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Shell ditched as sponsor of Wildlife Photographer Exhibition due to protest

David Rose | 29.01.2008 14:41 | Climate Camp 2007 | Climate Chaos

Shell's two year tenure as sponsor of the Natural History Museum's ¡Wildlife Photographer of the Year¢ exhibition has come to an end. A determined, creative two year national campaign, coordinated in part by the direct action group Rising Tide and its Art Not Oil (1) campaign, helped to force the NHM to ditch Shell. In Bristol, as well as the local Rising Tide group, People and Plane and FoEt were also heavily involved in the protests



SHELL DITCHED AS SPONSOR OF WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHER EXHIBITION IN FACE OF WIDESPREAD PROTEST

Shell's two year tenure as sponsor of the Natural History Museum's ¡Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition has come to an end. A determined, creative two year national campaign, coordinated in part by the direct action group Rising Tide and its Art Not Oil (1) campaign, helped to force the NHM to ditch Shell. In Bristol, People and Planet were also heavily involved in the protests

Using a combination of creative direct action (2) and a ¡Shell's Wild Lie exhibition (3), Rising Tide has been pressurising the Museum and partner BBC Wildlife magazine to acknowledge that one of the world¢s largest oil companies is not a good sponsor for an exhibition that has become a powerful testament to the beauty, diversity and fragility of the natural world.(4)

This campaign, and the significant public pressure it mobilised, has now paid off.

In Bristol, several protests took place. This includeda polar bear die-in at the museum and a visit to BBC Wildlife Magazine offices.

Mr P.Bear of Bristol Rising Tide: said "The people of Bristol should be proud that they have helped stop this particluarly noxious piece of greenwash from happening.

London Rising Tide's Sam Chase said: ¡We are delighted that the Natural History Museum has seen sense and bid farewell to Shell in what must rank as the most absurd and appalling sponsorship deal ever seen. Now it's time for the Museum to turn down cash from climate-destroying companies like BP, BA and Shell (5), and for cultural institutions across London and the UK to do the same.

¡The oil industry is destroying our future, as well as the lives and of countless living beings right now. For that reason, and because this victory has shown what climatically conscious grassroots art can achieve, we will be keeping up the pressure with our Art Not Oil campaign.

[Ends]

Contact:  info@artnotoil.org.uk, 07708 794 665

Notes to editors:

1) Now in its fifth year, Art Not Oil stands for ¡creativity, climate justice and an end to oil industry sponsorship of arts and culture¢. It has acted as a beacon for artists worldwide who are committed to using their creativity positively, and is a hub for protest against the oil industry greenwashing its image by appropriating UK cultural institutions. Its 2008 online gallery is now open for submissions: www.artnotoil.org,uk

2) Over the past year protests have taken place at (print quality copies of the photos below are available on request):
Natural History Museum, October 2007:  http://risingtide.org.uk/node/231 and January 2008:  http://www.planestupid.com/?q=content/march-penguins-climate-activists-protest-british-airways-ice-rink
BBC Wildlife Magazine HQ, Bristol, December 2007:  http://bristol.indymedia.org/newswire.php?story_id=27160
Bristol Museum, December 2007:  http://onthelevelblog.wordpress.com/2007/12/16/direct-action-in-bristol-reveals-shells-greenwash/
Tate Britain, January 2008:  http://www.londonrisingtide.org.uk/node/409

3) The ¡Shell¢s Wild Lie¢ exhibition will tour the UK and Europe through 2008 and beyond.  http://www.artnotoil.org.uk/gallery/v/Shell/

4) 'Shell: the evidence':  http://www.artnotoil.org.uk//content/view/23/2/

5) Both Shell and BP are Corporate Members of the NHM, donating £25,000 or more per year. BA gives £10,000 per year. Current Prime Minister-appointed NHM Trustees include Louise Charlton of Brunswick Group, the public relations firm contracted in 2004 by Shell to carry out PR damage limitation in the wake of its reserves-reporting scandal, and Sir William Castell, non-executive director of BP. Conflicts of interest like these are rife right across the UK¢s leading cultural institution.

6) Friends of the Earth has also been running a campaign against the Shell deal:
 http://www.foe.co.uk/campaigns/corporates/press_for_change/wildlife_photographer/index.html

David Rose
- e-mail: daviddoesbristol@googlemail.com

Comments

Display the following 11 comments

  1. Blowing own trumpet department — Bix
  2. But it's not renewed, is it? — xiB
  3. No problem — Bix
  4. Great to hear — Great work
  5. In the real world — Realism check
  6. Victory! — (A) Sab x
  7. Shell info — don't trust Shell
  8. world oil reserves — oil info
  9. Shell stuff — rik
  10. oi RIk — CH
  11. For CG re Thatcher — rik