Brooklyn street painted over with giant Black Lives Matter mural

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Brooklyn street painted over with giant Black Lives Matter mural

New York Daily News

Jun 14, 2020 5:53 PM

Fulton Street, from Marcy Avenue to Brooklyn Avenue, is painted yellow with the words

Fulton Street, from Marcy Avenue to Brooklyn Avenue, is painted yellow with the words “Black Lives Matter,” on Sunday June 14, in Brooklyn. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

Brooklyn likes to be first with everything, especially making a statement.

But the brash borough will happily settle for being the second spot to transform a major street into a “Black Lives Matter” street mural. A similar public art effort last week transformed Pennsylvania Ave. outside the White House.

Artist Robert Carnegie said the Washington, D.C., mural spurred him to bring the same spirit to Bedford-Stuyvesant.

“That inspired me to do more. It reenergized me,” said Carnegie, a co-organizer of the public art installation. “I wanted that same feeling for our community.”

The words

The words “Black Lives Matter” are painted on the Fulton Street pavement between Marcy Avenue and Brooklyn Avenue, Saturday, June 13. (Jeff Bachner/for New York Daily News)

Indira Etwaroo, the other co-organizer, insisted the mural was not ordinary street art. “Our art is protest,” she said.

She wanted to give artists a space to show solidarity with the protests over the death of George Floyd under the knee of a Minneapolis cop and says she was able to get city permits and donated paint in just a couple of days.

“[It’s] a bigger-than-life canvas for artists to do what they do best, which is speak truth to power,” Etwaroo said.

Gloria Braxton, one of many artists involved in producing the mural, is pictured on Sunday, June 14.

Gloria Braxton, one of many artists involved in producing the mural, is pictured on Sunday, June 14. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

A team of about 50 volunteer painters spent more than a day etching the words “BLACK LIVES MATTER” in giant yellow letters along Fulton St., the busiest roadway in the historically black neighborhood.

They wrapped up the project Sunday, with the finished mural stretching an entire city block between Brooklyn and Marcy Aves. A Department of Transportation spokesman said a street closing was allowed for the project, but that no decision has been made about a possible longer period of closure.

A team of about 50 volunteer painters spent more than a day etching the words “BLACK LIVES MATTER” in giant yellow letters along Fulton Street, the busiest street in the historically black neighborhood.

A team of about 50 volunteer painters spent more than a day etching the words “BLACK LIVES MATTER” in giant yellow letters along Fulton Street, the busiest street in the historically black neighborhood. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

Along with the words “Black Lives Matter,” the mural includes the names of victims of police brutality.

Artist Diane Nathaniel, 50, heard about the plans for the mural Saturday and organizers handed her a paintbrush.

Fulton Street from Marcy Avenue to Brooklyn Avenue is painted yellow with the words

Fulton Street from Marcy Avenue to Brooklyn Avenue is painted yellow with the words “Black Lives Matter” on Sunday, June 14. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

She hopes the striking mural will keep the spirit of the protests alive, especially among young people who have been taking the lead.

“I feel like our young people see the meaning and the power behind it and are getting more involved,” Nathaniel said. “And that I’m loving to see.”

A spokesman for the Department of Transportation

People shopping on the bustling strip said they are proud the neighborhood is taking center stage in the racial justice protest movement sweeping the nation.

Nadia Lopez, an educator who lives nearby, says it’s important for her to see change right in her neighborhood.

“Activism is nothing without action,” she said “This is a signal of what’s possible.”

Dominque Joseph, who works at a shop named Nicholas Brooklyn, says the mural will help establish the neighborhood as a center of the Black Lives Matter movement.

And he said it wouldn’t hurt to remind shoppers to patronize black-owned businesses.

“It’s like a stamp,” Joseph said. “Everybody will always remember it.”

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