A Toronto artist, who says she has been blacklisted by the federal government, is displaying posters along Bank Street aimed at the government’s climate change policies.
Franke James says the Canadian government interfered with her European art tour because she criticizes their environmental policies.
Nektarina, a Croatian non-governmental organization specializing in environmental education, planned to exhibit What Can One Person Do? in 20 European cities later this year.
James says the tour fell apart this summer after government officials discouraged the show’s producer from participating.
An official statement on Nektarina’s web site alleges the Canadian government tried to interfere with the tour.
“When Nektarina decided to present Franke’s artwork . . . we felt confident of the support of Canada – Franke’s homeland. Regrettably, the Canadian Government has since declined support for the project, verbally explaining that ‘She (Franke James) speaks against the Canadian Government,’ ” says the statement.
Nektarina also stated that they “felt patronized and even intimidated, as a small NGO trying to reach an understanding with a powerful state.”
James says the climate change office at the foreign affairs department also interfered with Nektarina’s request for funding.
In July, Jean-François Lacelle, a foreign affairs spokesperson, told the Toronto Star “funding was never withdrawn, nor was it guaranteed.”
But James has obtained emails through access to information legislation which reveal that $5,000 in funding had been internally allocated for the tour.
On April 29, Sylvie Gauvin, a strategist for the Foreign Affairs Department, sent an email to Vlatka Ljubenko, a public affairs officer at the Canadian Embassy in Croatia, which confirms the allocation.
“(The Foreign Affairs Department of Strategy and Services) is able to give $5,000 on our Advocacy Funds for (James’ tour),” she wrote.
On May 2, Jeremy Wallace, the deputy director of the Climate Change Division at foreign affairs, sent an email to Gauvin asking for further discussions about the project.
The email also asked, “Is it too late to pull it back?”
Wallace sent another email to Gauvin on May 4 where he recommended no longer supporting James’s tour because of “concerns that the funding . . . would run counter to Canada’s interest more broadly.”
In response to these emails, Claude Rochon, a foreign affairs spokesperson, reiterated in an email that “funding was never withdrawn, nor was it guaranteed.”
James says that the loss of $5,000 did not seriously affect the show, which had a budget of hundreds of thousands of dollars, but it proved something that government officials were denying in the media.
“The show was killed because they were bad-mouthing me to the NGO,” says James.
In mid-July, the show’s main corporate sponsor also withdrew its financial support.
James raised $4,226 online to bring five posters based on art from that tour to Ottawa.
She also designed a new piece calling on Prime Minister Stephen Harper to stop “blacklisting” environmental voices.
“I thought the most fun thing to do was actually mount this crowd-funded art show on the streets of Ottawa as close to the Parliament Buildings as I could get,” says James.
James says the current government has a tendency to silence dissenting voices.
Graham Saul, executive director of the Climate Action Network, an environmental advocacy group based in Ottawa, says the Conservative government is “vindictive and mean spirited” when facing public debate about its policies.
“Previous governments have always had thin skins but also acknowledged and understood the value of meaningful public debate,” he says.
James says the government claimed “that my message was not in sync with the message they wanted to promote about the tar sands.”
Jame's previous visual essay entitled Dear Prime Minister, criticizes the government’s development of the Alberta oil sands.
“What underlies this is that right now, in the European Union, they are deciding whether or not to slap a dirty oil label on tar sands oil,” says James.
“And the Canadian government is . . . actively trying to make sure that doesn’t happen.”
James’ posters will be in Ottawa until Nov. 27.