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Monday, September 21, 2020

Toronto artists are painting free garage door murals in response to hateful letter

Last week, Etobicoke resident Sapna Shah took to social media to share a completely confounding experience in which she received anonymous hate mail for commissioning a local artist to create a mural on her garage door.

In the wake of the viral story, local painters are now banding together to combat the appallingly insulting neighbour-at-large by offering up their garage painting services to others in the area for free.

The mural in question, painted by Natalie V. Bochenska a.k.a. Natalie Very B, depicts a night sky dotted with constellations, as well as a crescent moon overlooking some golden hills — all very benign.

But apparently the piece somehow elicited fury in a nearby citizen, who took it upon themselves to send Shah and her family a message with their incomprehensibly irate feelings.

"You just devalued all of the homes in this area with that hideous graffiti at the front of your house. It has made the entire neighbourhood look like a low income ghetto," the letter states.

"Every visitor we have will now have to drive by that shit on the way to us like they’re driving through the hood. Shame on you! You have no class!"

It went on to call Shah tasteless and accuse her of having zero consideration for her neighbours. She was utterly shocked by the piece of mail, as were others who read her story.

Moved by the online outpouring of support for the South Etobicoke family, we (@julii_mcmillo @bkez and I) are coming together along with local artists to organize a street-level demonstration of love! We are volunteering our professional skills to visibly express the positive, diverse and inclusive spirit of the South Etobicoke Community. It is our hope that by coming together in a public act of love we can support a sense of empowerment and connection for everyone living in the area. If you are interested in participating, or offering your support, there are four ways to join us: 1. If you can, please apply to have a mural painted by a professional local artist who is generously donating their services. If you have a front door, or a garage door AND you are a homeowner, or you rent and can gain permission of the property owner, we invite you to apply. Priority will be given to community members living within the boundaries indicated on the map included in this post, however any South Etobicoke residents are encouraged to apply. Each mural will be produced at no cost to the homeowner. We guarantee that it will be professionally painted and family friendly. Each homeowner will be matched with a participating artist who will have full creative license. We cannot offer customization or special requests for the designs. The mural painting is planned for the weekend of October 3rd and 4th. 2.Offer a donation to help cover the cost of supplies and help pay the artists for their time (link in my bio) 3.You can help spread the word in South Etobicoke and beyond, so that anyone who would like to participate can, while letting everyone know that hateful attacks will not go unanswered in our city. Let's make our love heard! 4.You can print our poster and hang it somewhere your neighbours can see it. Let’s make our love visible! ✨✨✨✨✨🌈🌈🌈🌈🌈 Thank you for making this happen everyone!

A post shared by Natalie Very B. (@natalieveryb) on

"We wondered why something so insignificant as painting our garage door would cause you so much anger that you took time from your life to type and mail such hateful words to our family. Then realized you weren’t worth our time," she wrote in a post about the incident in the South Etobicoke Community Facebook Group last week.

She also called the sender small-minded, racist, and elitist, which fellow members were quick to support her on.

"The only person who devalued property is the one who wrote that letter. Sorry don't want to live next to a red neck ignorant fu$k," one commenter said.

"Your mural is beautiful with character and creativity. Tell your six-year-old to feel bad for the person who wrote that letter as most likely they are sad and miserable, and can’t see positivity and happiness if it hit them in the face!" another wrote.

And, more than one called for other neighbours to hop on the garage-painting train and add custom murals of their own to beautify the neighbourhood — which is exactly what a team of artists are now hoping to help do, led by the hand that created the original mural in the first place.

"Moved by the online outpouring of support for the South Etobicoke family, a group of local artists are organizing a street-level demonstration of love!," Bochenska wrote in the same community group on Saturday of the new campaign, called Neighbourhood Love.

"We are volunteering our professional skills to visibly express the positive, diverse and inclusive spirit of the South Etobicoke Community. It is our hope that by coming together in a public act of love we can support a sense of empowerment and connection for everyone living in the area."

South Etobicoke residents, especially those who live in close proximity to Shah near Royal York and the Queensway, are being encouraged to sign up for a professionally painted, family-friendly mural via Google form if they are a homeowner with a front door and garage door, or are renting and have the permission of their landlord.

Murals will be painted by one of a number of artists over Oct. 3 and 4.

The service is pro bono, but anyone interested is welcome to donate to cover supplies and artists' time. There is also a poster promoting the cause that citizens can print off and hang up to show their support and, as Bochenska writes, "let everyone know that hateful attacks will not go unanswered in our city — let's make our love heard!"


by Becky Robertson via blogTO

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