Anti-racism
protest signs, murals destined for U.S.
Smithsonian
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[June 15, 2020] By
Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Days into nationwide protests over
the killing of George Floyd, demonstrators began
to fill a tall fence in front of the White House
with posters, flowers, paintings and photos in
honor of black men, women and children who have
lost their lives at the hands of police. |
Placed on the recently renamed
Black Lives Matter Plaza, the tributes have
created a spontaneous memorial that are now
being collected for a more permanent home at the
Smithsonian Institution.
Graffiti artists and mural painters have
designed visuals on the site where many
protesters congregate to begin nearly nightly
demonstrations in Washington.
Memorials have also popped up in New York where
muralists decorated the city's Chelsea
neighborhood, as well as cities around the
world, including Nairobi, Karachi and Berlin.
(https://reut.rs/2YFci5s)
Block after block in Washington, office
buildings and windows of upscale restaurants
that normally cater to lobbyists and business
executives have been sheathed in plywood to
protect against the short-lived outbursts of
arson and vandalism that struck the city's
center earlier this month.
Levi Robinson, one of the many artists who got
the call to design and paint atop the plywood,
said he stumbled onto the idea of making his
depiction of military medics.
"I decided to show black medics who serve in the
military after speaking with some examples who
were on site handing out water began to tell me
their stories," said Robinson of his piece
adorning a boarded-up exterior window of a
restaurant on Black Lives Matter Plaza.
Aaron Bryant, a photography and social protest
historian and curator at the African American
History and Culture Museum, said unlike most of
the protest artwork of the 1960s civil rights
era, which were made by professional artists and
graphic designers, this moment's artwork is
different.
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"Today, people are making signs
by hand and running out of the door. There is
more diversity in the signs you see," said
Bryant, who is leading the team of curators
collecting plywood murals, signs and objects
such as gas canisters that might one day act as
a portal to this moment in history. His museum
is one of several making up the Smithsonian
Institution on the National Mall in Washington.
"It's hard to talk about this moment's artwork
with one common denominator, but what I see is
this idea of humanity and community. People
coming together to make positive, social change,
messages that will last for generation s."
The Washington-based
P.A.I.N.T.S Institute, in partnership with the
Downtown DC Business Improvement District,
organized some 42 artists and volunteers,
including Robinson, to design protestor-inspired
murals on the Black Lives Matter Plaza, an
expansion of similar furnishings in downtown
Washington.
Foot traffic, thinned by a two-month coronavirus
lockdown, can be spotted taking selfies with
some of the roughly 27 murals depicting black
faces wearing masks that read, "Let Us Breath"
and "God is Love."
Once such first-time public mural artist, Jemn
Napper, said she hopes her downtown Washington
pieces ultimately help people realize that "even
though we may have our differences, we can all
play a part to come together and create change."
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson; Editing by Chris
Sanders and Lisa Shumaker)
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