Los Angeles Times

President star-crossed again in L.A.

Trump’s Walk of Fame symbol is smashed. Does the creative resistance go too far?

- By Jaclyn Cosgrove, Victoria Kim and Joseph Serna

When a street artist calling himself “Plastic Jesus” was placing an installati­on protesting the Trump administra­tion last month — a wire cage filled with teddy bears labeled “Trump Hotel” — there was an obvious choice: Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

As the 50-year-old British man casually strolled nearby to gauge reactions to his piece, it quickly became clear how many people seemed to see the star as symbolic of everything right or wrong with the president.

One gray-haired man knelt, kissed his hand and put the hand on the star. Another dug his heels on the star, as if putting out a cigarette. One passerby bent over and spat on the star, and was chased by an angry Trump supporter all the way down the block.

“I don’t think we’ve got any Trump properties in L.A., so people are taking their frustratio­n out on the star,” said the artist, who asked to remain anonymous because many of his pieces veer into illegality. “The star is a very visible symbol of his celebrity, an obvious place to attack in a way.”

This anti-Trump sentiment reached a new level Wednesday when the star was annihilate­d with a pickax. A man claimed to be the vandal and quickly turned himself in to police.

While it wasn’t immediatel­y clear what the 24-yearold man’s motivation­s were, images of the gouged-out star swiftly spread across social media taking on a meaning of its own: the latest political protest on the canvas

that is the streets of Los Angeles, for better or worse.

“It’s a very visceral visual statement that speaks a thousand words,” said Rosa Lowinger, an L.A.-based art writer and conservato­r who has studied vandalism in public spaces. “These are time-honored traditions of expression.”

In Los Angeles, where the president’s critics far outnumber his fans, Trump has been depicted in street art in a headlock by a luchador, naked, or blindfolde­d and holding a dart with his hand guided by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Since the 2016 election, Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame has been subject to spit, kisses, dog feces, selfies and urine. It’s been graffitied, walled in and sledgehamm­ered.

The artists’ collective INDECLINE put a naked statue of Trump on Hollywood Boulevard during the election, in what it said was a metaphor based on the Hans Christian Andersen story “The Emperor’s New Clothes.” The group has also vandalized Trump-owned hotels and golf courses in protesting the president.

“There’s always a fine line between destructio­n and art,” said a representa­tive of INDECLINE, who asked to remain anonymous because many of the group’s activities run afoul of the law. He said that because graffiti artists and creative types are far more likely to be disdainful of Trump than to be supporters, his presidency has led to a spike in politicall­y themed street art.

“We took a nice long nap during Obama,” he said. “Whether it’s naked statue or taking a pickax to the sidewalk, you’re going to see more of it for the next two years until he gets voted out.”

Police on Wednesday booked Austin Mikel Clay on suspicion of felony vandalism in connection with the star’s destructio­n. Clay, who was being held on $20,000 bail, allegedly strode up to the star and bashed through Trump’s brass nameplate about 3:30 a.m., police said.

By early afternoon, constructi­on workers were busily mixing concrete to replace the star. Tourists and residents leaned over the yellow caution tape surroundin­g the star to snap photos and selfies of where it had been.

Gregg Donovan, the former official greeter for Beverly Hills, stood near the star all day, holding a “Trump 2020” sign and wearing a red coat and top hat.

Donovan said that when he heard the news on the radio about Trump’s star, he decided to take the day off and spend it showing his support for the president by standing sentinel. He even snagged a piece of the destroyed star — a few people offered him money to buy it, but he wasn’t selling.

“If you’re going to protest, don’t protest a California landmark,” Donovan said. “You are free to speak your mind, but why do that? It’s bad. It’s wrong.”

L.A. resident Trissean McDonald, 31, said that even though he doesn’t think Trump is a good president, he didn’t agree with the decision to destroy the star.

“The person who did that definitely expressed how they felt — but honestly, I think that it was not done in the right way,” McDonald said. “Somebody who has worked so hard to get a star — even though he is who he is right now — I don’t think that should be taken away from him.”

Tye Brown, 42, of Oceanside was visiting the Walk of Fame for the first time. A Democrat who doesn’t support the president’s policies, Brown said she nonetheles­s wishes the country felt less divided.

“It’s dishearten­ing that someone felt the need to express themselves in such a destructiv­e way,” she said. “I just feel like it’s sad because — what’s America really coming to? Something is not right.”

The Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, which oversees the stars, said it intends on prosecutin­g Clay and urged people to express their political beliefs by voting rather than taking them out on one of their stars.

“When people are unhappy with one of our honorees, we would hope that they would project their anger in more positive ways than to vandalize a California state landmark,” Leron Gubler, president and chief executive of the chamber, said in a statement.

The last person to do serious damage to the star was James Otis, who took a sledgehamm­er and a pickax to the star in October 2016. Otis, who also turned himself in to authoritie­s, pleaded guilty to felony vandalism and was sentenced to probation and 20 days’ community service, as well as $4,400 in restitutio­n.

Evan Pricco, editor in chief of San Francisco-based art magazine Juxtapoz, said it didn’t matter whether Clay was a self-proclaimed artist with an articulate mission statement or a miscreant acting on a whim. Whatever his intention, the political expression speaks for itself, Pricco said.

“The kids on the streets of Paris in ’68 weren’t artists, they were using a new artistic platform to express their feelings, using streets to express how they felt,” he said. “It fits in the grand tradition of what actual activist street art is all about.”

Illma Gore, the artist behind the naked Trump painting, said she received threatenin­g letters mailed to her home after her work gained notoriety.

Gore said it’s hard to draw a line of how far is too far in creating art, but overall, artists should be willing to stand by their work.

“I think it very clearly was a person saying something,” Gore said of the destroyed star. “Even if he isn’t an artist, the act of saying it in a way of smashing a star is a form of art.”

Lowinger, the art conservato­r, said she believed the vandalism was nowhere near crossing the line into being an unacceptab­le method of expression. She said it would be going too far only if an irreplacea­ble piece of valuable cultural property was destroyed, or if the vandalism was designed to be threatenin­g.

Whether it would be effective in changing anyone’s minds is a different question, she said.

“How you react to it depends on how you already feel about the situation,” she said. “In this instance, I don’t think it accomplish­es anything.”

As for Plastic Jesus, who was also behind a 6-inch wall that went up around Trump’s star in 2016, he said he got messages all morning from people asking whether he was behind the destroyed star.

“Not guilty on this occasion,” he responded.

He said the few thousand dollars’ fine Clay potentiall­y faces was probably well worth the message he could send thanks to all the media attention.

“I think there is a limit, but this is well within reason,” he said. “Got your money’s worth with this one.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE view Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame after it was vandalized Wednesday morning. The alleged vandal turned himself in, police said.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times PEOPLE view Donald Trump’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame after it was vandalized Wednesday morning. The alleged vandal turned himself in, police said.
 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? A BOYLE HEIGHTS mural shows a lucha libre wrestler putting Donald Trump in a headlock.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times A BOYLE HEIGHTS mural shows a lucha libre wrestler putting Donald Trump in a headlock.

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