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Sure, but you displaying it also communicates to your guests that you're not disgusted enough by his actions to remove it, and also that you're not embarrassed that you financially supported someone evil.
That makes an assumption that it is one's moral responsibility to dispose of work made by someone who did something wrong. That's pure circular argument. As for supporting someone evil, that might apply if you bought it after you found out what they were doing, but it is absurd to complain about something someone did with no way of knowing what it might go toward. It is also absurd to require people to investigate every facet of every possible person they could interact with. If you are walking down the street and meet someone running a hotdog cart, will you hold off on the purchase until you can run a background check? What if they're actually 'evil?' *furious eyebrow wiggles* This kind of purity policing is silly, like placing the burden of climate change on the person who didn't separate their recycling.
Hey you said the negative history of the artist made the art more interesting, so i was just saying it's more nuanced than that. We all (me definitely) own stuff from evil people/ corporations, but art is different because it's not meant to be functional, it's meant to make you feel something. It's more susceptible to changing meaning based on creator than a T- shirt, a phone, or a pair of shoes