Written by 11:30 pm Opinions • 10 Comments

Whitewashing History

The formerly colorful, graffitti-adorned walls of the KB-Larrabee tunnel have been coated in a thin layer of white paint. Evidence of the art is still peeking through, as well as on the floor and ceiling. Photo by Amy DeGenaro.

The celebrated graffiti KB-Larrabee tunnel is no more. While the tunnel itself still stands, the spirit that made it such a unique and cool place has been sucked out; it is a shell of its former self, a whitewashed, soulless hallway and nothing else.

When I found out the years of intricate graffiti that decorated the otherwise grim walls were smeared over with a coat of ugly white paint, rage coursed through my veins. How could someone do that without informing a single person about it? Did it occur to those whitewashing the tunnel that they were systematically destroying a piece of Connecticut College history? Would they even care if students spoke out against whitewashing the tunnel?

I lived in KB my freshman and junior years. Aside from having Coffee Grounds on the first floor and being conveniently located across from Cro and a Frisbee throw away from Harris, the KB-Larrabee Tunnel was one of the coolest things about the dorm. It was a mysterious space, a sort of punk time capsule and art gallery all at once.

While I never spray-painted anything down there myself, I always admired the quirky stencils, the more intricate pieces and everything in between (my personal favorite was the stencil of Kermit the Frog holding a pistol in his hand). The tunnel was such an outlier from the rest of campus: an anarchic display of student expression with not a hint of administrative input. It was a student-run space in every sense of the word.

Who would have the audacity to reverse-Jackson Pollack this space, as if it would be perfectly fine to simply do away with the artwork of the tunnel and transform it into a plain white passage with no hint of personality? I’ve been hearing scores of rumors swishing around campus about who the culprits might be. The administration is obviously the first to come to mind; in one swift motion, without telling a soul, they bum-rushed the tunnel and whitewashed it shoddily in an effort to suppress freedom of expression. Maybe there is some building code that requires connecting corridors to be as boring as humanly possible. Maybe yet another coffee shop is being built down there.

But it doesn’t add up. The whitewash job was so poorly done that it couldn’t have been the administration that spearheaded this— anyone who has seen their response to bathroom graffiti knows that they are thorough as can be when they want to eliminate doodles. Although I would have secretly loved this to be the answer (I actually had another article written lambasting the administration), it doesn’t seem to be the right one. I feel that the school would have been more transparent about the situation and at least given a heads up via email saying, “Don’t walk down there, we’re making this school even whiter on November 11” or detailing a list of reasons why they must whitewash the tunnel in order to comply with something or another.

I’m leaning more toward the theory that it was students, sadly enough. If this is the case, I am seriously concerned for this college. This action baffles me and my peers, and only proves more to us that this school is slowly losing its originality and becoming a pretty uninspired place all together. If you have to prove something by destroying somebody else’s artwork, at least amputate a limb off of the eyesore crouching outside of Blaustein.

But it doesn’t matter who committed the act; it’s been done and cannot be undone. What’s important is that the KB-Larrabee tunnel was one of the few things that made Conn feel like it wasn’t just an L.L. Bean catalogue shoot in New London, and now it’s tainted permanently. Its location and aesthetic said, “There is an underground at this place! Express yourself and let your mind wander with a can of spray-paint and go fucking nuts!” It represented no-holds-barred experimentation and freedom, what should be two cornerstones of a place that considers itself a distinguished liberal arts college. It was diverse, colorful, fun and inspirational. Now it’s a whitewashed wall— a perfect metaphor for what is happening to Connecticut College.

I will hug and protect the graffiti room in Abbey House tighter than ever now that I know that citadels for expression are under fire on this campus. I will mourn the loss of the years of artwork that were destroyed with inconsiderate brush strokes of white paint. I can only hope that artists will descend down to the tunnel and repopulate the walls with eye-catching graffiti and gun-toting Kermits soon enough. •

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