Montreal

NDG's outdoor Alley Cat Gallery defaced by graffiti

An outdoor art gallery in Notre-Dame-de-Grâce has been vandalised with the kind of tagging that has plagued the area for years.

Founder calls act 'discouraging' after more than 2 years without major incidents

The Alley Cat Gallery opened in 2014 with cat-related works donated by friends and neighbours of its founder, John Jordan. (Elysha Enos/CBC)

An outdoor art gallery featuring images of cats in Montreal's Notre-Dame-de-Grâce neighbourhood has been vandalised with the kind of tagging that has plagued the area for years.

About eight of the artworks on display in the Alley Cat Gallery on Sherbrooke Street near Harvard Avenue were vandalized Thursday night with a scribbled signature.

The founder of the gallery, John Jordan, says he didn't expect taggers to go after his artwork.

"It was very discouraging, you know. We took a big risk putting this stuff up," Jordan said.

The borough has tried to crack down on the problem. 

In 2011, the Côte-des-Neiges—Notre-Dame-de-Grâce borough enacted a bylaw to fight the spread of graffiti.

The gallery's cat motif was inspired by neighbourhood cat, Humbert. Humbert enjoys a cult-like following. On the left, his 2015 federal election poster. (Elysha Enos/CBC)

Owners of commercial buildings that are larger than 300 square metres, or residential buildings with more than six units are expected to clean graffiti off their buildings or they could be fined up to $1400.

According to Melissa Proietti from Montreal's Under Pressure Graffiti Festival, outdoor artwork is ripe for tagging.

She says even the large murals on St-Laurent Boulevard fall victim to it.

"Public art is susceptible to this," Proietti said. "Once it's out there, it's not safe."

Jordan hasn't decided if he will clean up the works where the tags can be painted over, or if he will replace them. 

"We're still sort of smarting from the loss of our prints."