Los Angeles Times

Breonna Taylor statue smashed in Oakland

Weeks after it was installed, ceramic bust of woman killed by police is vandalized.

- By Lila Seidman

Vandalism of the bust is called act of hatred, two weeks after it was installed in honor of slain Black woman.

In what officials are calling a vicious attack and an act of hatred, a bust honoring Breonna Taylor was smashed in Oakland over the weekend.

Emblazoned with the phrase “Say Her Name,” the ceramic bust was found vandalized the day after Christmas, two weeks after it was installed in the city’s downtown area.

The artwork commemorat­ed Taylor, a 26- year- old Black woman shot to death by police inside her Louisville, Ky., apartment during a botched drug raid in March. The deaths of Taylor and other Black people killed by police, such as George Floyd, have spurred America’s reckoning with generation­s of racial injustice and sparked massive protests across the country.

Oakland police are investigat­ing.

Leo Carson, the artist who created the bust, called the vandalism an “attack on the Black Lives Matter movement, an attack on Breonna Taylor, and an attempt of intimidati­on.”

But rather than crush those voices, Carson, 30, said, “actually, we’ve proven exactly the opposite.”

News of the vandalism garnered attention for what was a quiet, independen­tly conceived project. That has now translated into support — including donations — to bring the bust back in a sturdier form.

A GoFundMe page launched Sunday to raise $ 5,000 to reconstruc­t the work in bronze had raised more than $ 10,000 by Monday evening. Carson said any money not spent on rebuilding the sculpture will be given to Taylor’s family.

When the COVID- 19 pandemic hit, Carson lost his job as a server at a restaurant in nearby Berkeley. He used the time to design the sculpture over several months. Once it was installed, he said, he was enthused to see members of the community taking photos of the work and enjoying it.

Carson, who lives in Oakland, was notified of the vandalism in an Instagram message Saturday evening and went to see his artwork. When he saw the damage, he said, he felt “really shook and overwhelme­d.”

After surveying the damage, Carson thinks the vandal — or vandals — struck the work twice: once on the back of the sculpted head and once across the shoulder. Photos circulatin­g online show large chunks broken from the bust.

The vandalism is an ‘ attack on the Black Lives Matter movement, an attack on Breonna Taylor.’

— Leo Carson, the artist who created the bust

In a tweet Monday morning, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf called the vandalism “a vicious attack” and said that Oakland would not tolerate “acts of hatred.”

Oakland “has a lot of work to do,” Carson said, in terms of enacting antiracist policies. He said he wants to see the city reduce funding for the police and increase spending on affordable housing, public schools and other institutio­ns in need.

Soon, Carson will undertake the process of casting the work in bronze and building a stronger stand to hold the increased weight of the metal. And he says he won’t be giving up his activism; he’s been tapped to speak at a political rally in Seattle in early January.

“I’m an activist even before I’m an artist,” he said.

 ?? Nenna Joiner ?? A CERAMIC BUST of Breonna Taylor was vandalized in downtown Oakland over the weekend.
Nenna Joiner A CERAMIC BUST of Breonna Taylor was vandalized in downtown Oakland over the weekend.

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