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Trump wigs, nudes with mirrors and musical rage: artistic protest at the Republican National Convention

From hairy installations to nude performance art to music filled with rage, artists are taking action at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland to raise eyebrows, ire and, ultimately, to incite political change.

Wide range of protest art includes rap concert urging #MakeAmericaRAGEAgain

Artistic protest is alive and well outside the 2016 Republican National Convention. A woman exits the Trump Hut (left), while naked women pose as part of the latest installation from Spencer Tunick. (Reuters/Getty Images)

From hairy wigs as digs tonaked dissent and rage-fuelled music, artistic expression is flowing at theRepublican National Convention in Cleveland this week.

While the convention floor saw aninner-circle Republican revolt on the very first day, there'sbeen plenty of protestoutsideas well, withartists taking action to raise eyebrows,ire and ultimatelyto incite political change.

Welcome to the Trump Hut

One such art project is Trump Hut, described on Twitter as a "livable protest wigwam modeled after the hair of America's most notorious real estate mogul."

Perched in Willard Park, just outside the RNC headquarters, the art piece features 96 hula skirtsmade of straw strawfrom Mexico.

The ideacomes froma Canadian who credits his homeland's satire-loving strain of humour as inspiration.

Ottawa-bornDouglas Cameron and co-creator Tommy Noonan created the huts, with the help of Mexican artist Roxana Casillas, as a welcoming place for protesters to rest. Itfits four at at time.

It was during the Occupy Wall Street protests that Cameron first got the idea to rectify the disparity between the luxuryaccommodations of "one-percenters"like Donald Trump andthe surroundings of the open-air demonstrators, who lived in sometimes-unsanitary conditions amidst tents moved around by authorities.

Although his artistic hut ultimately faced permit issues near its site close to the RNCgrounds, Cameron was pleased to be able provide a few hours of comfort,where protesters could enjoy the "Trump-like"opulence of a Persian carpet and fancy phone.

The attention-grabbing gambit worked, Cameron said.

"Whenever you get a protest, for the last 30 years or so, the esthetics have tended to look very similar; with placards and slogans," he told CBC News.

"Alot of people, especially the segment of voters that you might actually be able to reach, will see protest signs and roll their eyes and just think 'Ok this is a radical fringe.'

"But with the Trump Hut people are driving by and stopping, offering to talk and even buy us doughnuts. We'refinding [people] from all political persuasions, so it's one of those things that disarms people when you use absurdity and humour."

We wanted to do something that would stand out visually and make people laugh.- Douglas Cameron on his Trump Hut

The next stop for the hut is Trump Tower in New York next week. There's alsoa kickstarter campaign in the works, with the goal of placingmore of the huts throughout the U.S.as a non-threatening way to engage people in conversation about the polarizing politician.

SpencerTunick's naked truth

Famed photographer SpencerTunick is anotherartist who taps into the power of original imagery.Since the 1990s, he's convinced hoards of people to voluntarily pose nude in public places, all in the name of artistic freedom and social commentary.

Spencer Tunick's latest large-scale art installation, Everything She Says Means Everything, sees female subjects holding mirrors as a call for reflection on the role of gender in the current U.S. election. (AFP/Getty Images)

This time around, he selected only females to take part in this latest work of protest andarmed his naked participants with large mirrors. The piece, Everything She Says Means Everything,is intended to "reflect the knowledge and wisdom of progressive women and the concept of Mother Nature."

Prophets of Rage take the stage

One of the oldest forms of protests music with a message also showed up at the RNC grounds.

Given the nature of the highly-charged political event and during this time of heightened tensions in the U.S.,itwasn't one of thosefolksy sit-in concerts fromthe 1960s.

Prophets of Rage took to the stage Monday at a protest concert organized as part of the End Poverty Now Rally.

Comprising members from Rage Against the Machine, Public Enemy and Cypress Hill, the band was dubbed arap "supergroup" by Rolling Stone magazine.

With more than 23,000 followers on Twitter, the group routinely employssocial media as a platform and crafts explicitlyrics to express their feeling of violation by Republican Party policies.

In a play on Trump's own slogan, they urged concert goers to join their cause to #MakeAmericaRAGEAgain.

Beyond the hashtag, it's also the name of the group'slatest tour. Ithighlightsthat the band isn't using its art as a flash-in-the-pan protest, but rather as a committed movement to continue theirfight against the powers that be.