The effort is headed up by artist Sono Kuwayama,
best known for her installations employing painting, sculpture
and video, who lives in lower Manhattan's Bowery Street
neighborhood, a once dingy area gentrified into a bustling,
upscale section by the opening of galleries and shops.
"It's been so depressing around here, you know, to walk out and
just see all this plywood," she said.
The plywood went up after looters disrupted otherwise peaceful
protests following the May 25 death of George Floyd in
Minneapolis police custody.
Kuwayama said she was looking for a way to contribute in the
best way she could, through her art.
"I just want someone to smile, you know, to walk by and just
smile because it's something that's beautiful and lights up
their ... their soul or their heart," she said.
Kuwayama went around her neighborhood and asked managers of
boarded up stores for permission to paint. She then assembled a
team of local artists, many of them eager to leave their
four-month lockdown confinements and create outside with their
own supplies.
"So, on Monday was the first mural," Kuwayama said. "On Tuesday,
I painted one, and now it's Wednesday, and now I've got a bunch
of people out today, so I'm hoping this momentum can keep
going."
Charlie Hudson, 28, was the first local painter to answer
Kuwayama's call.
"I'm painting a countryside scene, because, I mean, when the
pandemic started, I immediately just I craved space," Hudson
said. "So, I want to kind of give people some space."
The response has been enthusiastic.
"I think it's great," said Aaron Perez, a building manager, who
let Kuwayama and her team paint boards on his building. "It
gives people and artists something to do and to work on. And who
knows, maybe we can preserve these later and have a gallery and
remember this time in a different way."
When the boards eventually come down, Kuwayama's plan is to
store the art in a gallery, and later sell it, donating the
proceeds to local homeless shelters.
(Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Richard
Chang)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|