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Wednesday, 9th December 2009 Change Date

Ship comes in for Leith Sailors statue

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Published Date: 18 March 2008
THEY were meant to reflect a sense of civic pride in Leith's seafaring heritage.
But within months of being installed, the three Cavorting Sailors statues became targets for vandals – with one of them even being uprooted and stolen.


Now the artist behind the life-sized monuments has launched a bid to see the remaining two restored.

Local artist Shaeron Averbuch spent two years designing and creating the statues, but it took just four months for them to be hit by vandals.

A concrete whisky bottle belonging to one of the sailors was ripped off soon after the installation, while other limbs have been taken from the characters.

Ms Averbuch had wanted to paint blood-coloured paint over the statues to reflect their wounds, but that idea was rejected in 2004.

Graffiti has also been daubed across the sailors over the past few years.

Ms Averbuch, who installed the statues beside Leith Library in 2003, said: "Of course you expect any kind of public art to sustain some vandalism over time, but not this much and not so soon.

"I had hoped in the past that they could be lit up, because that would prevent them being targeted, but that has not happened."

Ms Averbuch says she is determined to involve the community and local children as much as possible in the campaign.

"I've got a whole load of ideas for what could be done with the sailors – anything from staging a live art event around the sailors to having them digitally projected on to a building," she said.

"Even a humorous play to document their own demise would be good."

To aid the restoration bid, a grant application of £5000 has been made to the Leith Neighbourhood Partnership, which is expected to be favourably received.

That money, with the backing of Leith Harbour and Newhaven Community Council, could help fund an event such as a community film involving children, to mark the restoration.

A spokesman for Leith Harbour and Newhaven Community Council said the statues were hugely popular locally.

He said: "We have been asked to support this project and we do. Local people really value them and they have been well received since they were introduced by the community. Art in the public realm is extremely important, and so too is it for us to remember our maritime heritage."





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  • Last Updated: 18 March 2008 3:30 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Youth crime
 
1

Buggalugs,

On Ma Uppers 18/03/2008 12:13:18
Surely the Neighbourhood Partnership have something better to spend public money on? The sailors were put there with no public involvement in the first place - I would contest that they have ever been "much loved"....and in my opinion, they are not even very good works of art! This Shaeron Averbuch is just yet another example of arty meedja types trying to get their hands on public money by associating themselves with the people of Leith. What is the Community Council thinking!!! They would be better to back a bid for 5 grand of OUR money to be spent on something useful, like holiday playschemes for kids and activities for teenagers or provision for the elderly than someone's inflated sense of themself as a "public artist". But given that the community Council sit on the board that makes the decision about who gets the money, I suppose it's another fait accomplis. What a sorry excuse for "democracy" this neighbourhood planning is when public money can be thrown down the drain like this.
2

Iain fae Elgin,

18/03/2008 12:48:09
"Ms Averbuch says she is determined to involve the community and local children as much as possible in the campaign"

Sounds like they already are...
3

PaulB,

Edinburgh 18/03/2008 13:24:55
Typical - people try and improve and area then neds destroy it. We are all now far too soft on these little gits - give them a taste of their own medicine for a change - let the law-abiding majority have some peace and quiet for once!
4

Teofilio Cubillas,

18/03/2008 15:12:30
Instead of spending public money on art, akin to casting casting pearls before swine in this neck of the woods, why not instead invest in a decent public libary? Surely that would be appreciated by the locals? Maybe not.
5

Road Raga,

EDINBURGH 18/03/2008 16:56:05
The arty world always get £££££ of OUR taxes for their hairbrained schemes. If she wants a nice statue, then pay for it yourself dear. And mind the ground rent !
6

IanB,

Edinburgh 18/03/2008 22:24:25
Am sick of all this stuff about art being a waste of money. We need a bit of everything to make Leith the great place it could be. Besides, if it gets given in benefits, it just buys fagz-n-booze, if it gets given to the community, people wreck it anyway, if it gets given to local groups it's a drop in the ocean.

And a bit of imagination goes a long way. If you can do better art, then get off ya bum and make it.
7

For Scotlands Future,

Vote for the SNP 27/12/2008 12:09:48
You know that Leith Links was the place that the rules of Golf were first formalised - but there is no commemorative plaque. I know, that that alone would bring thousands of Gowfers just to get their photo's taken beside it - before they were mugged.
8

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 28/12/2008 03:14:56
EVERYTHING.HAS.TO.BE.DESTROYED.EDINBURGH.MOTTO

 

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