Canada Games mural vandalized - Prince George, BC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 53° 54.924 W 122° 44.846
10U E 516588 N 5974138
A large mural, by noted artist Milan Basic, displayed on the east side of the Prince George post office, was vandalized in the summer of 2019.
Waymark Code: WM16YEK
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Date Posted: 10/30/2022
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Alfouine
Views: 0

The mural of a snowboarder was accomplished by artist Milan Basic in 2012. The inspiration was from a photograph taken by Dustin Hall. The mural was in celebration of the upcoming 2015 Canada Winter Games to be held in Prince George.

Though it is on the side of the post office, the building is also recognized as the new home of Canada Games House, which is on the third floor.

The 2015 Canada Winter Games, officially known as the XXV Canada Games, is a Canadian multi-sport event alternating between winter and summer games.

There were 2,400 athletes and coaches, 4,800 volunteers and about 8,000 spectators who came together for the Canada Winter Games in Prince George. This was the biggest event in Prince George history and the first time the Canada Games were staged in British Columbia.

Then, of course, some idiot had to come along and spread graffiti about on the mural. As one would expect, the people of Prince George were somewhat miffed! Understandably, the act of vandalism was reported post haste in the local newspaper, the Prince George Citizen.
Canada Games mural vandalized

The Canada Winter Games snowboarder mural was tagged with spray paint by a vandal on Tuesday evening.

Frank Peebles | Jun 5, 2019
One of northern B.C.'s most prominent murals, one seen throughout the nation as a pivotal image of the 2015 Canada Winter Games, got defaced overnight.

When Shonda Shaw came to work on Wednesday morning, she saw that a spray-paint vandal had left a mark known as a "tag" - the anonymous vandal's sprayed signature.

"I am so fumed," said Shaw, who works for the building's owner, local entrepreneur Fritz Hausot. "When we acquired the building about two and a half years ago, we repainted the building but we went to great lengths to keep that painting as it was. We think it was an important part of an important time in Prince George. And then this happens."

The painting dominates the visual impression of the corner at Fifth Avenue and Quebec Street. What's especially galling is how upset the public was when an even larger mural, a massive Aboriginal collage on the former PG Lock & Key Building, was deliberately painted over when that building changed ownership several years ago. Now, on the same block, this acclaimed mural has also been disfigured.

The public knows this image well. It's the face of a goggled snowboarder on a mountain, with another snowboarder doing a trick in the reflection of the goggles.

It was painted by noted artist Milan Basic, unveiled July 27, 2012 on what was then Canada Games House - the headquarters for the Games organizers.

The Canada Winter Games committee commissioned Basic to paint the mural there.

Stuart Ballantyne, CEO of the 2015 Canada Winter Games, used the world "phenomenal" to describe the mural.

"I think it's iconic," he said. "That's what we wanted to achieve with launching our offices here in downtown. We knew that that was a great space to put a mural and we thank the BID Group for giving us the opportunity to have the canvas and a new office but we also thank Milan Basic for just an amazing piece of art that will last forever."

The building was owned at the time by the BID Group of Companies. It was owned by Canada Post to begin with, and indeed the downtown post office is still located there. North District RCMP also called the place home for many years.

Basic estimated he spent between 30 and 40 hours on the project and said he was happy to have been given the opportunity to do it.

"I'm really big on community, and I feel like the way I can contribute to community is by bringing colour to Prince George," he said on the day of the unveiling. "This is a legacy. This is a legacy for my children, for your children and on and on. That's what matters the most to me."

Basic used paint designed specifically for murals, so the piece will have a long life span. He said an anti-graffiti coating will be applied, which he finds ironic because he started out as a graffiti artist many years ago.

"That's what cracks me up," laughed Basic.

The longevity of that coating will now be tested. Consultations are underway with the Community Arts Council and the RCMP to track down a potential solution to the damaged art and track down a possible identity of the vandal.

"It's just so huge, a big, ugly mess," said Shaw. "Taggers have hit our walls before (on the nondescript cosmetic paint) and we've just painted over that. But to vandalize a mural, that is just unbelievable, so disrespectful, I can't believe what I'm seeing."
From the Prince George Citizen
Photo goes Here
Type of publication: Newspaper

When was the article reported?: 06/05/2019

Publication: Prince George Citizen

Article Url: [Web Link]

Is Registration Required?: no

How widespread was the article reported?: regional

News Category: Crime

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