• Banksy Funds a Boat to Rescue Refugees at Sea-and Soon It Finds Itself

    From Open Culture@1:229/2 to All on Monday, August 31, 2020 17:46:53
    From: open.culture@bbs.alt119.net

    "Like most people who make it in the art world, I bought a yacht to cruise the Med," Banksy wrote on Instagram when introducing the Louise Michel, a vessel tasked with a somewhat different mission than an arriviste party boat: picking up refugees from
    countries like Libya and Turkey lost at sea. Anyone who's followed Banksy's art
    career knows he possesses a well-developed instinct for catching and keeping public attention, and it has hardly deserted him in this venture. Why sponsor a
    refugee rescue
    boat, after all, when you can sponsor a bright pink feminist refugee rescue boat, emblazoned with a piece of original art?

    Despite having been named for the 19th-century feminist anarchist Louise Michel, the motor yacht's operations encompass an even wider variety of causes:
    The Guardian's Lorenzo Tondo and Maurice Stierl quote "Lea Reisner, a nurse and
    head of mission for
    the first rescue operation," saying that the project is also "meant to bring together a variety of struggles for social justice, including for women's and LGBTIQ rights, racial equality, migrants' rights, environmentalism and animal rights." This
    multidirectional activism would seem to suit the artistic sensibility of Banksy, whose work strikes out in as many critical directions as both his admirers and detractors can interpret.

    The Louise Michel, as Tondo and Stierl reported last Thursday, "set off in secrecy on 18 August from the Spanish seaport of Burriana, near Valencia, and is now in the central Mediterranean where on Thursday it rescued 89 people in distress, including 14
    women and four children." After picking up the first group of refugees, reports
    the Washington Post's Miriam Berger, "it then encountered a ship traveling from North Africa to Europe with 130 people aboard and some bodies of people who had died during
    the journey," and as a result "quickly became overcrowded and could not properly steer, its Twitter posts said." All this happened "at sea around 55 miles southeast of Lampedusa, an Italian island off the North African coast that has become a migration
    transit point."

    Hours later two other vessels, one operated by the Italian coast guard and one by a German nongovernmental organization, came to take on passengers. Though hardly smooth sailing, the Louise Michel's first rescue mission proceeded more favorably than some:
    "A vessel named the Talia, which rescued 52 people almost two months ago, wasn't allowed into the port for 5 days," says Dazed. "Now, a boat named the Etienne is in the longest record stand-off between authorities and rescuers ever, having spent three
    weeks at sea being denied disembarkation in Malta." Banksy publicized the Louise Michel, which he sponsors without involvement in its operations, only after it had set sail. But for anyone with an interest in showing the world the
    dire circumstances of
    refugees today, the highly visible boat's highly visible difficulties certainly
    aren't bad publicity.

    Related Content:

    Banksy Strikes Again in Venice

    Banksy Strikes Again in London & Urges Everyone to Wear Masks

    Banksy Debuts His COVID-19 Art Project: Good to See That He Has TP at Home

    Watch Dismaland - The Official Unofficial Film, A Cinematic Journey Through Banksy's Apocalyptic Theme Park

    Banksy Shreds His $1.4 Million Painting at Auction, Taking a Tradition of Artists Destroying Art to New Heights

    Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the book The Stateless City: a Walk through
    21st-Century Los Angeles and the video series The City in Cinema. Follow him on Twitter at @
    colinmarshall, on Facebook, or on Instagram.

    Banksy Funds a Boat to Rescue Refugees at Sea-and Soon It Finds Itself in Distress in the Mediterranean is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don't miss our big collections of Free
    Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.

    http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OpenCulture/~3/6F82gYuVkvc/banksy-funds-a-boat-to-rescue-refugees-at-sea.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)