The QR codes, accessed by taking a picture with a smartphone, route to the YWCA’s website with statistics about domestic violence, resources, and supports. Including a link to donate to the organization’s new housing project for women who have experienced abuse.
The interactive use of QR codes elevates the Wall for Women from artwork to a call to action. It wakes the community up to the pervasiveness of domestic violence and seeks donations for women’s housing, asking us to do something about it.
This is an incredibly important effort for women in Vancouver, where housing affordability, homelessness, and gender-based violence are major intersecting issues.
According to the YWCA, one in three women have experienced domestic violence in Canada, and a woman is killed every six days. Every. Six. Days. Let the gravity of that sink in. These are not just numbers. They are mothers, daughters, sisters and friends.
Intimate partner violence has also increased by 20-30% in some parts of the country during the pandemic. Lockdown measures keep women at home with their abusers, making it more difficult for them to leave and access support.
This rise in domestic abuse has been called COVID-19’s shadow pandemic—a fitting name as intimate partner violence often remains invisible despite its prevalence, discussed in hushed whispers if spoken about at all.