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Justice Monument, Clerkenwell Green
[previous] :: [next]In August 2004 London got a new monument. The pre event hype had paid off. A large crowd had gathered to see what was underneath the black drapes. What really foxed people was which way the thing was facing. Was it the Statue of Liberty, was it a comment on the torture of Iraqi prisoners? Or was it a load of over hyped crap? Whatever, Diana's memorial fountain didn't attract this size of crowd when it was unveiled!
Every unveiling needs a master of ceremonies - cue MC Dynamite to do the honours: "Congratulations on acquiring your new monument. It is dedicated to thugs, bullies, liars, thieves, the corrupt, the arrogant and the stupid. Essentially it is dedicated to the entire British Legal system". A cartoon character Tony Blair came out to inspect London's newest monument...a 'cheap, fake royal impersonator' as promised indeed. As the statue was unveiled it became obvious that it was a remodeled version of the figure that sits on top of the British Royal Courts of Justice with a few additions - a garter with a dollar bill, thigh length PVC boots, hitched skirt revealing thong and a blindfold. Apparently the whole structure weighed 3.5 tonnes, the statue is cast in bronze and it all stands at 20 feet high.
"Clerkenwell Green once housed England's biggest and busiest courtroom which is now a Masonic Lodge. The green has been home to protest and dissent in London for hundreds of years. It is also near the spot where Banksy feels he was wrongly arrested last year" (from the photocopied leaflet thrown out at the unveiling). Leaflets were distributed that continued the theme of injustice: "The unveiling marks the anniversary of the death of Kevin Callan. Kevin was famously jailed in 1991 for murdering his girlfriend's severely handicapped four year old daughter. From his cell in Wakefield High Security Prison he badgered library staff to provide him with an array of medical textbooks and despite being a lorry driver who left school with no formal qualifications he became an expert in child neuropathology. He was able to eventually prove the girl in his care died as a result of a tragic accident and was released unconditionally. Kevin died on the 5th August 2003" "People like Banksy have got real talent - they just need use it in a more constructive way" - Chief inspector Dave Dickason, British Transport Police (source BBC). The statue stood in place for another couple of days before the council craned it out citing the fact that it could make the toilets below the square unsafe. According to the BBC Banksy's agent has offered to pay the recovery costs to retrieve it. From here who knows where it will turn up next.
This article has been viewed 7124 times in the last 3 years Marc: 20th Apr 2005 - 07:14 GMToh man from this side of the atlantic banksy seems like a dope foke hero!! keep the pics coming.. elaine: 20th Apr 2005 - 07:17 GMTit was because I was looking for info about banksy's exploits in NY putting up the paintings in the galleries recently that I found this site Flower: 21st Apr 2005 - 23:37 GMTRe: Justice Monument, Clerkenwell Green I think that Banksy is certainly an interesting guy but I am not sure that the above stunt is really terribly impressive. The words of MC Dynamite are quite frankly crass, idiotic, inaccurate and inflammanatory. It is a good thing that many of the good people working to obtain justice in the legal system don't do it for the thanks of those whose liberty they seek to uphold, but rather from an internal desire to do the right thing. A balance has to be struck between those that feel that the laws are unfairly restrictive (essentially free-thinkers, libertarians, anarchists, &c.) and the vast majority of people that want their way of life to be protected and to have a set of rules that they understand and that they can live their lives by. It is all very well to object to the current rules relating to property, liberty and the right of the state to interfere in peoples' lives but the reality of the situation is that most people are happy with these rules and if you were to replace them with the sort of principles that are espoused by the people that support their removal then the lives of the majority would be hugely damaged by the ensuing mess that such an absense of law would create. That is not to say that there is not much to be said in favour of the minority view, just that it is not possible to run a system of the scale of our current society on that set of values. I am aware that I have been ranting, and that this is not the sort of forum in which these views are necessarily terribly popular, but I really enjoy this forum and wanted to present a possibly alternative viewpoint. Flower: 21st Apr 2005 - 23:44 GMTOn an entirely different point: the above state is not a replica of that which stands on top of the Royal Courts Of Justice (RCJ). The RCJ is a civil court, and also the home of the Court of Appeal. There is no statue on top of the RCJ, although there are a couple of spires. The statue that is being parodied is in fact the statue of "justice" that sits atop the Central Criminal Court, generally known as the Old Bailey. jeeff: 22nd Apr 2005 - 00:57 GMTi agree that mc dynamite's little speech seems a bit ridiculous. even the statue kind of lacks the sly sense of humour that makes most of banksy's work so great. i guess getting personally involved sours things a bit. but i do think that graffiti/public art plays an important role - not in calling for society's collapse, but simply in making people stop & think. i seriously doubt that most graffiti artists have a hardline ideological stance. at their best, people like banksy are the merry pranksters and shit disturbers that get us to pull our heads out of our asses once in a while. and in that way it promotes the idea of soft change, change by degrees, on an individual level. i think that's a good idea. Marc: 22nd Apr 2005 - 02:11 GMTwe don't need anarchy to work on a global scale- it's a local scale moral compass at this point- i agree with the need to balance society but also would like to point out that at least 2million other british subjects don't want an imperialist war in iraq, either.. one issue at a time, and that seems to be a pretty important one with a real effect on peoples' lives. so the anti-war movement does encourage a sort of balance, that of expressing opinions, and indeed a large number of imperialist invasions are in fact illegal, so protestors are sometimes demanding justice. wonderlane: 4th Jul 2005 - 17:54 GMTLove the art, not sure how well it relates to Kevin Callan, however, I would never have read about his suffering unless I had viewed that image. Thank you, Comment on this article..[previous] :: [next] |
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