Timothy Martin—an architect based mostly in North Carolina and one among two local weather protesters who splashed paint on the show case and base of Edgar Degas’s La petite danseuse de quatorze ans (Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, 1880) on the Nationwide Gallery of Artwork (NGA) in Washington, DC, in 2023—has been sentenced to 18 months in jail. His sentencing, earlier this week, got here after a federal jury discovered him responsible of conspiracy to commit an offense in opposition to the US and damage to an NGA exhibit in April.
The choose in Martin’s case gave him credit score for time already served, stating he needs to be launched in a 12 months, in line with The Guardian. He was ordered to pay $4,250, full 150 hours of group service (20 of which should be spent cleansing graffiti) and serve two years’ probation. Prosecutors had sought a jail sentence of 5 years.
On 27 April 2023, Martin and one other affiliate of the environmental activism group Declare Emergency, Joanna Smith, smeared purple and black paint on the case that holds the Degas sculpture and its base. Although their motion didn’t have an effect on the sculpture itself, it brought on $4,000 in injury, in line with the NGA, and required the Degas to be taken off show for ten days. Smith beforehand pleaded responsible to “inflicting damage” to the exhibit and has served a 60-day jail time period; she was additionally sentenced to 24 months of supervised launch and ordered to pay greater than $7,000 in restitution and fines.
“After I was requested to do that motion, it was a no brainer,” Martin advised Local weather Rights Worldwide earlier this 12 months. “I come from an artwork background and the little dancer is so, so stunning and he or she represents the kids of the world which might be underneath main menace due to the local weather emergency. So I couldn’t resist the chance to show her stunning, weak, symbolic self right into a message [against] fossil gas.”
Martin’s lawyer submitted character-witness letters to the courtroom, together with one from a fellow North Carolina-based architect, Frank Harmon, who in line with The Raleigh Information & Observer wrote that Martin “was, and is, a helper, not a destroyer”. Harmon added: “Whereas he stays in jail, awaiting sentencing, he has continued to assist others. As an artist in addition to an architect, he sketches portraits on the request of fellow inmates to ship to their households.”
The jury’s responsible verdict in Martin’s case got here shortly after US president Donald Trump signed an government order clamping down on protests and acts of alleged vandalism in Washington, DC. Within the order on 28 March, Trump urged federal and district officers to make the US capital “protected and exquisite”, promising to “deploy a extra strong federal law-enforcement presence” in combating “graffiti and different vandalism, unpermitted disturbances and demonstrations”.







