A Statement Against the Rewriting of Value
This women’s tee confronts pigeon control as a system sustained not by necessity, but by perception, convenience, and a narrative deliberately rewritten. It exposes how a living being once recognised, trusted, and relied upon has been reduced to something dismissed, degraded, and targeted for removal.
Pigeons were not always seen this way. They carried messages through war zones where no other method could succeed, navigating across vast distances under conditions of extreme danger. Individuals such as Cher Ami and G.I. Joe saved human lives, delivering critical communications under fire. Some were injured in service. Some were awarded medals.
Their role, however, was not chosen.
It was imposed.
They were placed into human conflict and used for human purposes, their abilities exploited in environments they could not understand or escape. This history does not justify their value. It exposes how it has been assigned, used, and later withdrawn.
The pigeon has not changed.
The narrative has.
Today, they are labelled vermin. Reduced to “rats with wings.” A phrase repeated until it replaces recognition with contempt. Their intelligence, memory, navigation, and social bonds are dismissed. Their ability to adapt to human environments, not as intrusion but as survival, is recast as nuisance.
This shift permits what follows.
Spikes deny them rest. Nets entangle and trap. Poisons cause prolonged internal suffering and slow deaths out of sight. Birds ingest toxins and return to nests where others are affected. Shooting and culling are justified through the language of control, cleanliness, and urban management.
These actions are not responses to threat. They are responses to perception.
Pigeons live within human environments because those environments have replaced their natural habitats. Buildings become cliffs. Cities become landscapes. Food waste becomes resource. Their presence reflects adaptation, not invasion.
Yet their existence is treated as contamination.
This system depends on one condition. That the pigeon is no longer seen as an individual life, but as a category to be removed.
The Image
The artwork captures a quiet moment that exposes this contradiction. A pigeon stands in the foreground, fully present, detailed, and alive, positioned upon a stone structure within a human-built environment. Behind it, a soldier stands elevated in monument form, a figure preserved, honoured, and remembered.
The composition is deliberate.
The pigeon is real, immediate, and living.
The soldier is fixed, historical, and revered.
Both share the same space, yet only one is granted dignity.
The soft lighting and muted urban background create a sense of stillness, allowing the viewer to focus on the subject without distraction. The image removes spectacle entirely. It does not dramatise. It reveals.
It functions as witness, placing past recognition and present dismissal side by side.
The Message
“From war hero to vermin. Only the narrative has changed.”
This statement exposes how easily value can be reassigned. It challenges the idea that worth is determined by usefulness, convenience, or public perception. It reveals that the same being once used, relied upon, and later discarded can be redefined as disposable without any change in its nature.
The pigeon is not the contradiction.
The narrative is.
When life is reframed as nuisance, harm becomes acceptable. When history is forgotten, empathy disappears.
Each piece stands as A Declaration of Freedom for All Beings, rejecting the rewriting of value that turns life into something disposable. It refuses the language that permits harm and affirms that worth is inherent, not assigned, and cannot be rewritten.
Colour Significance
Colour is used to reinforce the contrast between recognition and dismissal.
The pigeon’s natural tones of grey, iridescent green, and violet reflect individuality and life, subtle but unmistakable, often overlooked within urban environments. These colours shift with light, a reminder of complexity beneath what is routinely dismissed as uniform or insignificant.
The warm gold and amber tones of the surrounding environment evoke memory, history, and preservation. They mirror the way certain lives are remembered, honoured, and protected over time.
In contrast, the softened background and muted architectural greys reflect the modern urban setting where pigeons now exist, a space that tolerates their presence while simultaneously rejecting their value.
Together, these colours create tension between past and present, recognition and dismissal, memory and neglect.
Wear Your Values
This is a refusal to accept perception as justification.
A stand against the rewriting of value to permit harm.
A declaration that survival is not a crime and existence is not a nuisance.
Wear your values in defence of recognition over dismissal, truth over narrative, and the right of all beings to exist without being reduced to something disposable.
✦ ✦ ✦