Campbellford artist’s cross and noose protest raises residents’ ire
Artist Brent Townsend erected a 5-metre high cross topped with a noose on his front lawn in Campbellford, Ont., to protest what he describes as "mistreatment" by the municipal government.
SUPPLIED PHOTOA Campbellford artist celebrated for his design of the toonie has drawn the ire of his community after he erected a 5-metre cross on his lawn and hung a noose from the top.
Brent Townsend knows the display is especially controversial in a town that gained notoriety last Halloween when a Ku Klux Klan getup won first place in a costume contest.
But the 48-year-old wildlife artist, who created the cross out of old barn beams, said it’s his last resort in a four-year battle with the municipality over the planned construction of a bridge. His home is slated for demolition.
“I’m not trying to stoke racial fires . . . It’s a symbol of mistreatment,” Townsend told the Star on Saturday. “It’s not a hate crime. If anything it’s a hate crime against me. I’ve been a victim.”
Campbellford resident Troy Varty said it was “bad enough” when one man dressed in a white cloak and draped in the Confederate flag led another in blackface through a party at the Legion with a noose last Halloween. The duo won first place in the costume contest.
The combination of the noose and the cross is especially offensive so close to Easter, Varty said.
“A noose represents hatred — a symbol of death through intimidation, fear, control and degradation of the heart and the soul,” Varty said. “Everyone who I have talked about it to is very upset and all say the same thing — that, yes, it should be taken down. There are many churches in the area.”
The controversial display has been up for five days across the street from the Canadian Tire where Renee Fairman works.
“With everything that has happened in our town at Halloween and the controversy, to do something like this is ridiculous,” Fairman said. “I’m not keen on it.”
The Ontario Provincial Police have received complaints “from neighbours that are upset” but the matter has been referred to the Campbellford bylaw department, said Const. Peter Leon. The display of a cross and noose is not a hate crime, he added.
“It’s obviously his property to do as he wishes. There’s no basis for a criminal investigation,” Leon said.
Townsend is originally from Scarborough but has been living in Campbellford, about 180 kilometres northeast of Toronto, since 1996. He was pleased when the town put up an 8-metre metal toonie in a local park to honour his polar bear design.
“I was fine with that. I thought, if the town wants to create a tourist attraction, and want to have a symbol, that’s great,” Townsend said.
Now Townsend has put up his own symbol — one that he hopes will grab the municipal government’s attention.
“Some people might find that image disturbing — I find it disturbing — but the idea is to be thought-provoking,” he said. “It was out of sheer desperation for the way I have been treated that I chose a very edgy subject.”
Officials with the municipality of Trent Hills, which governs Campbellford, could not be reached for comment.
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