Vancouver Sun

Teen caught tagging gets to paint with permission

Instead of booking him, Mountie saw 15-year-old’s talent and gave him the chance to create legal graffiti

- AMY REID

On the walls of the Alice McKay building on the Cloverdale Fairground­s, half a dozen lifelong graffiti artists are leaving their mark through rodeo-inspired pieces that will come together to make a mural.

Among the men is Ian Ireland. His story is a little different.

Ian is 15 years old. The other guys have been tagging longer than he’s been alive.

Coming from a family of creative people — his father a florist, his mother a wedding dress designer — Ian grew up drawing. It’s how he expresses himself. It’s how he makes sense of the world.

A passionate artist by any definition, the Semiahmoo Secondary School student was heading down a bad path before something special happened.

See, Ireland’s not a skateboard­er. But his friends are. He’d hang out at skate parks and didn’t really know how he fit in. Until, one day, he stumbled across a can of spray paint in a park. It didn’t take long for him to take to tagging.

“It was about the rush,” the teen said. “It’s also about expression. Leaving a little bit of you somewhere. It had just become a bit of an addiction. I got lost in the art of it.”

Things came to a screeching halt when he got busted for vandalizin­g his school. A teacher recognized a tag from Ireland’s sketchbook he fills with his drawings. He was told he’d have to pay for the damage, and a police officer would be coming to see him. Surrey RCMP Const. Troy Derrick answered the call. Ian laughs as he recalls Derrick showing up in full uniform — bulletproo­f vest and all.

“Oh crap,” he recalled thinking, likening the experience to a TV show where cops try to scare kids out of continuing to commit crimes.

“But Troy changed his mind as he was talking to me. He noticed I had talent,” he continued.

“He said, ‘I’ll help you fill out a resume, we’ll get a reference letter ... as long as you don’t do any illegal graffiti anymore. And I’ll give you space to paint.’ He gave me an amazing opportunit­y.”

Derrick, who uses skateboard­ing and art to connect with youth, said he noticed Ireland’s talent and drive right away.

As a graffiti- style muralist himself, he decided to take him under his wing instead of laying charges against him for painting up the high school.

And as Derrick quite simply puts it: “The difference between art and vandalism is permission.”

So it was with permission — and Derrick’s guidance — that Ireland got a break.

“Ever since Troy came along, it’s shown me a clear path in what I want to do in life,” said Ireland.

“I want to become a concept artist or muralist. I want to be able to influence and inspire people with what I do. I want to show people that there’s nothing to life without the spice of art.”

Ireland and Derrick are set to participat­e in a graffiti contest during the Cloverdale Rodeo this May long weekend.

Mainroad Group, host of the contest, is inviting graffiti artists to come out and tag about work zone safety — such as distracted driving or slowing down in constructi­on zones — on large walls the company will be erecting. The winner will take home $500.

To sign up, email bnielsen@mainroad.ca.

 ?? AMY REID ?? Ian Ireland says getting caught spraying graffiti has led to him finding his path in life as a concept artist.
AMY REID Ian Ireland says getting caught spraying graffiti has led to him finding his path in life as a concept artist.

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