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Rainbow crosswalk more than colourful art, says artist

The Lake Country community has had discussions online about a rainbow crosswalk
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Student Fiona Scholl paints a rainbow sidewalk in 2015 as part of an art project to celebrate diversity. - Credit: Contributed

The rainbow crosswalk is more than a colourful art piece, it’s a statement from a municipality, says one Lake Country artist.

ā€œI think when you see a rainbow crosswalk in a community it’s a visual cue to you as a visitor or member of the community that as a community, the town or municipality has made a statement by putting down a crosswalk and the statement is they hold in high values human rights protections, tolerance and diversity,ā€ said Lake Country Art Gallery curator Wanda Lock. ā€œIt’s saying we as a community holds these values.ā€

The role of the artist is to observe society and reflect back on it and its issues, said Lock.

A few years ago rainbow crosswalks came into the spotlight after Āé¶¹AV got its painted crosswalks in its downtown; Lock then spearheaded the movement to allow students to paint their own rainbow sidewalk in Lake Country. It wasn’t permanent.

Recently a rainbow crosswalk in Lake Country had made its way back to online discussions after a Facebook post was made about the City of Merritt’s decision to not paint a crosswalk.

The discussions range from support of a crosswalk to saying it’s a waste of tax dollars.

Lock said she was disturbed by some of the comments made, ā€œsome feel potholes are more important than tolerance, diversity and human rights.ā€

The Lake Country Art Gallery currently has a fitting exhibition called ā€˜Who Are We?’ from local artists who aim to create a narrative on defining the Lake Country community.

ā€œThe reason why I wanted to do the community show was I attended a lot of town hall meetings when we were doing the Official Community Plan last year and the conversations were great but we never actually defined what a community was,ā€ said Lock.

ā€œThere was lots of ā€˜I and me’ conversations instead of ā€˜us and we’ conversations.ā€ She asked artists what they thought makes a community and was answered with diversity, human rights and equality.

According to Mayor James Baker, the district had looked into a rainbow crosswalk near Municipal Hall, but it’s not a priority.

ā€œI had read that one about the Merritt council, that surprised me. Their reason was that they thought they’d have to put in colourful sidewalks for every community (organization),ā€ he chuckled.

ā€œIt hasn’t gone away, it just hasn’t been on top of our engineering priority.ā€

Greg Buchholz, director of infrastructure services with the district, said there is no plan for a crosswalk anytime soon, and the initiative would have to come from the community and council.

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carli.berry@kelownacapnews.com

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