Punishment to fit the crime
February 3, 2008
Likely in response to the 15-year-old graffiti artist who was stabbed to death by a neighborhood resident last weekend in Manurewa, New Zealand, the government announced the start of a program designed to crackdown on graffiti. The program called Stop (Stop Tagging Our Place) will include legislation to fund anti-graffiti programs, limit sales of spray paint and increase law enforcement efforts.
One part of the crackdown is an increased use of ‘restorative justice.’ Apparently taggers who are caught would be forced to clean up some of their own work.
“I think some of the most effective punishment is when taggers have to clean up their tags in the full glare of the public,” said Auckland’s Police Minister Annette King.
I’m not sure if it will work, but it is an interesting idea. Maybe taggers would be less inclined to paint on illegal walls if they themselves would have to paint over what I can only assume they consider to be great art work.
As Seen In Puerto Rico
February 3, 2008

Graffiti found in San Juan, Puerto Rico
Photo by Kayla Webley
Museums Turn Blind Eye To Stolen Art
February 3, 2008
A New York Times article suggests that museum curators are so greedy to build their collections that they will accept artifacts even though they might be tainted. One deputy director of collections admitted to an undercover investigator that she was supposed to feign resistance, but eventually accept antiquities, even without proper paperwork.
“Museums are in a sense just turning a blind eye to what everybody knows in their heart of hearts is going on,” said the specialist, Patty Gerstenblith, a professor of law at DePaul University.
“By not thinking about what they buy, they are putting money into an international network of smugglers, looters, thieves and destroyers. As educational institutions, museums have a responsibility to look beyond that particular object” that they may be acquiring.
I could not agree more.
Chicagoan Tapped in Stolen Art Investigation
February 3, 2008
The same day as four Southern California museums were raided, authorities searched the private museum of Barry MacLean, a trustee of the prestigious Art Institute of Chicago. A Los Angeles Times article said:
The affidavit suggests that MacLean built his well-known art collection with substantial help from Robert Olson, an alleged smuggler of illicitly excavated American Indian, Thai and other Asian artifacts.
In a phone interview Monday, Olson confirmed that MacLean was his biggest client, saying the Chicagoan purchased as much as $50,000 to $100,000 in Asian antiquities a year during the eight to 10 years they did business.
Graffiti Artist Allegedly Murdered
February 2, 2008
A 15-year-old boy in New Zealand was stabbed to death while reportedly painting graffiti on a fence in a suburban neighborhood near Auckland. A 50-year-old businessman, who lives near the fence, appeared in court for the murder.
In response to the murder of the tagger the mayor of the town said, “Graffiti is an issue we absolutely want to get on top of.”
Yeah. So is murder.
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A New Zealand newspaper article: Does graffiti cause murder?
Glow-in-the-Dark Graffiti?
February 2, 2008
This gadget blogger obviously doesn’t approve of street artists using glow-in-the-dark for graffiti, but I think it would be rad to see (on a commissioned wall, of course). Apparently when the paint dries in day light it looks like a fine off-white powder maybe this would be a less-offensive form of graffiti?