Medicine Hat News

THUNBERG MURAL

– Defacer speaks out

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EDMONTON

A man says he defaced a mural of teenage Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg because he wanted to take a stand peacefully and the artist who created it says he doesn’t mind.

James Bagnall says he wrote “stop the lies” and “this is oil country” on the painting of the 16-year-old girl against a brightblue background along a lightrail transit line in Edmonton.

“My intent was to just let people hear my voice and my opinion,” he said in an email Monday. “I was not taking shots at Greta as a person. She’s only a child and I would never do that.

“I’m just tired of people bashing our (Albertans’) way of life.”

The eyes on the portrait were blacked out, and a slur and a message telling Thunberg to leave Canada were written over top in French. Bagnall said he was not responsibl­e for the French messages.

Thunberg has made headlines for her passionate pleas to world leaders to take tougher action on cutting greenhouse gas emissions. She joined thousands last Friday in a march through downtown Edmonton to a climate action rally at the legislatur­e grounds. The group vastly outnumbere­d oil-and-gas industry supporters who showed up.

Thunberg repeated her message that the future of the planet is at stake, but she refrained from any direct criticism of the Alberta oilsands.

Artist AJA Louden said it took him about 2 1/2 hours to create the mural on the “free wall” where anyone is allowed to paint.

“My goal was to keep the conversati­on going after the rally. The problem is still here, and sometimes all that productive energy seems to go away when the rally ends,” he wrote in an email.

He said he’s not upset because people scrawling over his work are telling their own story.

“Our local economy is dependent on the energy industry and there’s some anger and fear as people come to terms with the changes we need to make,” Louden wrote.

“Focusing that anger and fear into making large-scale change so we can succeed in the future - as opposed to attacking a young girl trying to speak up - will be key for us.”

The climate crisis is a complicate­d problem, Louden added.

“Denying it is a problem, or retreating into entrenched ideologica­l camps who are too bitterly divided to collaborat­e, makes the problem a lot harder to solve,” he said.

“Alberta has some of the cleanest fossil-fuel-based energy production available, but it still causes damage. We also have one of the highest per capita rates of energy use as a country.”

Before it was defaced, the mural read “Thank you, Greta” and “Thank you, Beaver Hills Warriors” — a reference to the grassroots environmen­tal group that helped lead the rally.

 ?? CP PHOTO JASON FRANSON ?? James Bagnall stands in front of the defaced Greta Thunberg mural in Edmonton on Friday. Bagnall was the first to paint over the mural with the messages “This Is Oil Country” and “Stop The Lies”.
CP PHOTO JASON FRANSON James Bagnall stands in front of the defaced Greta Thunberg mural in Edmonton on Friday. Bagnall was the first to paint over the mural with the messages “This Is Oil Country” and “Stop The Lies”.

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