UPDATE: Wolf Hills Wolves Returned

UPDATE: Wolf Hills Wolves Returned

By Debra McCown/Bristol Herald Courier

Eugene the Wolf, designed by the Barter Arts Department and sponsored by Barter Theatre, seems to look out over Main Street in Abingdon, Va., on Saturday after being placed with 26 other statues throughout the town. On Monday, Eugene and the blue wolf named Abby, were missing, victims of apparent theft.

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UPDATE 1:53 p.m. June 24: The two missing wolves were returned to the Library sometime last night.  Library personnel called the police this morning and reported their return.  They have been moved to town hall and will remain there until they are returned to their proper places. They should be back on the streets by this weekend.

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ABINGDON, Va. – Two days after 27 painted wolf statues were placed around town, two of them were missing Monday.

There are no suspects, but town police and local officials say they will watch for any tampering with the remaining statues.

“I think people are pretty upset,” said Courtney Bledsoe, spokeswoman for Barter Theatre, whose wolf disappeared Sunday night. The second statue went missing from outside a downtown business.

“Over the weekend, people were thrilled walking up and down taking pictures and talking about it,” she said of the statues. “People were excited about it and the fact that we’re planning to make it an annual thing and that they can buy the wolves at the end.”

The colorful statues, placed Saturday, were each painted by a local artist and will decorate the town until October, when they will be auctioned off to benefit Advance Abingdon, the town’s Main Street organization.

Sporting flags, eagles, butterflies, tuxedos and even polka dots, each statue had a theme and a name, from Hollywolf Incognito to Earth, Wind and Flowers.

The wolf sponsors paid $500 or $300, depending on the size of the statute, and artists put hours of work into each one. Wolves were chosen for the project because the Abingdon area was once called Wolf Hills.

“Some number of people [who stole the statues] have managed to spoil what’s probably one of the greatest things that’s happened in Abingdon in a long time,” said Gary Kimbrell, president of Advance Abingdon and the man behind the statues.

Kimbrell advises those who have the statues to pull them inside at night if possible. He said if the thieves return the statues, they won’t be charged; Abingdon just wants its wolves back.

“If they’ll bring them back and put them at Town Hall, put them back where they were, we’ll let them go,” he said. “Something that should be a great day for Abingdon has ended up being a sad day because of what they’ve done.”

Kimbrell said the lightweight platforms – Styrofoam coated in concrete – that make the statues easy to move should not be blamed for the theft. But the organization will find a better way to secure them _ and fast.

“I put them on a Styrofoam pad, that’s the least most important thing; that shouldn’t make a difference. It’s about a group of people maliciously stole from the town of Abingdon,” Kimbrell said.

The plan is for the wolves to be auctioned Oct. 23 at a gala on the Barter Green, a Friday night event called “Who’s Afraid of Virginia’s Wolves?”

Meanwhile, in a town striving to market itself as a tourism destination for the arts, Bledsoe’s message to the thieves is simple – bring back the wolves.

“Please just consider the work that went into these and the artists’ time and effort and return them, and don’t do this again,” she said.

Allen Hay, a patrol officer for the Abingdon Police Department, said the theft is grand larceny, a felony that carries a penalty of jail time plus a fine.

He said the statues were taken after 10 p.m. Sunday and the thefts were reported Monday morning.

“They’re useless to anyone who would steal them because someone will tell on them,” Hay said. “That [a wolf statue] isn’t something you see around every day.”

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Flag Comment Posted by majork on June 24, 2009 at 2:09 pm

For those who have commented and those who just read about this.  I am the project manager for the wolves and would like to thank you.  We will collect the wolves from town hall this afternoon and get them ready to go back on Main Street by this weekend.  I visited with the two wolves that were taken and they are shaken up but in good spirits and are awaiting the opportunity to show the town how good they are.

Flag Comment Posted by quilter on June 23, 2009 at 9:22 pm

I am shocked, dismayed and angry at the recent theft of our public art display.  It was such a delight to drive down Main Street on Sunday and take in all the enchanting and beautiful wolves and pups gracing our street.  This evening it is depressing.  Hopefully these individuals will be found and we can get our Main Street back.

Flag Comment Posted by Abingdon on June 23, 2009 at 8:25 am

The wolves are a wonderful addition to our town, I personally would love to see them as a permanent fixture.  But apparently we have a few morons running around that thinks it is funny to steal them.  Well, we’ll be the one laughing when you get hauled in to the jail!!!

Flag Comment Posted by Annie Nonimus on June 23, 2009 at 8:08 am

Uh, you knew it was gonna happen.  Check with the Town of Blacksburg…..They had several artistic “Hokie Bird” statues placed throughout the area and many of them were stolen by pranksters.

Flag Comment Posted by Sassy1 on June 23, 2009 at 7:43 am

How incredibly sad to open my computer and read about this just a day after reading about them being placed in Abingdon…I was anxious to get to Abingdon and take a picture or two of them, they are beautiful and I think the entire idea is a great one. I hope the person/persons that stole these bring them back in the same shape they were taken, it’s just like the people that steal flowers from graves, they just have not been raised right or learned respect.

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