Anti-Olympic Mural Removed, then Restored

Vancouver city council retreats in the face of criticism that the ordered removal of an anti-Olympic mural outside an art gallery is proof of the 2010 Police State.

Anti-Olympic mural returns
Sean Kolenko, Metro Vancouver, December 14, 2009

An anti-Olympic mural that was removed after the city deemed it graffiti
once again adorns the facade of an art gallery in the Downtown Eastside.

Civil-rights watchdogs have pointed at the mural’s removal as proof of the threat to freedom of expression during the Games.

But a Vision councillor maintains that the removal order, while regrettable, was simply a case of staff acting in good faith after receiving complaints.

“I think, frankly, that it’s just a bit of a bureaucratic snafu, said Coun. Geoff Meggs yesterday.

“I’m sorry that it happened, but it’s not representative of how we want to protect civil rights during the Games. And we’ve been adamant that we do.”

The mural shows five Olympic rings, four with frowning faces, the fifth with a smiley face. It had hung for three months on the front of The Crying Room art gallery on Cordova Street at Main Street.

It was taken down in November under the city’s graffiti bylaw. The mural was back up this weekend (the grin on the smiley face is bigger).

COPE Coun. Ellen Woodsworth called its removal a violation of free speech and artistic expression.

David Eby, executive director of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, said the city should treat anti-Olympic messaging the same as pro-Olympic messaging.

The display space had been used since 2003 without incident.

From: BC Civil Liberties Association [mailto:info@bccla.org]

Statement from British Columbia Civil Liberties Association
December 11, 2009
For immediate release
City orders anti-Olympic mural removed from Gallery

The City of Vancouver has shut down the public art space that has existed, uninterrupted since 2003, in front of the Crying Room gallery at 157 East Cordova Street following the posting of an anti-Olympic mural.

"Given the long and uninterrupted display of public art at this gallery, the tolerance of the City to date, the content of the mural, and the stipulations of the IOC and VANOC in limiting anti-Olympic expression, it certainly appears to be more than simple coincidence that the City has chosen this mural, at this time, to take exception to the Gallery's actions," said Robert Holmes, President of the BCCLA.

The City issued a notice to the landlord of the Gallery suggesting that the anti-Olympic mural was graffiti and contravened the City's restrictions on graffiti, and ordering the mural removed. The BCCLA has written a letter to the City of Vancouver, expressing disappointment that the City has targeted this expression, apparently based on the content of the sign.

"We urge you to review your processes to ensure that this does not happen again," wrote Holmes in the letter, "Although we are losing confidence in your political will to ensure that all voices are heard during the Olympic period despite your repeated public assertions to the contrary."

Other displays mounted by the Crying Room, since 2003, can be viewed at www.thecryingroom.com

A photo of the mural ordered removed by the city can be viewed at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/blackbird_hollow/3960151488/

MEDIA CONTACTS:

Robert Holmes, President, 604-838-6856
David Eby, Executive Director, 778-865-7997

Vancouver orders removal of anti-Olympic mural
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/british-columbia/vancouver-...

Gallery and artist claim piece was removed because of its message, prompting concern about free-expression rights

Marsha Lederman, Globe and Mail, Dec. 11, 2009

The city of Vancouver has ordered the removal of a mural hanging outside a Downtown Eastside gallery depicting the Olympic rings as four sad faces and one smiley face.

The gallery says in 10 years, it has never before been asked to remove any work.

The city issued the order under its graffiti bylaw, but it comes in the wake of a debate over a controversial city sign bylaw that opponents feared would allow officials to stifle anti-Olympic expression.

“It was pretty clear to me that it was because of the context of the work,” says Colleen Heslin, who runs the Crying Room, a small studio focusing on emerging artists.

Ms. Heslin points out that over the years she has hung about 30 murals there, and has never had any trouble. She has also used that space as a giant chalkboard, allowing passersby to write or draw whatever they wanted (which included swear words) and was never asked to remove that either.

In fact, when her landlord, Peter Wong, received a notice from the city telling him to remove the graffiti from his building, he had no idea what they were talking about. “I called them and said I cannot find the graffiti. And they said the sign [the mural] is graffiti.” This surprised him, because the murals have been up for years and he had never heard from the city about them before.

The mural – black paint on varnished wood – may look grittier than other works that have hung on the front of the gallery in the past, but the artist, Jesse Corcoran, says he has no doubt it was ordered taken down not because of a misunderstanding but because of its anti-Olympic content. “I think that they were very careful to try and just term it as graffiti … but let's be honest: it's on the front of a gallery that has had a rotating series of art pieces. So I think that's just the kind of terminology [they used] to avoid it seeming like it was being removed because of the Olympics.”

Vancouver spokesperson Theresa Beer says a city inspector viewed the work as graffiti, not a mural, noting “black graffiti tags on wood panelling covering a window.”

“It has nothing to do with content,” Ms. Beer added.

While this removal was ordered under the city's graffiti by-law, a sign bylaw in Vancouver has faced heavy criticism. First passed in July, it was accused of stifling debate by giving police and city officials broad power to seize signs and placards, with one civil libertarian saying the city was at risk of becoming “Beijing 2.0.” The law was revised last month to apply only to commercial signs, with Mayor Gregor Robertson saying the city's “commitment has always been the protection of people's Charter Rights and Freedoms.”

Ms. Heslin removed the mural on Nov. 16, complying because she likes to rotate the art there anyway (the work had been up since Sept. 25). Also she didn't want to cause Mr. Wong any grief, as he allows her to install the murals without restrictions – a great freedom, she says, for someone running a gallery with no funding.

The mural is unquestionably an anti-Olympic statement. Mr. Corcoran, who works at a homeless shelter, feels that the Olympics have not served marginalized people of the Downtown Eastside well. He is upset that some key gathering places for homeless people – such as Oppenheimer Park – have been shut down for pre-Olympic renovations. “The oppressive nature of the Games is what I wanted to capture and how the majority is suffering for the minority.”

And for everyday Vancouverites like himself, Mr. Corcoran says, the Games are simply inaccessible. “I live in Vancouver and I pay taxes and I'm not going to be able to go to the Olympics. I can't afford to go to the Olympics. So basically on a lot of people's backs like the taxpayers of British Columbia, the Olympics are being staged and it's not really for us. I find that frustrating and I think there's a lot of issues that should be dealt with before we have to worry about increasing our ability to host sports events.”

Patrick Smith, director of Simon Fraser University's Institute of Governance Studies, said the removal of the sign is symptomatic of the high demands the “Olympic movement” places on its host cities. He believes Vancouver will be the beginning of a shift away from the modern Olympic era, with communities saying the cost of hosting is too high.

“A lot is asked of communities, and it seems to me this is a perfectly good example of where we've gone too far,” he said. “There's no other way to describe it other than overreaction, but it's the city trying to protect a brand that's not the city's brand. It's the Olympic movement's brand.”

It's the latest in a series of cases where the Olympic interests have trumped Canadian or local interests, he argues, citing other examples such as a recent court ruling that Canadian women ski jumpers couldn't claim a spot in the Games under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, or a new B.C. law that allows police to force homeless people into shelters in severe weather. Civil libertarians argue the law is simply a tool to sweep Vancouver's homelessness problem under the rug during the Games.

“I think the city has kind of caved in to a whole serious of events here,” said Prof. Smith, also a past chair of SFU's department of political science. “It [the Olympic movement] dictates an awful lot to local citizens. It's not as if the event isn't interesting and doesn't grab the attention of people around the world, but [the Olympic movement] goes to far and it asks too much.”

With a report from Josh Wingrove