Folklife Festival Narrative Session: Urban Art, Neon Signs and Graffiti Murals

About the Project

The 2001 Smithsonian Folklife Festival celebrated just a few of the innumerable manifestations of traditional culture in New York City. In addition to a shared urban culture, most New Yorkers also have one or more reservoirs of specialized traditional knowledge, which they have acquired from their ethnic and/or religious upbringing, working in a particular occupation, or living in a specific area of the city. The innumerable, multifaceted ways in which these factors interact are what make New York and New Yorkers so fascinating. Artists Tobbie Theresa and Hector Tate discuss their graffiti artforms, influences and art process. The artists also speak about the stigma that graffiti art carries in urban landscapes and their efforts to do away with misconceptions by infusing graffiti murals with community identity and aesthetics. See the finding aid for this program here.

Read more

|
Show pages needing (scroll down to load more): Transcription | All

Completed!

Project Progress (details)
6 pages completed
Difficulty
5 out of 5
(details)

9

Contributing
members

6

Total
pages