Pair sentenced for smearing jam on Victoria statue

Hannah Taylor and Sarah Martin leaving an earlier court hearing. Taylor has close-cropped dark hair and has several piercings in her ears and nose. Martin his long, wavy fair hair and his wearing a black jacket over white topImage source, Spindrift
Image caption,

Hannah Taylor and Sarah Martin had been found guilty to a charge of malicious mischief

  • Published

Two food poverty protesters have been given non-custodial sentences for smearing jam and porridge over a bust of Queen Victoria.

Sarah Martin, 31, and Hannah Taylor, 24, carried out what they described as a demonstration against rising food insecurity at Glasgow's Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum in March.

The pair, activists for campaign group This is Rigged, also spray-painted an offensive word on the plinth of the statue.

Martin and Taylor were found guilty to a charge of malicious mischief following a trial at Glasgow Sheriff Court last month.

Sheriff Simone Sweeney ordered Taylor, of the city's Drygate, to carry out 80 hours of unpaid work at a sentencing hearing.

Martin, of Shawlands, was told to pay £300 compensation to the art gallery.

In a video of the protest played to the trial, Martin is heard to say: "We refuse to be dragged back to the Victorian era."

A This is Rigged image of the Queen Victoria bust after it had been smeared with red jam and porridgeImage source, This is Rigged
Image caption,

The protest group, This is Rigged, shared a video of the bust being smeared

She told the court: "I was forced into taking action and I took no reckless or thoughtless action - I sought to express my rights to protest."

The charity Glasgow Life, which runs the art gallery museum, had to pay about £600 to repair the statue and its plinth which have been fixtures at the museum for more than 30 years.

Related topics