Danny Le of Dorchester;
Leah Prodigalidad of West Roxbury; and Zariyah Wilkerson of Roxbury pose
with the progress of their masked self-portraits, on August, 12,
2020.
Photo courtesy of the
Mayor's Mural Crew.
BOSTON
- Thursday, August 20, 2020 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh, together with the
Boston Parks Department and the Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture, today
announced The Mayor's Mural Crew has completed its 29th summer of employing
Boston high school students to create large-scale public art projects
across Boston neighborhoods and City parks. In an effort to provide more
Boston teenagers with a safe, in-person experience of working on meaningful
projects amidst a global pandemic, the Mural Crew employed nearly triple
the amount of youth for their ordinary summer program, with 27 youth
participating in this year's program. This year's crew brought together
teenagers representing 12 different local high schools, 10 neighborhoods,
including teens who have dreamt of being a part of the program since coming
across their first neighborhood mural as a kid.
"It
has been a very challenging year for Boston, including our young people who
are seeking support systems and community events," said Mayor Walsh.
"I'm proud of every member of our Mural Crew who have worked
incredibly hard this summer to bring their unique experience and vision to neighborhoods
throughout our communities. To all the young people who rose to the
challenge this summer and created positive engagement in our city: thank
you."
Currently
a program under the Boston Parks Department, The Mayor's Mural Crew started
in 1991 as a summer initiative to cover graffiti with original murals
painted and designed by local high school students. Over the course of the
program, the Crew has employed and engaged hundreds of youth artists. Youth
between the ages of 15 and 18 can apply to be a part of the Mural Crew
through the City's SuccessLink
Employment Program.
Earlier
in the spring, there was a tremendous surge in the use of Franklin Park,
the City's largest open space. The Mural Crew, based out of the City's
Parks Department farm in Franklin Park, took inspiration from the amount of
socially-distanced space within Franklin Park. The Mural Crew let the
"forest school" outdoor education learning style serve as a guide
for the summer's work.
Instead
of the traditional summer experience of painting murals in neighborhood
parks or small business walls, this year the Mayor's Mural Crew focused on
a selection of street activism, painting, and placemaking projects. All
projects took place outdoors and followed proper COVID-19 public health
guidelines.
"As
a team, we had to think outside of the literal box and create a summer work
program of alternative learning, art-making, and skill-building-inspired by
the times, and our city's parks," said Heidi Schork and Liz O'Brien,
who co-lead The Mayor's Mural Crew program. "This summer, a consortium
of City employees from the City's Parks Department, the Mayor's Office of
Arts and Culture, and the Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics came together
to create a curriculum that allowed teenagers to work in
person."
Youth artist Lucy
Edelstein-Rosenberg of the North End adds finishing touches to chalk paint
quote installation on Blue Hill Ave on July 25, 2020. Photo courtesy of the
Mayor's Mural Crew.
This
summer's project portfolio includes:
- A labyrinth of land art installations and whimsical
pathways in Franklin Park. The crew built a dozen sculptural
structures including a beech tree treehouse, using only native
material (live plants, stones, fallen limbs, and branches) in the
south end of the park, by Scarboro Pond.
- A series of landscape
watercolors and illustrated map designs of public parks in
Boston.
- A series of social justice
sidewalk quote designs,
with a temporary installation of youth artist Leah Prodigalidad's
design, painted on a Franklin Park sidewalk along Blue Hill Ave.Using
Irwin marking chalk and Montana chalk spray, the crew captured Maya
Angelou's quote: "We all should know that diversity makes for a
rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the
tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color."
- A series of socially distant
leaves on Boston Common,
painted with turf paint on the grass surrounding Boston Common's
Parkman Bandstand. This was a collaboration with the Mayor's Office of
New Urban Mechanics, to encourage staying safely apart while enjoying
the beauty of the park.
- A series of pop-art style mask
self-portraits,
painted 6 feet apart from each other on plywood against barn doors in
Franklin Park. The portraits will be installed in public spaces across
the city this fall.

A deer head sculptural
structure in the woods of Franklin Park built on July 21, 2020, led by
youth artist Madalyn Spitz, of Roslindale.
Photo courtesy of the
City of Boston.
"Before
joining The Mayor's Mural Crew, I was afraid creativity was a thing I would
lose stuck in quarantine, but the crew taught me that art lies within
everything- even a global pandemic," said Roslindale's Isabel Oalican,
a rising sophomore Posse Scholar at Bryn Mawr College, who was new to the
Mayor's Mural Crew this year. "Channeling how we felt about the reality
of the pandemic into our work was fulfilling, in that it transformed
mundane things into art, like our masks or a very spacious park that has
room for keeping social distance. I hope that our work during the summer of
2020 serves as an example of how to remain positive and productive in tough
times!"
"I
had no idea what this summer was going to bring. I prayed that this job
would work out because the people I meet are so down to earth and funny and
human," said Jamaica Plain's Nina Porter, a rising senior at Meridian
Academy, who just completed their second summer as a Mural Crew artist.
"The diversity is incredible, and it seems like we are just bursting
at the seams with suppressed creativity that quarantine has brought upon
us. While this was unexpected, it was not unpleasant. I still get to be
creative and make friends safely."
"This
summer we got to make new forms of art in the woods that pushed our
thoughts and conceptions of art, and allowed us to experience something
new," said Jamaica Plain's Jon Lopez-Wilen, a junior studying
illustration at Lesley University, who has worked with the Mural Crew since
2015. "We helped the Mayor's Office install socially-distant leaves,
which got us out to explore a new territory and medium. Our masked self-portraits
emphasize the importance of wearing a mask, while giving us each the chance
to be self expressive."
"I
felt so happy to be able to create artwork outside, on behalf of the City,
during such an abnormal time," said Roslindale's Sayde Cheever, a
rising sophomore at Boston Latin Academy.
"It
was a really great chance to be creative with low stakes and lots of help
from my supervisors and coworkers. We had to think outside the box to make
art happen in the midst of COVID-19," said West Roxbury's Christy
Jestin (this year's reigning champ of WGBH's High School Quiz Show), who
begins his first year at Harvard College next week.
Lead Artists
Heidi
Schork, Director and Founding Artist of The Mayor's Mural Crew
Liz
O'Brien, Teaching Artist and Manager of The Mayor's Mural Crew
John
Crowley, Teaching Artist and Exhibition Coordinator for Boston City Hall
Galleries
College Student Artists
Jonathan
Lopez-Wilen
Taylor
Billy
Kaylee
Chang
Angel
Zayas
Youth Artists
Brenda
Cartagena
Brian
Santizo Romero
Cait
Duncan
Christy
Jestin
Cindy
Nguyen
Danny
Le
David
Liu
Erika
Rivas
Grace
Sullivan
Isabel
Oalican
Jaden
Malagodi
James
Sullivan
Jeff
Charles
John
Gallagher
Julia
Spitz
Leah
Prodigalidad
Lucy
Edelstein-Rosenberg
Madalyn
Spitz
Max
Lyman
Mila
Fields-Zayas
Nathaniel
McKay
Niamh
Mulligan
Nina
Porter
Sage
Stuart
Sayde
Cheever
Valencia
Louis
Zariyah
WIlkerson
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