Experts paint bleak picture for sectarian murals
Splashed beneath gables and daubed across walls, Belfast's sectarian murals are an impassioned pictorial history of conflict in Northern Ireland.
But many of the pictures are crumbling, and some locals, keen to reinvent their public image, are painting over them. While new images constantly spring up, many are lost forever.
Now experts in Ireland say there are “significantly fewer” sectarian murals than at any time in the last 50 years.
Their concerns are echoed by one of the world's leading art experts, Martin Kemp, Emeritus Professor of the History of Art at Oxford University, who has questioned the murals' destruction.
“My instinct as a historian is that these are some of the most important public images of our time,” he said. “People should see what they can do to preserve them. Someone should look seriously at them with a view to which ones should be kept and how.”
Professor Kemp writes about sectarian murals in his forthcoming book, Christ to Coke: How Image Becomes Icon, out in October, which explores the dissemination of famous imagery through popular culture. He highlights a mural unveiled in 1998 on West Belfast's Shiels Street, featuring an image of Che Guevara. The mural, meant to express republicans solidarity with the Cuban revolution, is flaking, and is split by a metal fence.
According to Professor Bill Rolston of the University of Ulster, there are now fewer of these works than at any time in the last 50 years.
“The problem is they are not seen as art, they are seen as political,” he said. “They look like art but are not in the eyes of the people who paint them, so there is no pressure to preserve them.”
The Arts Council of Northern Ireland (ACNI) now works with local communities and artists to paint over murals.
“There's been a lot of research into the iconography which has been left in Northern Ireland and various agencies have looked at positive ways we can address that legacy,” said Noirin McKinney, ACNI's director of arts development. “Some of them have come down, while some have been replaced with sculptures or landscaping. It's really up to the community.”
Earlier this year, large murals appeared on gable walls in Belfast depicting masked members of the UVF in black turtlenecks holding automatic weapons.
This presaged the street riots in Belfast in June and a level of sectarian violence that hadn't been witnessed in the city for several years.
Kemp acknowledged it was still too early to discuss aesthetic matters.
He said: “Once something survives to become an antique it achieves a higher status. Street art can be analysed like other historic art but tends not to be. It is really difficult to conserve them.”
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