Times Colonist

Mural festival gets art ‘out of galleries’

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — An east Vancouver neighbourh­ood has gotten increasing­ly colourful lately, but the people behind dozens of new murals in the area say the art is about more than beautifyin­g empty walls.

More than 40 artists are painting about 35 permanent works on buildings near Main Street for the inaugural Vancouver Mural Festival.

There are massive pieces on century-old apartment buildings, whimsical doodle-like images on the front of a paint store and an intricate image of geometric wolves on the back of a coffee shop.

“We’re trying to get art out of galleries, and the bars and the studios, and into public space,” says David Vertesi, the festival’s executive director.

There’s an abundance of artistic talent in the city, he says, and many people simply don’t know about it. Part of his goal is to transform how art is seen, both figurative­ly and literally, and get residents talking about it.

Those conversati­ons are important for what happens in the future, says Drew Young, a Vancouver artist who helped curate the festival.

Despite the high number of creative people in town, events and spaces to showcase work are disappeari­ng, he says.

“Venues are slowly shutting down, opportunit­ies are becoming few and far between, and we’re sitting on a hotbed. The time is now to really show what’s going on in the city, or else there’s really not going to be an art scene in the city.”

Young says the festival’s organizers looked for a diverse range of artists, including people from different ethnic background­s, genders and sexual orientatio­ns. Everyone has a story, he explains, and they wanted a lot of different stories to be told.

All of the creators have been working hard to make their craft viable, Young says, and the murals have stretched everyone’s limits, because few people have previously taken on such largescale projects.

“There are so many massive firsts,” he says. “Our newcomers, they’ve never painted a wall and most of these guys are painting walls that are bigger than stuff I’ve ever touched.”

The festival, too, is a massive undertakin­g. In addition to coordinati­ng artists and spaces for all of the paintings, organizers have put together a series of events this weekend, including a walking tour, a speakers’ panel and concerts by musicians such as Shad and Andrew W.K.

“This [festival] shows it’s a so-fun city, not a no-fun city,” says Vertesi, who’s also a musician and plays bass in the band Hey Ocean!

There are a lot of issues facing the arts, from funding to public perception, and in some ways the murals are meant to address those, he says.

“It comes down to the public caring. And the way we’ve chosen to try and influence that is to create meaningful experience­s for people with art in Vancouver.”

Murals created for the festival’s first year have yet to dry, but organizers are already looking forward to what future iterations may bring. They see it becoming an annual event, and want to expand to other neighbourh­oods, as well as work with other artists and organizati­ons.

Young says he hopes the festival makes people view Vancouver as an art destinatio­n.

“It feels like we’re actually changing the way people see things.”

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mural artist Drew Young is artistic director of Vancouver’s first Mural Festival. More than 40 artists will paint about 35 permanent works on the walls of apartment buildings, coffee shops and more.
JONATHAN HAYWARD, THE CANADIAN PRESS Mural artist Drew Young is artistic director of Vancouver’s first Mural Festival. More than 40 artists will paint about 35 permanent works on the walls of apartment buildings, coffee shops and more.

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