Tuesday 18 September 2018

When Is Theft Not A Theft?

when it is a “provocative outcome”,


 that is the view of English artist Anna Brownsted, who left 100,000 pennies in an abandoned public fountain in Cambridge, over the weekend, in a bid to explore human nature, the coins worth £1,000 were placed in the fountain at Quayside, in Cambridge, at 8 am on Saturday, 

so guess the result even though there were clear signs saying the area was under CCTV coverage? 

 the money was all stolen in just one day, by 9 am on Sunday, over 99% of the coins had been removed from the fountain, only £1.66 worth of pennies were left, but organizers didn’t consider it theft, but a “provocative outcome”, “Pence Sterling was an invitation to respond, a provocation,” artist Anna Brownsted said, “It was an experiment in the dynamics of human behavior and our complex reactions to heightened situations.”

 the coins weighed a total of 356 kilograms, and with copper being relatively valuable, it’s not that hard to understand why some people couldn’t help themselves,

the money used for this artistic social experiment was from an Arts Council England lottery grant, which also funded five other artistic installations in Cambridge over the weekend “We do not consider the removal of the money to be a theft as the money was there for people to interact with as they saw fit as part of this art project,” artistic director Daniel Pitt said. “The experiment had a provocative outcome, it opened conversations about human nature and the bystander effect.”

all gone! the money was put in the fountain for people to interact with as they see fit, but Anna Brownsted admitted that she was amazed by how fast all the coins disappeared, She wanted to see if people would use the money to make a wish or use it for themselves, and planned to donate all that was left to a local charity, so I guess that won’t be happening anytime soon, still what a great excuse if you are caught stealing a bicycle, 'I am sorry Mr.Policeman, it was a provocative outcome!


1 comment:

Vic said...

Just read about an Irishman who had an iPad, phone and cash worth 100,000 baht in total stolen from his hotel room while he was asleep.
1. He left the door unlocked!
2. He left all that lying around?
Apparently the police caught the thief because he was known to them. He booked into one of the other rooms in the hotel and prowled around looking for unlocked doors. They recovered the phone and iPad but the thief had, according to them, blown all the cash on "Ya ba and gambling."
Sometimes all the Provocation some people need is a door!