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nashville public art

Nashville murals, street art, graffiti, signs, sculptures and more

And her hair was an unfolded flower

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Located in in the heart of the Buchanan Street neighborhood, this is impressive piece is a Norf Collective creation, signed by Woke3 (also known as Jay Jenkins). The Buchanan Street area has begun to see signs of gentrification. The building this work is on, which apparently used to be an auto body store, is currently unoccupied, its fate unknown. It’s hard to believe a future tenant would want to remove this mural, but I think we still have to qualify this as endangered art. (The title was inspired by a line from a Yeates poem.)

Located at 1114 Buchanan Street, at the corner with 12th Avenue North. Street parking available on 12th. And maybe grab a bite at Mai-Bee’s Southern Cuisine across the street, which sports a mural of its own I’ll feature later.

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Gone but not forgotten

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When I grab a shot of some interesting graffiti I happen to see, I don’t expect to learn that it has become in effect a memorial for an artist who has died, much less one who died while doing his work. John Brown, an artist based out of Louisville and Detroit, went by the handle 2BUK and worked with the FST crew. Sadly, he died about a year and a half ago after being hit by a vehicle while working on a project in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on November 23, 2015. He was only 27. The tag above is dated 2014, so it is one of his later works. RIP.

Located under a railroad bridge on Stanley Street, on the block between Nestor and Willow. Stanely St. runs north from Hermitage Avenue, at about the 300 block. The mural is hard to miss. The underpass at the bridge is only wide enough for one car at a time. This is a very industrial area. Street parking is easy, just don’t block the road.

Dawn to dusk

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The Fatherland District mural, found on the backside of The Pavilion East, is a product of Eastside Murals, home base of artists Ian Lawrence and Sterling Goller-Brown. If I decided to dedicate myself to just their work, it would keep me busy for a while. The daylight scene (closeup below) depicts a dog and cyclist hanging out at Bill Martin’s grocery, while on the night side we see dancers in the Pavillion and one of the walkways of The Shoppes on Fatherland, which the Pavillion is part of. While I’m not fond of that spelling of “shops,” this cluster of eclectic small local shops is worth visiting, and tourists are some of their most important customers.

The address of The Pavillion East is 1006 Fatherland, but the front of it actually faces south 11th Street, on the 300 block, a little south of Fatherland. The best way to access the mural is to walk down the alleyway that runs south from Fatherland, halfway between 10th and 11th. You can also walk around back from the front side of the Pavillion. There is parking in front of the Pavillion, and street parking is relatively easy, particularly going south, away from Five Points.

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Heavy reading

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“La Storia della Terra,” (1999/2001) otherwise known as “the big pile of stone books next to the downtown library,” is the creation of Anna Wilmsen and the late Wolfgang Kubach, German artists who created many other stone book towers. The plaque at the bottom indicates the twenty-six books (representing the letters of the alphabet) are made from stones that came from five continents, and that also seems to have been characteristic of their other works. Actually, Nashville didn’t quite get the full deal, because at least one of the book towers on their gallery page says it has stones from seven continents. You’re not supposed to take rock samples from Antartica except for scientific work, so I’m not sure how they got that seventh stone. Maybe it’s just as well we don’t have any Antarctic rock in ours! The statue was paid for by Judy and Noah Liff. Mr. Liff made his money in recycling and the Liffs donated generously to a number of arts-related causes around Nashville.

Located on the northwest corner of the Main Library downtown, near the corner of Seventh and Church Street. The library’s official address is 615 Church Street, but the building takes up the entirety of the 600 block. It’s hard to miss. The library has its own parking garage, and there is plenty of paid parking in lots and garages nearby. Check out a book and enjoy the art!

Freedom Riders on Jefferson

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Particularly because of the work of the Norf Collective, the Jefferson Street corridor has seen a recent explosion of murals and other public art. One of the oldest pieces on Jefferson, which helped kick start the public art movement along this historic street, is a Michael Cooper (of Murals and More) piece at the I-40 underpass. This 2009 piece was a collaboration between Cooper and local high school students. Cooper took drawings and designs from the students and turned them into a coherent mural. After Cooper drew it, students joined in painting it. The mural honors the Freedom Riders. Jefferson, of course, has long been the beating heart of the African American community in Nashville, and students from the three universities along the road, Fisk, Meharry Medical, and Tennesee State, were active in the Freedom Riders and numerous other activities in the Civil Rights era. The placement of the mural is poignant for another reason. I-40, I-65, and I-440 cut the Jefferson Street neighborhood into pieces, doing everlasting damage that the community continues to work to repair. Nashville is hardly the only city where the interstates were built through the heart of African American neighborhoods. It was a common practice. If you have wondered why some protesters have taken to blocking interstates, there’s definitely a history there. This mural has been vandalized in the past, which forced Cooper to coat it with a clear coating that makes vandalism easier to remove.

Located on the southwest side of the I-40 underpass on Jefferson Street, at the beginning of the 2500 block. Street parking is available across the street, though traffic can make crossing hard. Some parking is available at nearby business.

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Welcome to the garden

Garden Brunch Cafe mural by Norf Collective

In honor of the Jefferson Street Art Crawl which I visited this evening, some Jefferson Street art. Why, you might ask, is this picture taken at such an odd angle? Well, there’s a fence in the way. A fence that serves no obvious purpose other than blocking a clear view of this mural. This is a Norf Collective piece (their website is down as of this posting – I’ll add the link if it comes back up), done as part of the Jefferson Street Community Health Fair last August. See the Get healthy! post for more details. It’s found on the east wall of the Garden Brunch Café (which I recommend), so the depiction of a quiet garden makes sense.

UPDATE: Here’s their Facebook page. And the website is up and running.
UPDATE: The building has been painted black, and this mural is gone. The café is no longer in business.

Located at 924 Jefferson Street. If you are there for a meal, and why wouldn’t you be, the restaurant has parking in back. You can probably also park next door at Popeye’s or the church behind the Garden Brunch Café.

Smokin’!

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If you go to Smokin Thighs, I hope you like chicken. Like, really, really like chicken. There are some non-chicken sides, and I imagine most of the drinks don’t have chicken in them, but you never know. But it’s not the smoked chicken inside but the metal ones up top that gets Smokin Thighs on this blog. Two metal fowl and two winking waitresses adorn the restaurant (and if you find their food truck, the winking waitress is found on it, too).

Located at 611 Wedgewood Avenue, within sight of the west entrance to the fairgrounds. Plenty of parking. Grab some wings and enjoy the art!

 

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