex" remind us that communication is the key to good sex. Pick your favorite slogan or write your own. Whatever you do, remember to practice CONSENT.
Join the next sexual revolution: PINK loves CONSENT. "
pinklovesconsent.com -
Then and Now Page“PINK loves CONSENT” was a web-based prank that made consent go viral and sparked an internet revolution. Posing as VIctoria's Secret, FORCE got people talking about rape culture and consent online.
On the website, we explained the difference between printing "Sure Thing" and "Ask First" on a pair of underwear:
When it comes to sex, words like "no" are for setting boundaries—NOT flirting.
THE PROBLEM:
Across the country, women are saying "NO" and not being heard. Maybe it is because people (men and women alike) think that words like "no" are for flirting and don't have much meaning. Kinda like the "no" in this "NO PEEKING" pair of PINK underwear. Cute, right? It's cute when young women sport the word "no" as an invitation. It's cute when young women learn that pretending to not want sex is a way to flirt. Cute when their partners learn that "no" really means yes.
THE SOLUTION:
A boundary is not an invitation to try harder. It is something to be deeply heard and respected. Words like "no" and "stop" are not ways to flirt. If you want to have sex, go for it! You don't need to pretend like you're not into sex because you're a woman! And if you don't want to have sex, in any situation, that should always be respected. No matter what. NO means NO.
The website was designed by Dan Staples, and the photography is by Philip Laubner.
pinklovesconsent.com -
About Pink Loves Consent
Top Ten Party Commandments
As a follow up to the online spoof, FORCE hosted a contest encouraging students to share ideas about how they are creating consent culture on their campus. The contest was accompanied by the FORCE's own magazine, Consent: A Good Time for Everyone, including actions and activities for students to use to promote consent on campus. The Consent zine was designed by Whitney Frazier. The spoof was a collaboration with web developer Dan Staples.
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Top Ten Party CommandmentsThe infograph that FORCE developed to highlight student groups promoting consensual party times on campus.
Text: It has been brought to our attention that fun-loving undergrads everywhere feel like their party times are under serious threat. The enemy? Rape. To kick rape out of what we’ve been promoting, we had to re-invent the whole list. We now present to you the ultimate guide to a consensual good time.
The only good time that is a good time for everyone.
Full infograph: http://www.brobible.com/life/article/fake-feminist-brobible-think-its-cool
Rape is Rape
This project was a collaboration between feminist team FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture and the activist collective Luminous Intervention. The project was conceptualized by Hannah Brancato and Rebecca Nagle. Photos are courtesy of Casey McKeel.
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Rape Is RapeOn the eve of the last presidential debate, FORCE projected “RAPE IS RAPE” onto the US Capitol Building along with stories of survivors. The text tells the experience of survivors, which in a national conversation about the politics of rape, have eerily been left out. The project was a collaboration with the art/activist collective Luminous Intervention.
Mourning and Rage
To Be Heard
This performance was part of FORCE's installation for the Sondheim Artscape Prize 2016 at the Baltimore Museum of Art. The performance was collaboratively organized with Melani N. Douglass. Photography by Tara Sloane.
Not Alone Baltimore
Quilt Walk for Justice
We do this work through social media campaigns, direct actions and quilting workshops. 4 in 5 Native women will be raped, abused or stalked in their lifetime and 1 in 3 Native Women will be raped, abused or stalked every year. 96% of these perpetrators are Non-Native. Because of a racist legal framework imposed by the United States government, Native Nations are prohibited from prosecuting Non-Native people who commit sexual assault, rape, child abuse, or murder on their lands. FORCE’s tribal sovereignty projects took place in partnership with community and national Native organizations, including National Indigenous Women’s Resource Center, Native Alliance Against Violence, Muscogee (Creek) Nation Family Violence Prevention Program, and many other Tribal programs, coalitions and grassroots advocates.
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No DAPL PrayerDuring a busy morning commute, hill staffers and DC professionals had their regular routine disrupted by a group of Native women praying in Union Station. At 8am on Tuesday Nov 15, 20 people, led by DC Standing Rock Coalition and FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture, gathered in Union Station, DC to pray that President Obama to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline. Hope Butler (Piscataway Conoy Tribe of Maryland) stated, “President Obama, we fear what the future holds under Trump. If you do not stop the pipeline during your term, the blood of our relatives will be on your hands.”
Photography by Casey McKeel
In This Man
#INTHISMAN
January 2017
On the eve of the presidential inauguration in 2017, survivors of rape and abuse projected building-sized statements of how Trump reminds them of their abusers in Oakland, California and Washington DC. The projections were stills from a video by DISCLOSE, an Oakland-based art-activism collective.
As Trump supporters and protesters poured into the nation’s capitol for inauguration weekend, the front facade of the Washington DC Convention Center was lit up with statements like “In this man’s words I feel the anger of the man who pinned me to the floor when I was 14”. The next night, the convention center hosted an inaugural ball, celebrating Trump’s presidency. In Oakland, California, DISCLOSE organized survivors and allies to march to the Oakland Police Department headquarters, where they projected the video upon the building’s front facade. The Oakland action was in protest of the inauguration of a “Rapist in Chief”, and to the repeated sexual exploitation, coercion and intimidation of sex worker Celeste Guap, whose story made national news in 2016.
“The members of the OPD who exploited Guap, like Trump, are examples of the endemic perpetuation of gender-based power and sexual harm, resulting in the continued oppression of all women, especially women of color and trans women,” said Jadelynn Stahl, from DISCLOSE.
In the video, titled “We Will Not Be Silent”, survivors name the parallels between the violence of the Trump presidency and the violence they’ve experienced in their own lives. The video concludes with a commitment to survivor-led organizing and resistance. The video was created by DISCLOSE, and includes the voices of several survivors of gender-based violence. It was projected by Luminous Interventions in collaboration with FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture in DC, and was projected by the San Francisco Projection Department in collaboration with DISCLOSE in Oakland.
“Survivors of rape and abuse, along with our supporters, are coming together to use our collective voice to name what is happening: a rapist is becoming president,” says Jadelynn Stahl from Oakland-based group DISCLOSE. “Not only has Trump bragged about sexual assault in his personal life, but through his public actions, rhetoric and policies, he - and the administration he has appointed- embody the racist, misogynist, xenophobic, classist, ableist, transphobic, and homophobic agenda that is the bedrock of rape culture in the US. We, as survivors of gender-based violence, came together to assert that our collective vision for a world without gender-based violence persists in the face of the impending administration. ”
“As survivors of violence, we know best the tactics that Trump uses to maintain power because we have lived it,” says Rebecca Nagle FORCE Co-Director. “We have been violated, we have been lied to, we have been gaslit. Trump is not new, but all too familiar. As a survivor and as a queer, Native woman I know deeply the hate that Trump embodies, because I live it everyday.”
The full video was released online as part of a #WeWillNotBeSilent Twitter storm coinciding with Trump’s swearing in ceremony. From noon to 1pm EST on Friday January 20th, survivors will be stating the ways Trump reminds them of their abusers using the hashtag #InThisMan. Survivors will also be naming how they plan to organize against and resist Trump with the hashtag #WeWillNotBeSilent. The Twitter storm is co-sponsored by Disclose, Force: Upsetting rape culture, Sister Song and North Carolina Coalition Against Sexual Assault. A Storify from the event is available here.
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DISCLOSE is a Bay Area, art-based, collectivist organization founded in the Spring of 2013 to address the pervasive issue of sexual violence. Project-based, they collaborate with artists, organizers and educators on events which aim to actively consult with and engage their diverse communities through outreach, education and direct action in order to facilitate dialogues that address the complex oppressive systems that allow sexual violence culture to thrive. We center the voices of POC, trans and gender-nonconforming folks and all Women.
Worthy of Belief
45’s administration’s continues to attack survivors - at home, abroad and on campus. 45 revoked the visas of nearly 60,000 Haitian immigrants. Roy Moore nearly won a Senate seat in Alabama - a man who dreams of an America where Black people were enslaved - and has had nine women allege assault against him. DeVos has raised the burden of proof for survivors on campus, making it harder for college students who experience sexual violence to seek justice. The lesson we as survivors learn again and again, is that rape is an American institution, and that speaking out harms us, and makes us more vulnerable within a toxic culture that seeks to punish survivors for asking to be believed. While belief is a luxury for any survivor, we know that for survivors of color, queer and trans folks, folks with disabilities, immigrants and/or undocumented people, youth and Muslim communities, belief in our histories -- the things that have happened to our bodies -- becomes nearly impossible. We believe it doesn’t have to be this way.
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Worthy of Belief GraphicOne of 3 social media graphics created by FORCE Studio Director Shanti Flagg for our Worthy of Belief campaign, in protest of Betsy Devos' rollback of evidence required in Title IX investigations. This graphic in particular speaks to the reality that we are most likely to disbelieve survivors of color and trans survivors, and that often in response, they face incarceration and other punitive consequences for speaking out against their abuse.
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Belief Discussion GuideOne of 3 social media graphics created by FORCE Studio Director Shanti Flagg for our Worthy of Belief campaign, in protest of Betsy Devos' rollback of evidence required in Title IX investigations. This graphic is also a discussion guide for our audience to engage in dialogue within their communities.