Ologies with Alie Ward - Modern Toichographology (MURALS & STREET ART) with Conrad Benner
Episode Date: September 26, 2024Murals! Frescos! Graffiti! Street art! Philadelphia is the birthplace of graffiti and the mural capital of the world so we sit down with city historian, journalist, curator, and Toichographologist Con...rad Benner to chat about public vs. private art, cultural movements, commissioned vs. um… un-commissioned murals, how mural topics are chosen, how much it costs to make a mural, where to get that money, vandalism and murals and the fine line between, and how everything you do is art. Let Philly’s history and 5,000 murals inspire you to gaze at what’s in your city and find out who made it, how you can get involved, and why it matters. Also: this episode will have a bonus Field Trip we’ll release in a week or so that will take you to a series of murals in the process of being born. Follow Conrad on Instagram, TikTok and XVisit his guide to Philadelphia’s public art and public space at StreetsDept.comDonations went to the William Way LGBT Community Center and SkypeAScientist.comPurchase a Frog Facts Advent Calendar at SquidFacts.net More episode sources and linksSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesOther episodes you may enjoy: Political Sociology (VOTER TURNOUT & SUPPRESSION), Nomology (THE CONSTITUTION), Domicology (ABANDONED BUILDINGS, RECYCLED HOUSES & GHOST TOWNS), Wildlife Ecology (FIELDWORK), Very Special Episode: BlackAFinSTEM, Mythology (STORYTELLING), Museology (MUSEUMS)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes!Follow @Ologies on Instagram and XFollow @AlieWard on Instagram and XEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jacob ChaffeeManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling Producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh hey, it's the acquaintance who always reintroduces themselves in case you forgot their name.
Allie Ward, this is Ologies.
Here we are with a trip through time, space, art, ideas, paint, and guest starring Philadelphia.
So this ology is in fact real.
I was just tickled to discover that toyco means wall, graph means writing, and that
scholars have used this term to discuss wall paintings dating back like thousands of years,
but this episode is going to be more of a modern look at big street art that either colors your
day without you even noticing, or maybe it stops you in your tracks and then you're like weeping
into a to-go latte. Thisologist hails from Philadelphia and as it happens, so does street
art we shall discuss. But he has been on the scene as a journalist for approaching 15 years as the editor and
the founder of this really popular blog, StreetsDepartment.com.
And he's a curator for the public arts program, Mural Arts Philadelphia, and also has a podcast
called Why's Art Outside?
And through all this work, his focus is really about spotlighting and elevating artists.
He's the best.
And I was introduced to him by your favorite squid expert, toothology guest, Dr. Sarah
McAnulty.
And this interview took place on her living room couch.
It was a sunny summer day.
The walls around us were brick on one side and then various pieces of squid art on the
other with her cat holding court between our microphones. And we're going to get to that convo in a second. But first, thank you to everyone supporting and
sending in questions via our Patreon at patreon.com slash ologies. Thanks to everyone out there in
ologies merch from ologiesmerch.com. Also heads up, we have a new show spinoff called Smology's. I
know you've seen Smology's in our feed, but you can now subscribe and listen on a separate feed wherever you get podcasts.
We're making them every week.
We'll link it in the show notes.
And also for no dollars, you can just leave us a review, which I read and then I read
one to you.
And thank you this week to Cody Haltz who wrote, in a world of division, endless trolls
and sleuths, this show grabs you warmly by the hand and says, hey, it's okay if you
don't know much.
Let's go explore together. Cody Haltolt, thank you so much for that. Let's explore murals. Let's
explore Philadelphia, shall we? Okay. Now this episode also has a bonus field trip episode that
we're going to release in a week or so. That will take you to a series of murals in the process of
being born. But in this episode, we're going to be looking through the lens of the inception of street art and public versus private art, cultural movements,
commissioned versus uncommissioned murals, how to make murals without
everything looking wonky because you've scaled up, how murals are chosen, how
much it costs to make a mural, where to get that money, vandalism and murals and
a fine line in
between and how everything you do is art. Trust me. We'll also be talking a lot about
the history and art in Philly and because we cannot and should not attempt to touch
on every mural in every city across the globe. We couldn't do it. Do you know how long this
episode would be? And we shouldn't just highlight the most famous ones. So rather, let this
look into the workings
of public art and murals where they started,
inspire you to find out more about what's in your city
and who made it and how you can get involved
and why it matters.
So stand back and admire the history
as told by journalist, curator, art appreciator,
Philadelphia liver and toy co-graphgraphologist Conrad Benner.
Conrad Benner and he him pronouns.
You live in Philadelphia.
I live in Philadelphia.
Yeah.
Did you?
Best city in the world.
Is it the best city in the world?
I believe it so far.
I've been here a couple hours and it's feeling good.
I think it's a fantastic city and I'm so glad to be from here.
I grew up around the block from where we're recording this.
Everyone in Philly is so awesome and I think we're just, you know,
we're the salt of the earth where, I don't know.
I don't know, I love everyone here.
I only learned recently that Philadelphia, Philly,
has a culture of murals that goes way back.
Oh my gosh, where do we begin?
I mean, yes, when we're talking specifically about murals,
not only do we have the nation's largest public arts program,
that is Mural Arts Philadelphia,
and they have been responsible for creating somewhere
around 4,000 murals in their 38-year history.
Dang.
And yeah, Mural Arts, a number of years ago,
created the nickname Mural Capital of the World.
You know, you have to self-brand.
Yeah, yeah. Oh.
And it's kind of stuck.
It's like on Wikipedia now when we get written about internationally.
Of course, there's other cities with great murals and some with great mural programs.
But yeah, we're the one who took that name, Mural Capital of the World.
I've been wanting to do an episode on murals for years and it's like there's not going
to be anology for that.
I was like, I wish there were.
Maybe I have to invent one because very rarely I'll work with anologist to be like, can we not going to be an ology for that. I was like, I wish there were. Maybe I have to invent one. Because very rarely I'll work with an ologist to be like,
can we coin a term, please?
But I was doing some research.
Ooh, the phone has come out.
I know, because there's no-
For those listening, which is everyone.
Twicographology.
You just call me a twink?
What did you say?
That's a follow-up.
I am 38 years old. Your skin is amazing though.
Oh, thank you.
Forever young.
You are a toy-go-graphologist.
You're a modern toy-go-graphologist.
Nice.
Did you know that?
You know, I did know that.
No, I did not know.
And it comes from, it's a real term.
It's used the world over.
It's used in academic journals.
And a toyco graphologist is someone who studies mural arts or makes them.
And it comes from toyco for wall and graph writing, wall writing.
And so modern toyco graphology would be...
Hold on, I have to update my about page because that is my new that's in my new bio.
Can you tell me a little bit about take me back?
Sure. But yeah, I grew up in Philly.
So I did take an art class, but I really don't remember it.
I remember like all the math classes.
I was really obsessed with math.
And then the long story long, because this is a long podcast, is I got sick.
My junior year of high school, they couldn't figure out what it was,
but I was just lethargic all the time, like would
sleep right through my alarm.
So they ended up homeschooling me at public school.
So I'm here, I had a great program where a teacher came out a couple of times a week
and I graduated on time, but long story long, it messed up my transcript and I didn't go
to college.
So the reason I got into the arts is because of my late teens, early twenties, worked at
Whole Foods, worked at Zara,
worked a few jobs, I was late everywhere,
so I got fired after a few years at all these places.
So, but around this time I met a lot of great people.
A lot of like, you know, I was 19, 20,
and the folks that were meeting were in their early 20s,
and a lot of them had just graduated from art school.
You know, this is like early 2000s Whole Foods,
which for the young folks out there,
it was a different world.
Whole Foods was a different, it was very artsy and fun, at least in Philadelphia.
That's where it attracted a lot of like young artsy folks.
In Philly, we have this thing called First Fridays that was started about 30
years ago in the nineties here.
And they said, let's do this thing where every first Friday we open our doors, we
give folks free wine and free snacks and maybe people will come out.
And they did.
And seeing the art there when I was like 1920, 21, in old cities
seeing really experimental art, it wasn't the stuff you see in the PMA, the Philadelphia
Museum of Art or other galleries. It was really exciting. And it was stuff I'd never seen
before. And then just like really interesting themes, lots of queer art, lots of queer themes,
lots of like really beautiful representations of people who, you know, were from my community.
I'm part of the LGBT army.
And yeah, I think my experience with art before was sort of
like whatever I was taught in the textbooks and whatever I saw
in like the museums and it's kind of, you know, a lot of
European art, a lot of Renaissance painters and stuff.
And it's great.
You know,
Bowls of fruit, dead pheasants.
Yeah.
But what Conrad was seeing in the more underground and experimental art scene
really spoke to him.
And it was more colorful.
It was more daring and in more evocative settings like art
showcased in an otherwise dark room or with more vibrant palettes.
It felt like what I would see on Nickelodeon as a kid, like, but cooler.
So it was around that time I was out actually one time
and this woman who I went to elementary school with,
her name was Kelly White.
This was 2005, 2006 and blogs are so new.
And she was like, I'm looking for someone
to help me co-write a weekly article
where we talk about arts and culture in the city.
Would you like to co-write it with me?
And I was like, what?
Of course, let's figure it out.
And all I wanted to do was write about the arts.
It was just this thing I found myself in
because I was going to these first Friday shows.
And when I was 24, I broke my leg.
I got hit by a van that was turning right on red
and broke my leg.
I had to move back in with my parents for a minute.
Went through this depression.
By then I was 24, making most of my money
at a coffee shop job, making like $7 an hour.
Like, what am I doing with my life?
I'm so scared.
So Conrad enrolled in the local community college
and at the suggestion of a friend, he took up photography.
And then his love of photography and the art scene
and writing kind of coalesced into his own blog
about street art, streetsdepartment.com,
which is now this long running staple of the art scene
in the mural capital of the art scene in the
mural capital of the world. And he knows everyone, everyone knows him. Conrad is like a city
treasure.
Did you find that transition, having written about and consumed and been in that art world,
that your transition to photographing it kind of felt like it scratched a different itch
for you?
Yeah. First of all, it's so funny.
I was just listening to a podcast on the way here that maybe was your podcast.
But it was some quip about how, like, everyone hates to write,
but everyone loves to have written. Yes. Was that your podcast?
It was. I hate writing, but I love having written.
And I literally laughed on the L. I was like, that's how I felt.
So this quote is usually attributed to early 20th century poet and screenwriter I love writing, but I love having written. And I literally laughed on the L. I was like, that's how I felt.
So this quote is usually attributed to early 20th century poet and screenwriter Dorothy Parker.
But some people online fight about if that's a misattribution to this writer named Frank Norris.
But it doesn't matter. Writing could be daunting, Conrad says, but he loved being out cataloging street art with his camera.
So yeah, it did scratch a different it itch for me and it was so different. I mean, within the first few months of creating this blog, Time Magazine had republished one of my articles
on their Tumblr and used one of the photos. Very small, it was very small, but used it in one of
their like wrap-ups in the print edition too. By the end of that first year, the Encyclopedia Britannica
used a couple of my photos to talk about yarn bombing. Oh my god.
Yeah.
Let's talk about semantics.
Sure.
Street art, graffiti, murals.
Can you break down some of the terminology for people that don't know jack shit about
this?
Great.
I would love to.
So when you see art in the public space, there's two broad categories, commissioned and non-commissioned. Commissioned work is stuff
that's approved. So you have the wall owner's approval or the land owner's approval.
Usually there's funding, whether that be, you know, city, state, federal funding or grant funding or
private funding. Usually there's a curator involved, so an artist is selected through a process.
Oftentimes there's decent amount of community involvement, so maybe the community is consulted
before, during, or after, or all of the above. Sometimes the idea comes first and
then the artist is selected, sometimes the artist comes first, and then the idea
comes through that. But the general idea being that it's this big, purposefully
bulky process to make sure that artwork is created in the public space
that has some reflection of the community, city, town, block,
neighborhood, home, whatever that it's around.
Here in the US, there is this government art
and architecture program.
I did not know about this.
It's been in place since 1962, and it
reserves half of 1% of the construction
cost of every federal building
for commissioning artworks and that includes murals. Now what if big government or nobody
asked you to art on them? On the non-commission side, it's artists speaking directly to the
people around them. No approvals, usually self-funded or almost always self-funded.
And the two sub buckets there are street art and graffiti.
It all really started with modern day graffiti.
The modern day graffiti movement started here in Philadelphia, so you're in the right place.
Some could argue also in the Bronx or right around the same time, but if my memory serves
me correctly, even the New York Times credits Philadelphia as being the place it started.
There were writers like Cornbread and Cool Earl and a number of others who would go around and write those tags, those names on different walls around the city.
Cornbread famously did like the Jackson 5 jet and the elephant at the zoo.
So he became a huge name and is still a working artist today.
Okay, so this is wild. You're not going to believe this, but Cornbread is not his given name.
He was actually born Darryl Alexander McCray.
And after getting into some trouble in his youth
in the 1960s and asking the cook at a detention center
for Cornbread every day,
people started making fun of him by calling him Cornbread.
And he embraced it.
And he said, so fricking what, haters?
And then when he was out,
he used the tag cornbread
Around his neighborhood to tell this girl named Cynthia that he loved her I don't think that this led to a relationship, but it did lead to more writing on walls
Moving up from marker to spray paint and then when this rumor spread that cornbread had died
He was like no I didn't and so he snuck into the city zoo in Philly and he painted
He was like, no, I didn't. And so he snuck into the city zoo in Philly,
and he painted cornbread lives on an alive elephant.
Also, the Jackson 5's private jet
went and touched down for a Philly gig.
So by the early 1970s, word had gotten out
that with some paint, you get the word out.
And graffiti was invented about 12 years
after the invention of the spray can, which makes sense.
There is roller graffiti, so dipping a roller into paint
and rolling it that way.
But really the quickest form of graffiti is spray paint.
And oftentimes you want to get in and out really quickly
because you don't have anyone's approval.
And then street art is kind of everything
that's not graffiti.
So graffiti is a tagline, sometimes a character.
A tag is just a couple of letters usually
that spells out a name and it's spray paint on a wall.
It's all about like hand control. So it's like the style of your hand that you have on the wall and as I said sometimes
there's characters and then street art is sort of everything else you can imagine so there are
street artists who do stickers there are street artists to do wheat paste wheat paste is paper and
glue on a wall yarn bombing it's creating some sort of installation with yarn and attaching it
to something there are artists who do projection work, street artists who do projection work,
anything this, that, and above, you know?
So yeah, on the commission side,
there's murals, monuments, and public art.
On the non-commission side, there's street art and graffiti.
Those are the super broadest strokes we could take.
When it comes to murals,
I feel like the biggest thing I've always wondered
is what counts as a mural?
If I do something that is a postage size, postage stamp size on a wall, is that a mural?
At what point does something go from this is a painting on the wall to this is a fucking mural?
That's like when does a drop of water become a lake sort of thing?
So really kind of any paint on a wall that's commissioned would be a mural,
even if it's just a dollop.
Okay, see, this is good to know. I always wondered about that. And do you ever look
back at like frescoes, say, in antiquity? Where do you think frescoes lie in all this?
Oh, this is a beautiful question. I even remember taking art history when I was going to community
college and my art history teacher was saying like, yeah, graffiti has kind of always existed.
They would carve things into like different buildings and you could say like the cave
paintings of France are right.
There's no permission there.
I mean, we didn't even have property then.
So like, is that commissioned mural work or is it street art or graffiti, whatever it might be, this urge for us as human beings
as this like consciousness on this earth,
we want to paint, to decorate,
to have the space around us reflect us
and our experience in some way.
And if you look at the murals in Philadelphia
or a lot of cities around the globe,
a lot of them kind of just depict the city around them
and the people around them and the culture around them
or different cultures in the world, different histories.
So when we're talking about frescoes, yeah,
maybe some of the earliest murals, right?
Because certainly commissioned, certainly approved,
certainly funded.
So, and they're beautiful.
It's so interesting, yeah.
Just a side note, don't call just any mural
that features people in robes and stuff a fresco.
So fresco comes from fresh in Italian, like a fresco.
And so fresco comes from fresh in Italian, like a fresco.
And frescoes are painted using pigment
that's laid directly into wet plaster.
So like the wall's going up, the fresco is going up. pigment that's laid directly into wet plaster. So like the
wall's going up, the fresco is going up, hence fresh. Is that fun? Also, it's a huge pain
in the ass.
I drive by a mural and I go, that's pretty. But I don't know anything. I'm like, is that
acrylic? Is that enamel? Is that spray paint? Do certain media lend themselves better to
elements on the East Coast as opposed to like a mural in Joshua Tree or something. Like when people are making murals, what do they have in their
trunk when they roll up to make a mural?
Yeah, there's a few different ways you can make murals. That's a great question. And
we're actually making some right now on Front Street here in Philadelphia. In addition to
running a blog, I have a curatorial part of Streets Department called Streets Department
Walls. And right now we're creating four new murals with four up and coming artists on
Front Street.
Stay tuned for a field trip where I stand
on a Philly street corner at midnight with Conrad,
watching muralists do their thing
and asking them what their inspo was, how they do it,
where to get a good cheesesteak, et cetera.
You can make murals with acrylic outdoor paint
or with spray paint, but I would say most murals
are created with acrylic outdoor paint or with spray paint. But I would say most murals are created
with acrylic outdoor paint.
Most murals are created to have some length of time.
If you wanted to live more than a couple of years
because weather will deteriorate it,
the sun will start to remove some of that color.
You'll often want to do this like clear coat
that goes on top that costs a decent amount, right?
So they're under the commissioned bucket.
So there's funders, there's approvals,
there's artist selections.
Murals aren't cheap to make for the most part.
Yeah, how much does it cost to make a mural?
So yeah, murals can go anywhere from a few thousand dollars
to a hundred plus thousand dollars.
It really depends on who the artist is you're hiring,
the wall, all of it, the materials,
how long you want it to last.
So if you are, let's say a homeowner,
who's a great wall, who would love a mural on their wall,
but can't pay 10, 20, 40, $50,000,
whatever it might be to create a mural there,
in a place like Philadelphia,
what you can do is submit your wall to the mural program,
and it'll be put into a batch of walls
that project managers and curators can
look at as potential opportunities for murals and it can be funded through that organization
and you can have a mural on your wall with that money. So for you it's free but you know
everyone's still paid. What about trends in murals because you've been covering this for
so long you're such an expert in this. What have you seen in terms of content-wise over the last decade or so?
What used to be depicted and where is it trending?
So this is a great question.
So one thing that's really clear is that we're in an era now where graffiti and street art is so nostalgic.
I mean, graffiti is, I can't do the math on that, over 50 years old at this
point. So that aesthetic is so nostalgic for people and people just really love it, that
we're seeing a lot of like mural programs be a little more open to those sorts of styles
of mural making. To give you an example, when the mural arts program, which is 38 years old in Philadelphia, started in the 80s, it's today now the biggest, it started as the anti-graffiti
network and it was a part of the mayor at the time, Wilson Goode, wanted to create a
division of the city that would cover up graffiti with murals and they hired a person named
Jane Golden, who is now still the executive
director of the mural arts program.
And her theory of the case was, well, let's actually hire the graffiti writers.
So like while we're out there, if we see someone tagging, we'll say, hey, do you want a job?
Now unfortunately, or fortunately, I don't know however you'd want to see it, you know,
think of the 70s, you can think of train graffiti in New York, you can, you know, I think that
those images come fresh to a lot of people's minds. You've seen movies or entertainment or old photos. There was a real pushback still about graffiti
in the 80s. So even when graffiti writers were hired, their talents were used, but they were
making more depictoral murals. So murals that would depict, you know, the communities around them,
civic leaders, people from history. A lot of those sort of early
anti-graffiti murals were very literal, let's say. There's a very famous one that's still there now.
It's been there for like 30 plus years on the side of a car mechanic's place, and the mural
depicts a car mechanic and what it looks like inside, you know? So this is the 1985 Blatt
Tire mural in the Callow Hill area of Philly,
and it was made by artist Joshua Kaufman
and commissioned by the then called
Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network and Marv Blatt,
the owner of Blatt Tire and Auto.
And it's in this flat, blocky, almost cartoonish style,
and it shows these cars parked in a line
and a few cars up on lifts as if
they're getting worked on.
And it's now this city landmark, and it's been restored twice in its 40-year history.
And whatever Blatt paid to have it done, excellent investment.
So much Blatt for the buck.
Mural arts did take chances, though.
They did this Diego Rivera mural right around where
their offices were in the 80s.
But very few were in any kind of graffiti style or street art style.
They were all like...
Like are trending toward fine art?
Nothing was experimental.
There wasn't even like abstract murals really.
By the late 2000s, early 2010s, mural arts started taking more risks because they could.
The culture had moved to a place where graffiti
and street art themes started to be more appreciated
and many more abstract murals.
So now when you walk around,
you're more likely to see abstract murals
than you ever were in the 80s or 90s.
And things are just more experimental.
So I think that's been the evolution,
this acceptance of this culture,
which has been really important.
Just think of the irony there, right?
Mural art started as the anti-graffiti network,
and this was the same for a lot of cities
across the country.
There was this battle against graffiti.
I guess it was a part of this like broken windows theory
of local governance, right?
That sort of took hold in the 80s and 90s.
Like how can we fix, quote unquote,
fix these small problems as opposed to dressing
like real systemic problems?
Like, why don't we raise the minimum wage? No, why don't we, you know. And now 30 plus years later they're hiring
graffiti writers to create murals that look like graffiti. It's so funny. It's right.
That's the turnaround.
So from its original name of the anti graffiti network to the now mural arts program and
founder Jane Golden has been quoted as saying, we quickly realized that we were a pro art program,
not anti anything.
And when you go to different cities,
if you ever traveled to different cities,
do you see stylistic differences?
Like if you're in LA or let's say you're looking
at pictures of Tokyo, are you ever like,
oh shit, they do it so differently there.
Yeah, I just came back from Mexico City.
I spent a week in Mexico City.
I loved it.
And it's always a response to the city that you're in.
Every city's culture is a bit different.
All the artists there have different energies and flows.
And that's what I get really attracted to.
You know, there is this like growing trend in some cities, I won't name them, where they
create little like mural districts,
where they bring in huge name muralists,
and they create a little outdoor museum.
And those are fantastic, I've been to plenty.
Dish the shit, Conrad, come on.
I'll name the most famous one, Windward Walls, right?
Okay.
In Miami.
And when you do that, it's great.
I think those are super valuable spaces,
but we also need, you know, to support the local artists in whatever city you're in, because
you never know who's going to be the next big artist.
So look into the work of Aaron, A-R-E-N, who paints clowns in like magnifying mirror
level detail with face paint caked into wrinkles and stray silver hairs kind of escaping
Face paint caked into wrinkles and stray silver hairs kind of escaping wigs.
Really gorgeous.
Like you can almost smell the clowns.
And he did one to a very famous clown from that city.
There are a couple of famous clowns from Mexico City.
I didn't know.
I think comedy is really important there.
But looking at it, I was like, wow, this is really interesting.
There's no clown murals in Philly.
Yeah.
I think in America, like clowns are kind of scary, right?
That would not have been something I would expect like,
oh yes, of course there'll be a lot of public clown art.
That's not a thought I would ever have.
And I feel like in LA, we do have some of our murals
are very clearly an Instagrammable backdrop.
Like there are a lot of murals in LA where it's like
butterfly wings that you stand in the middle, butterfly wings that you stand in the middle.
Angel wings that you stand in the middle of.
Like they're very much like a backdrop for your tourism photos.
But as more people are looking for Instagrammable opportunities,
do you find that mural artists might be getting fucked a little bit more?
Because it's like, well, this is the great exposure, great exposure, great exposure. Who are you? Your insight is spot on. So this is, you have just opened up a can of
worms. Okay, so let's talk about this. First of all, yes, this is why funding is really important
for these projects. So the idea of sort of outdoor mural museums with only big name artists comes from this
idea of usually the funding is maybe a developer or someone who wants to create a tourist attraction.
That's where like complicated questions around gentrification come in because especially
if you look at Wynwood, there's a huge conversation happening there about like, it has transformed
the neighborhood around it because it's become such a tourist attraction.
And there's a whole debate to be had there.
So when yeah, like what is the intent of the funding?
What is the intent there?
So yeah, when you see murals that are all about
like creating Instagrammable moments
on like shopping district streets.
Not to mention the many debates about neighborhoods
pushing out long established locals
and the real estate tycoon behind windward walls
called this gentlification.
Guess what?
People did not like that term.
Sure.
I don't want to yuck anyone's yum.
Like, and I've taken photos in front of those things too.
Like, okay, do it.
But there needs to be kind of an equal playing field here.
You know, there's lots of private funding for murals because there's
lots of incentive, especially in the Instagram age and the TikTok age of
like, if we put murals
here, people will come out, people will photograph them, people will take selfies in front of
them.
And then the businesses around this sort of district that we create will benefit from
it.
But murals and public art can't just exist for capitalism, in my opinion.
So we need to make sure that our local, especially our local governments in cities and towns
across the country are funding and creating
in these public art programs because it's really important.
You know, a lot of the projects I work on right now
are through Mural Arts Philadelphia.
They're the partner I work with,
the nonprofit partner I work with,
and a lot of it's city funding.
So every two years I do this project called To the Poles
where we build walls in Love Park,
which is a central park here in the city of Philadelphia. And we hire six artists to create
six temporary murals about why they vote. And they are selfie walls. The idea is people are
supposed to come out, take selfies in front of them, take photos of it. And just like the I
voted sticker, it's something that you can share with your with the people around you about that
you vote, right? It's it's nonpartisan. So you don't just say who why what or why you're voting
But it's just like I vote right because one of the reasons people vote is positive peer pressure
And the more they see those messages, they're more likely to vote now for more on political sociology
You can see our 2020 episode about voter turnout and suppression and we also had a stuff ology episode about voting from 2018
But the audio was really rough and it was a lot
about the 2018 congressional elections in the US.
But we also have a two-part nomology episode
on constitutional law.
It's a two-parter.
In one part, I read you the entire constitution
of the United States with some added footnotes, so enjoy.
But yes, pro-voting murals.
And if we did that with Coca-Cola, I mean, Coca-Cola gave me money, I won't bevoting murals. And if we did that with Coca-Cola,
I mean, Coca-Cola will give me money, I won't be mad,
but if we did that with Coca-Cola,
who knows what it would be?
It wouldn't be a voting thing,
it'd be something about Coca-Cola.
So we need, we really need public funding for these programs,
otherwise it will all be tourist attractions,
which again, nothing ends with tourist attractions,
I think those are valuable.
It's really valuable to be able to live in a city and go,
oh, you know, I've never seen this big muralist. Let me go here and see it. But
if you're not supporting the local artists there, if you're not creating murals, you
know, for the communities around them, you know, you're missing out.
What about in the mural capital of the world? Conrad gets asked this and he said there are
a bunch of murals near the Gaborhood. Dr. Sarah McAnulty has helped spearhead a few
biology themed ones in Fishtown.
Like, our aquatic neighbors is located at Trenton and Norris,
and there's one called River Critters at Franklin and Belgrade next time you go to Philly.
But overall, there are 5,000 peppered throughout the city.
Kind of like if Pokemons were murals. Go find them!
So if you want to get a real sense of the murals, you have to take like a trolley tour or something to go around the city and see them all.
In Philly, it's much less about creating these tourist attractions and more about like, how
can we use public art, hire local artists, work with local communities to tell the history
and stories of our cities through our public art?
Do most murals have an agenda of some kind either to raise an appreciation for something
that's depicted, to make the experience of walking down that street better? Do you find kind of like
a common motivator for a lot of mural artists? Well the way you phrased that question makes me
think of Percy Street in Philadelphia for a specific reason but I would say the overarching
answer to that is murals are here to reflect us,
to reflect our lived experiences, to reflect our histories,
to reflect our hopes and dreams for the future.
Even the abstract murals are here to excite us in ways that maybe, you know,
make our brain chemistry work a little different so we can open up different
pathways in our mind. Who knows? The way you phrase that makes me think of Percy
Street. So Percy Street is this weird alley here in Philadelphia. You know,
Philadelphia is mostly a grid system. So if you're on any street in Philly,
you can see all four intersections. But Percy Street, the way it's carved out,
when you're in the middle of Percy Street,
you can't see either end of the street and it's near Pats and Genos.
I'm sure every listener might know that we have cheese steaks here in the city
of Philadelphia.
Familiar with it, heard of it.
As a vegetarian, I will not comment.
There's got to be some vegetarian.
Oh, there are, there are.
Are there any, what's a good, just a quick internal aside into this, Percy Street comment.
Is there a good vegetarian cheese steak, vegan cheese steak in the city?
I think Govinda's. Let's say Govinda's. I don't know if they're still there.
Here's the secret about being a Philadelphian. You don't eat that many cheese steaks.
I know. I imagine.
Well, also, if you want a cheese sticks. I know, I imagine.
Well, and also if you want a cheese stick in Philly,
everyone's like neighborhood shop is their favorite place.
Like it's none of these places you would have heard about.
Maybe gyms, I've heard good things about gyms, but anyway.
But that's a cheese stick aside, but Percy Street.
But Percy Street.
So yeah, it's this weird street where like
it's near Pat's and Gino's.
So there's like nightlife over there.
You know, Pat's and Gino's is famously open 24 seven.
So what the neighbors around the street started noticing
was like, people would go back there, maybe take pee and poop.
Sure.
Oh, yeah.
OK.
Outdoor latrine.
Getting fights back there.
Qualities that you wouldn't want happening
behind your bedroom window.
Oh, OK.
Yeah, I got it.
OK.
So they had this really smart idea
where they hired an artist named Drew Bellew and David
Gwyn to collaborate on a mural.
They raised money. And they did this light installation mural. So David Gwynn
is a painter and Drew Belleau, I might be pronouncing his last name wrong. I'm so sorry,
Drew.
It's spelled very French because it's French, but you say Drew's last name Belleau.
Is a light installation artist. So the mural has sort of this geometric-y kind of background
with bright, beautiful colors.
And then at night it lights up
because there's like neon tubes or LED tubes.
I always say neon.
They go, no, it's LED.
I know, I know.
What do I know?
I feel like neon is a descriptor for the quality of the work.
Yes, exactly what it looks like.
And it became a tourist attraction.
And I wrote an article about it
and I mentioned how this is a really interesting way
to address a street where what's the alternative?
How would you make that street safer?
It's a funny way to make that street safer,
to make it a tourist attraction of sorts.
So instead of people going back there to take a pee
after they go to Paz and Gino's,
they're going back there to take selfies.
And there's a whole nother conversation
about how we should have more public restrooms.
That aside.
Oh, agreed.
I've written that too.
I'm a freelance writer still for WHLI,
which is our like NPR affiliate.
I wrote a whole article about it.
But it was a really interesting way
to think about public safety.
Like can public art be used to create a safer street?
And Percy Street has now become a walkable street
with like maybe like a half dozen murals
and they're kind of rotating. It's really interesting, Percy Street has now become a walkable street with like maybe like a half dozen murals and they're kind of rotating.
It's really interesting Percy Street.
So what's the intent behind murals?
It really depends on the project, depends on the funder, it depends on the artists,
it depends on the community around it.
But one way or another, yeah, it's about reflecting who we are and making our public space better,
I think. So this mural is titled Electric Street,
and it features blocks of brightly painted stripes
and zigzags.
And each one is outlined in these soft purple and green
glowing tubes of light.
And it looks as though you turn a corner into an alleyway,
and then suddenly you're just like in an arcade in 1992.
And I'm sure you get asked this all the time, so forgive me.
But just to get people excited about the notion of murals,
do you have a couple murals that you have seen in the world
or that are just like some ones that you really remember
that just made an impact that kind of lodged in your mind?
Yeah, I mean, I'll bring it home to Philly, I'll start there.
There's a mural here called Common Threads by Meg Saligman.
And, you know, I have a Streets Department podcast.
It's kind of on hiatus right now,
but I also produced the Mural Arts podcast.
And I got to interview Meg about that.
It's a really interesting story.
In the early 90s, she saw this wall.
It was the sunset. Just imagine it.
She's driving down Spring Garden Street,
which is like a four-lane street here in Philadelphia.
She sees this five-story wall on the side of what used to be a former school.
Now it's whatever it is, apartments. And the sun was setting and she goes, I want to do a mural on that wall.
This is back in the day when it, mural arts is yet to become mural arts.
It's still the Andy Graffiti Network and they're doing sort of smaller projects around the city.
So this was originally conceived in 1993, although it would be four years before completion.
And she goes, how am I going to do this?
She spends the next couple of years going to local high schools
around the wall, figuring out what the wall could be,
figuring out what the mural could be,
and knocking on the wall owner's door, saying, can I do it?
He says yes.
The theme of the mural ends up being connecting
performance artists here in the city, dancers,
contemporary dancers from the schools around there with
maybe like Victorian dancers and that the idea of like performance art through like
the decades, common threads were all sort of connected in one way or another. And she
applies for like a bunch of different grants because each of the grants she get would give
her $5,000 and it just wasn't enough to do this huge mural. She gets to the end, she
starts painting it by hand by herself realizes she needs a bit more money
for scaffolding.
Down to no money, Meg petitioned the mural arts program,
then the Anti-Graffiti Network,
and they funded the rest of it.
And it still stands on the corner of North Broad
and Spring Garden streets.
And it's this gorgeous kind of sepia-toned scene
of this diverse array of people in corseted and
bustled gowns intermingling with people in then contemporary late 1990s fashion. And
it's huge and detailed and ornate. It's stunning. And when Dr. McAnulty drove me past it later,
I gasped a gasp. I was like, whoa, look at that. And it really changed mural making here in the city. So in the 80s and early 90s, a lot
of what the Andy Graffiti Network here in the city was doing and a lot of the murals
created in the city were very quick. It was sort of like, hey, here's a problem wall.
Let's do something real quick. Like the tire place, for example. We have two seconds to
think about this. Let's just do a mural depicting the business that's inside.
Right?
And what Meg did, spending those years she took
to think about the idea, work with the community, create it.
And the final result, I beg people,
as you're listening to this, go search Meg Saligman,
Common Threads.
The mural is stunning.
It changed mural making the city.
It got international press, was beloved by everyone.
And as I believe Jane Golden talked about later, the executive director of Mural press, was beloved by everyone. And as I believe
Jane Golden talked about later, the executive director of mural arts, it opened up new funding.
All of a sudden people were saying, wait, murals cannot just be covering up things we
don't like, but actually like a huge, really interesting thing for the city and neighborhoods
that they're in. And this is where like public art gets really interesting because I've seen
so many murals that when you first asked that my mind went to this artist named Hot Tee
who is
He works with yarn and he did this installation in Asbury Park, New Jersey
If you've never been to Asbury is a great little beach town very queer very fun. Very artsy
they have a fun little mural wall and
They hired hot tea for two summers in a row to do this yarn installation. So they have this
Architecture, I think it's like a, I don't know,
some very important part of what the boardwalk used to be.
It was kind of run down,
but it's this beautiful old architecture
and he did this hanging yarn installation.
The yarn hung from the ceiling,
I want to say 20 feet down,
and it was like a full block of it.
And every whisper of wind would move the installation.
So it was almost like the sea, but in the air and colorful.
And I was so drawn to it because of that delicateness of it.
Cause they said, look, the way this is hung and with the wind from the beach,
this could last the day.
This could last two days.
And then the funders were fine with that.
They were like, this is a risk we're taking.
This is great.
So I went up right afterwards and saw it was incredible.
And it ended up lasting all summer.
They had to detangle it almost every day.
But that ephemerality was so just my mind,
I don't think could totally wrap around it.
And it was just so interesting to me.
What do you think the most famous mural in the wall is?
In the world?
Is it Last Supper?
Yeah, in the wall.
The most famous mural in the world,
I need to fact check this,
but I don't know if the Last Supper is a fresco.
I don't know if that counts as a mural.
But what do you think are some murals
when people think of murals, they go like this?
I would bet you that most people don't think about murals.
And if you said what's the most famous mural in the world,
I don't think people would have an answer.
I know, I'm wondering-
What would be your answer? I feel like I... If I had to guess,
I was going to say Banksy. I was going to say either that or on the swing. But yeah, the Banksy
balloon heart. Definitely. I think you said like who's the most famous street artist. I think he
would rise to the top, maybe Obey. But I think when you ask people about murals,
I think their mind goes to the ones around them.
And maybe that's good.
Murals are so personal.
And local, that's the whole fucking point
is that you cannot take a mural on a touring exhibition.
It is so location-based.
And it's a really interesting question to ask too
because art is so personal too.
So it's like, what's the most famous TV show in the world?
I don't know, but I know what I watch, right?
The reason I started this blog is because I was walking around, right?
I broke my leg, I decided not to bike,
I was walking around with my camera,
and I really started to appreciate and notice things more
and be curious about them.
That's all this effort is,
is I'm curious about these works around me
and this world around me and like, why paint this?
Like, why was this painted?
How was this painted?
What's the next thing that's gonna be painted?
Yeah, I'm just so curious.
And I think that's what's really interesting
about this work.
But the murals in our neighborhoods are really like,
one of the easiest ways for folks to connect
with like visual art painting.
And this is so important.
I really hate that we live in a world where
some people think art's not for them.
Art is everything!
Are you picking clothes to wear every morning?
That's art.
Are you deciding how to do your makeup every morning?
That's art.
Are you deciding what car you drive?
That's art.
This is all art.
It's all expression.
It's all fun and creativity.
And don't put a wall between you and paint on a wall
just because it's paint on a wall.
It's just such a great way.
Art makes you feel things,
and we deserve to have these feelings.
We deserve to go explore how things make us feel and react
and open up new pathways in our mind, right?
That's how I think about finding these murals.
Everyone's like Pokemon Go.
It's like every time I find one,
I'm like, oh, this is a new one.
Then I want to find everything out about it.
Or first I want to sit there and be like,
how does this make me feel?
Okay, what is this thing to me?
And then I'll want to investigate and see what it's about.
But yeah, like just go connect with art.
That's such a good point.
And it's so bonkers to think of how expensive
a lot of art and how private the
acquisition is. Once that very expensive piece of art is acquired, then it's put away somewhere
very safe where it can't deteriorate and usually one or two people can see it. Whereas the
idea of a piece of art that's so public, that has almost no protection from the elements
and that is so democratized in terms of who can see it.
Anyone can see something on a public street.
How much power that image has, I feel like,
is the beauty of it, is the reach.
You know what I mean?
Just stand in front of something and go,
how do I feel?
Yeah.
Okay.
And then next one, you don't have, you know,
it's not a test at the end of the day.
Maybe that's where school gets us wrong.
Cause the only thing I remember about art school
or art class was like names and dates.
Yep.
It's probably the least important part of art.
Yeah, I know.
Okay, before we get to your Patreon questions,
we're having so much fun yammering
just a few more technicalities of murals.
Are most murals titled?
You mentioned Megs.
That's a great question.
It's about 50-50.
A lot are not titled.
Yeah. Okay.
I wasn't sure about that.
And then also, can we touch on briefly the etiquette And it's about 50-50. A lot are not titled. Yeah. Okay. I wasn't sure about that.
And then also, can we touch on briefly the etiquette of why murals don't get tagged as
much as a blank wall?
Yeah.
It goes back to how we started this.
Like the number one rule of creating in the public space, commissioned or non-commissioned,
permission or no permission is you don't go over someone.
It's just a longstanding rule. You know, if a mural goes up, you don't go over someone. It's just a long standing rule.
You know, if a mural goes up, you don't go over it.
It's just respect at the end of the day.
So yeah, you don't go over someone else's work.
It's code.
You don't do that.
And it's generally respected,
although there is some pretty great global exposure
if you tag a still wet Banksy, which happens.
But typically straight artists show mutual respect,
even if it's just not stickering over someone else's sticker, you don't do it. And just in case,
though, there are coatings like mural shield, or there are novel hydro gels that are impregnated
with gentle paint dissolvers, according to the 2021 paper, selective removal of over paintings
from street art using
an environmentally friendly nanostructured fluid loaded in highly retentive hydrogels.
Although other vandalism removal methods can include, news to me, laser ablation, ultrasonication,
plasma spray, thermal spray, dry ice blasting, and soda blasting.
And that removes the top few microns of
overpaint to restore the mural. And is there ever a backlash against funded
public art like well that was a tagging space for the community and now we've
got commissioned art piece so there isn't that available real estate for
local graffiti. Is there ever any tension with that?
Yeah, I think you have to be really intentional
about the spaces you use or the spaces you don't use.
A lot of the murals, probably most of them in Philly,
are on the side of row homes.
You know, Philly has this great architecture for murals.
We have blocks and blocks of row homes, which are on...
What's another word for them? Like brick homes?
I don't know.
And wherever there's an empty
lot or if there's a lot before an intersection, the side of it will have no windows, so it's like
a perfect wall for a mural. A lot of like where street art and graffiti is happening is on abandoned
like warehouse structures and construction materials where it would be like hard or impossible
to create murals. There have been instances like about 10 years ago and part of that project was
it covered a lot of tags and big graffiti pieces along the Amtrak corridor.
According to the project's creator, they talked with folks in the graffiti community to make sure
they didn't go over the tags of anyone who had passed on to protect their tags. Because if you see a tag that's old, there's a lot of respect for that artist
and or potentially the artist or that writer has potentially passed away, unfortunately.
But it's still got a lot of pushback. It was sort of like, this is our spot. This is a graffiti
space. So get out of here. So this was the German-born installation artist Katarina Gross, whose work looks like pigmented
explosions went off and detonated these huge sprays of color over each other.
Part of her idea was to do these big sort of abstract strokes that kind of look like
if a giant came down from outer space and painted this with crayons, painted the samtrack
corridor, big crayons.
So her intent was the graffiti will come back and it will cover this eventually,
but it came back real quick. So there was a lot of tension there. So yeah, I think
just the creators and everyone's got to be on the same page.
Yeah.
And sometimes, you know, folks in the graffiti and street art world just want to do graffiti
and street art, but then some of them want to come into the mural world, want to get jobs and get
opportunities. So find those people too and support them.
I've seen so many artists, so many street artists
go from doing wheat paste or yarn bombs
to doing huge mural projects with mural arts or other folks
and now do both.
It can be a way to get people's attention,
creating street art.
Questions from the audience?
Questions, but before your questions,
let's contribute to a few worthy causes.
In this week, Conrad shows the William Way Center, which provides everything from social
groups, networking events, counseling and support services to art exhibitions and cultural
experiences for the LGBTQIA plus communities throughout greater Philly.
And Conrad says they do incredible work and they also have a whole art gallery.
So they support local artists as well.
And because this episode would not have been possible
without the knowledge and the intros from
squid scientist, community organizer, and street artist,
Dr. Sarah McAnulty,
we're also sending a donation to her nonprofit,
Skype a Scientist,
which matches scientists with groups and classrooms
for free, they're amazing.
And right now, Skype a Scientist needs our help.
So to fund their program in 2025,
Ologies' Toothologist, Sarah McAnulty,
is selling these extremely adorable
Frog Facts Advent Calendars.
Every day you scratch off a sparkly sticker
to reveal a new frog fact.
They're so cute, so wholesome.
And if she sells 5,000,
she can fund Skype a Scientist for all of 2025.
So let's help her.
I really wanna help her.
Get one at squidfacts.net.
They're 25 bucks, squidfacts.net.
Get one for every child in your life.
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They will always know about frogs.
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Okay. Thank you to sponsors of the show who make those donations possible
Okay, so on to your questions, which you can submit via our patreon patreon.com slash allergies
Many of you wanted to know how murals and public art can affect change and I'm looking at you patrons Sarah de Jesus
can affect change. And I'm looking at you patrons, Sarah DeJesus,
Sinead McDonald, Nico Price, Matty Gordy,
Becky Dasassi, Seagrass Scientist, Matt Herschel,
Michelle Boyle, Lisa Saint, and Emily Stauffer.
So revolutions, labor movements, civil rights, pandemics.
How does public art change us as a whole?
A lot of people had questions about murals
and their community.
In Shelby Ruudens' words,
is there a way to measure the value a mural brings to a community and have murals been their community in Shelby Ruudens words, is there a way to measure the value a mural brings
to a community and have murals been used to change
public opinions of certain parts of cities?
How has that looked at critically?
Yeah, that's a really interesting question.
And there are, I mean, certainly there's value, right?
That's why there's public and private funding
for this art form.
There's real value. I mean, colloquially, that's why these business districts will often create these murals and sometimes selfie murals to attract people, right?
Murals, especially in dense quantities, will attract people, right? So these mural districts end up popping up places.
For community, it's different, right? It may be harder to measure, but, you know, in Philly, for example,
I'll give you, we're in Fishtown.
There's a mural here created by Ka Yaini that celebrates Philly's trans community.
Right?
So Ka worked with the Morris Home, which is I think the country's only place where
if you're trans and recovering from addiction, it's the only place you can go,
where they have like housing.
So they're hugely important.
And worked with the organization and folks
from that organization for about a year,
found a wall here in Fishtown.
And now there's this incredible mural that has words
from a lot of the trans folks who participated
in this mural making process.
It says,
we will survive. We are strong. We are frustrated. I'm paraphrasing here because I don't remember
the words exactly. So this is at the Morris home, which is a residential recovery program
specifically serving the transgender and gender expansive community. And the mural reads,
we're trans, we're survivors, we are joyful, We feel rage. We are universal.
But all the different emotions that folks from this community felt. So how do you measure
that? How do you measure, you know, particularly now being a trans person in this world, the
value of like seeing yourself and your community represented in a mural that's not tucked away
anywhere, it's on Frankfurt Avenue, which is a big street here in Philadelphia. It's
huge. Lots of people pass out every single day.
So I imagine that for the folks in that community,
it's really valuable.
I can tell you as a queer man,
I love that we have a gayborhood
with lots of murals that celebrate gay men
and queer culture and LGBTQ rights
and different victories that we've won over the years.
And I think that's where it gets really personal.
It's hard to measure the personal.
I'm not doing lightning round, am I?
No, no, no, no, that's a great answer.
And on the way to get a breakfast sandwich,
we passed a great ad painted on masonry
for fire extinguishers and it was peeling
and it looks like it's been there for a while.
And it's this- Go sign.
I mean, it looks like art at this point, but there's also old advertisements on masonry
buildings in like downtown LA for like cigars, like five cent cigars. And I'm wondering if
something deteriorates enough and it no longer has a purpose to advertise a brand, does it
become like an artifact? Do you know what I mean?
People email me all the time about ghost signs.
Patron John Worcester asked,
have murals replaced the billboards
that used to see on top of buildings?
But as Conrad explains,
those old signs aren't always hastily replaced.
Same with the painted ones on the side of buildings.
I love them.
So like a lot of old advertisements
were like painted onto walls.
And then yeah, when that company is long gone and you know
It's the other caught ghost signs and there's a whole contingent of people who love them. Oh, yeah ghost signs people love them
I never knew there was a word for them. It's so we love nostalgia. Yeah, you know, it's pure it fits in that nostalgia
It's like apocalypse light
Archaeology Michaela Humiston and Torina both wanted to know, how does an artist scale a mural?
Marissa and Hester Dingle wanted to know,
how are designs transferred from the drawing board to a wall?
And Archie George, this is a great question.
What tricks do muralists use to preserve perspective
on this tall vertical surface?
And I've always wanted to know that.
A bunch of people ask that.
Camille Krauss, Olivia Eliason, and Crystal Simons. How do you make a mural where you don't stand back and go,
everyone looks a little fucked up here? Unless that's the point. Or maybe it's the point if you
did fuck it up. That's a great question. How have we not talked about this yet? So there are a couple
of ways to make murals. You can paint directly onto the walls. We talked about before with spray paint or outdoor paint.
You can also do it with something that's colloquially,
well, I'm really stuck on that word,
known as parachute cloth, which is basically wallpaper.
So if you paint directly onto the wall,
most people will project.
Very few murals are gigantic.
Most are a couple of stories tall
and you will go out at night.
This is what I'm doing tonight, by the way, at Front Street with our muralists there.
What?
You go at night.
Come with me for a field trip episode at this location.
That episode will be out very soon.
You project onto the wall, you trace it out,
and then when all the tracing's done,
you can start painting during the day,
basically coloring the lines.
Mm-hmm.
That's the most common way to do murals like that.
Parachute cloth, on the other hand,
is large sheets of cloth
that you can take into a studio.
You could project on the parachute cloth.
You could print out pieces of paper and trace from the paper.
The difference between parachute cloth and painting directly on the wall
is often, there's two reasons why you might do it.
Painting directly on the wall is cheaper,
but it can deteriorate quicker,
especially if you don't have that final clear coat
that goes on top that protects it from weather and sun.
Parachute cloth on their hand can be more durable,
can last a bit longer.
You'll still need that clear coat on top.
But what it also allows is for if your mural program
is more community oriented,
what you can do is you can have the artists work
for however long they work to create the design.
And then the community, the neighbors,
whoever helped influence the mural
can come out and paint it with the artists.
So in Philly, there's a lot of community paint days
for that reason.
And there's also kind of a fun aside here.
If the neighbors paint the mural themselves,
they're less likely to complain about it when it goes up.
So one of the things that's, you're never going to satisfy everyone, right?
Like art is very subjective.
So the idea of creating permanent or semi-permanent public art on your block, like someone's bound
to not like it.
So if you invite everyone out to be a part of the process, they're more likely to like
it when it goes up.
They're like, I made it.
I love it.
Kind of subversive, but I love it.
Yes, exactly.
I did this little piece in the corner.
I did that rose. Yeah. I'm the artist., but I love it. Yes, exactly. I did this little piece in the corner. I did that rose, yeah.
I'm the artist, therefore I love it.
So right before we recorded this,
Dr. Sarah McAnulty had mobilized a bunch of locals
to help paint a mural in her neighborhood.
And the pictures, it looked like nice, sweaty fun.
10 out of 10, find a muralist to help out,
make some friends.
And Adam Weaver wanted to know though,
how do you connect your murals to the communities
that they're displayed in?
Do you speak to people on the street?
Do you host town hall sessions?
Do you sit at a bar and collect ideas?
As well as, let's see, Spencer James Parks says,
if you wanted to propose a mural to your city,
what department of the city do you have to say, hey, I have
a great idea, I got a wall over here, put something cool on it?
Oh, this is a great question. And it's really going to depend on your city. So there are
plenty of cities that have mural programs or art commissioners. It's really different
everywhere. If you live in a city or a town that doesn't have some sort of art commissioner,
doesn't have like a mural program
or something like that, your best bet would be to reach out to your city council person,
your local representative, and have a conversation with them. Most city council people, you know,
especially if you have a good one, are really open to listen to this. There's also the
potential that there's a private organization in your city or town that's doing it that even
your city council person could probably point you to. Okay, cool.
Lizzie Carr wants to know what's up with those butterfly wing murals.
I feel like every other business I go to has one on the wall.
Instagram.
Instagram changed the world.
All of a sudden there were artists that would create stuff that could come down overnight.
So like, you know, when I first started the blog in 2011, like Instagram was very new
and it was very sort of traditional street art styles, lots of stickers.
In Philly, we have this huge sticker culture,
a lot of handmade stickers.
We pace.
But around 2013, when Instagram was really hot,
you saw artists take more risks
because they knew that even if their piece was up
just for a couple of hours,
they would get photographed a ton,
especially if it was like big and interesting enough.
You know, one example of that is a yarn bomber here in Philly
named Ishnitz, who famously yarn bombed the Rocky statue, which is outside.
I'm sure you heard of it.
Yeah.
Outside of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
She yarn bombed a sweater on him that said, go see the art.
And of course it was very non-commissioned.
I like that language.
And so it got ripped off very quickly quickly but enough people photographed it where those
photos now live forever online and that's the weird conversation we're going to have
is like now the public space is the internet so like a street art quote-unquote installation
that takes place in the real world could have a longer life in the public digital space
after it's created than when it's actually up. It's a different interesting way to think
about street art where you can take more chances.
Yeah, on that note, Greg Wallach wants to note,
does breaking the law matter
if you're making things really cute?
What kind of trouble with the law
could a muralist get into?
Or is that a thing where a cop might show up and say,
I have bigger problems than this?
Yeah, well, let's be real here.
Okay, so they use Lord Muralist, and I would use mural
as on the commission side.
So if you're making a mural, if you're making public art,
it's commissioned, so you have approval.
I think your questioner is asking about,
is it on commission side?
Yeah, it is illegal to do stuff without permission
in the public space, even if it's an abandoned building or construction material,
depending on where you're at and sometimes who you are,
you might get more criticism from a police officer
that's driving by or a wall owner.
Even in Philly where street art is pretty beloved,
I've been out with artists where someone will come up and try to stop them and usually the artists will just stop.
So yeah, there's definitely risk involved there
and you gotta know your city and your town to know it.
I mentioned before that in Philadelphia
and a lot of cities, a lot of street artists,
non-commissioned artists, graffiti writers
will go on abandoned buildings or construction materials
often because there's usually like, eh, do it, kind of mentality around those spaces,
especially in big cities where, as your questioner alludes to, there are more important issues to
address. You know, if your concern is about a sticker on an abandoned building, why not go
question the person who abandoned the building and say, why don't you reinvest in the city,
as opposed to worrying about the sticker?
Can you imagine if we had an episode on abandoned buildings, Syke?
We do. It's the Dome Ecology episode, which we will link in the show notes.
An entire episode about abandoned buildings.
So definitely like it's not without risk doing that noncommissioned stuff.
That's why I'm particularly in favor of places like free wall spaces.
So in Philly right now, we have this place at 5th and South
Street that is a free wall space.
It's a construction wall that's put up around where a fire
happened on a famous cheese stick place, Jim's.
And the Neighborhood Association and the wall and the building
owner has given approval for street artists and
graffiti writers to come out and do whatever they want to
the construction material
while reconstruction of the building's happening
for the next however long, couple months a year.
I love that.
You know, and the walls become this magnet for artists
and photographers and people over the last couple of months.
Okay, so I made fun of LA earlier
for having too many photo op murals,
but I shouldn't because as they say, no cap,
LA actually a bonkers artsy place. It's great.
And LA has been called the mural capital of the world too, but both Philly and LA have Wikipedia
footnotes acknowledging that the other one gets called that. So I'm going to just consider them
sister cities in that distinction. And in LA, we got a lot of blank stucco that can host people's dreams and visions.
But we also have a lot of very expensive real estate that sits empty while the cost of living
soars out of reach for like everyone.
NBC4, people in action here.
Spring, the graffiti towers in downtown LA.
It is a crime, a violation of city law, but some call it art. So very rich developers, bankrupting luxury projects means, I guess, free wall space for
those brave enough to confront their fear of heights and also potential arrest.
So if you are in a city or a town where maybe there aren't free wall spaces, maybe you
could talk to your city council person and fight for them.
We want to have these places to reflect ourselves.
And look, you can set guardrails there too, right?
Like you can have rules for your free wall space.
No derogatory language, no curse words, no nudity.
You can make the rules, whatever they are.
Cause certainly we wouldn't want someone to put something up
that was harmful to anyone.
But yeah, I think the more free wall spaces
in cities and towns, the better.
And I feel like this dovetails with a question
a few people had.
Hannah Boyd asked, how is it that some street artists
like Banksy are praised for their work
when other artists are viewed as vandals?
And Tim and Ashley Flintoff asked,
does the difference relate to issues of racism and classism,
especially in urban environments?
Michelle Lee asked that as well.
And Gemma asked, how has anti-black racism
affected black muralists?
What are the conversations like, you know,
in different cities and also just as time goes on
since you've been doing this?
Yeah, absolutely.
This is like any sort of graffiti or street art panel
I watch or participate in, you hear that often
from artists and writers who are black that
they get more stops, more criticism from police, unfortunately.
So we've talked about the same factor in many episodes, like wildlife ecology with Karina
Newsom about doing field work in the marshes in Georgia and being forced to stay on plantations as university housing.
And check out the Black AF in STEM episode that was sparked by an incident in Central Park
in which a woman named Amy Cooper verbally assaulted birder Christian Cooper, no relation to each other, with slurs.
So it's not just in art, this is obviously systemic. And absolutely.
That is why, you know, folks like Banksy and Obey
were able to kind of get away with it
and potentially other artists weren't.
One of the reasons why I'm really in favor
of this free wall space, right?
Like, we deserve to have spaces in our public space
that we can be creative on.
The other thing I would say too is make sure, you know,
if you're interested in this, which I hope everyone is,
find out who's making the public art in your town
and make sure that they're selecting
from a diverse array of artists as well.
Make sure that it's not just all white men
who are getting the public art sculptures in your town,
that your monuments aren't just to white men.
I mean, that's a whole nother conversation.
And that the artists making those monuments are diverse.
It's another way to sort of push back
at this systemic racism that's involved
in sort of all many parts of American life,
all parts of American life, including this part.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah, I mean, look around.
That's another reason to be curious
about the public art in your town,
the murals in your town.
Not only what are they depicting,
what stories are they telling,
but what stories are missing from the town you're in.
You know, we live in Philadelphia where
I think we have a really good mural program
that has done a lot of great work
when it comes to like diversity and inclusion.
But when you look at our monuments, for example,
there are almost no monuments to women.
And I don't know if this is a fact,
but women were in history, did you know that?
We've been around. Did you know that?
We've been around.
Been around.
Seriously?
Publicly or mostly just making soup at home?
So in Philly, it's just that one flag, I think the one woman did, I forget her name.
Mrs. Ross.
Betsy.
Good for her.
And that's actually where you could kind of like, things get a little blurry.
There's the Betsy Ross house, but there's a project called Monument Lab
that I encourage everyone to look at.
They're doing a lot of really great work.
They started in Philly, now they're around the world,
asking the question about what is an appropriate monument
for the current age?
What is an appropriate monument for your city right now?
Just literally holds a different weight
in our physical space, in maybe how we honor it or pay,
it feels heavy.
Now that's particularly interesting here in Philadelphia.
We live in a city that's majority black.
So the fact that most of our monuments
don't represent any of that history is really a problem
that will slowly, hopefully be fixed.
A Harriet Tubman monument will be built
here in Philadelphia soon.
I think there's a commission open for that.
Yeah, but I think there's like three or four monuments
to women, bronze statues of women in Philadelphia
from history, very little.
Meanwhile, hundreds of men.
Well, at least there's a couple.
There's like a dozen to Benjamin Franklin alone.
Jesus, Louisa.
So that's the past, but what's ahead,
asked patrons, Kasia Sword and Sarah Bowen.
And looking to the future, some people ask questions
about the future of murals.
Katie Stalter wanted to know what role might technology play
in creating large murals? And I was talking to Sarah McAnulty about
QR codes and murals, being able to find more information out. Are we seeing any technological
changes? What's coming next?
Yeah, that's a great question. So I'm of two minds of this. Certainly, we've seen technology
assist in helping people understand murals or explore murals in different ways. So QR codes might lead people to a page that has maybe audio
interviews. You know, if the mural is about some history, you can maybe click
the QR code and go to somewhere where you could hear archival audio of some
interview with some person from that piece of history that's being documented
in the mural and it can add that extra layer. Those could be really interesting.
There's also like augmented reality murals.
There's a new mural in Philly right now
where if you download a certain app
and you put it up to the mural,
the mural will come out and be all kinds of 3D.
And this is an augmented reality for the mural
Dreams, Diaspora, and Destiny on Lansdowne Avenue in Philly.
And the artist's statement reads that 3D visual elements
extend and enhance the experience
of an otherwise flat work of art.
And spatial audio is tied to every augmented object, providing a narrative theme with music
and sound bites as the space is explored.
So the digital element can add more texture and dimensionality or context if you choose
to opt in and look at it.
But you don't need to.
And Conrad says that's the point.
The point in the future of murals is that IRL experience,
that in real life experience, paint on a wall,
how does it make you feel?
We're so overloaded with content every day.
The last thing I want to do is go to a mural
and then click a QR code and watch 500 videos.
I'm already on TikTok enough.
You know, like, so I think the future of murals
is what it's been,
which is not only paint on the wall,
but the future might be who are making these murals, right?
We were just talking about diversity
when it comes to murals.
Hopefully there's more diversity.
If your city or town has not had a mural program
that's been very inclusive in the histories
or the artists that it hires,
hopefully it gets more inclusive.
But yeah, the future of murals is the future of humanity
because all it does is reflect us.
And your advice to muralists,
toss an ad on there, toss a handle on there
so people can find you.
Sure, so you can find me on Instagram, TikTok,
and Twitter at Street Steps.
So it's streets with an S, D-E-P-T,
like short for department.
Okay, what about for muralists?
Do you think that they should put their handles on things?
Yeah.
Yeah. So people can find you.
We live in that Instagram era and people want to credit the artists.
A lot of murals will have plaques on the side,
which sometimes might include that handle,
but most murals I'm a part of curating,
the artists will include their handles
because it's too important.
People are taking photos of the mural.
Most people are not going up to the plaque.
So you might miss it. Just have it in the corner. Why not?
Okay. That's a good idea. What is something that the public gets wrong about murals and
public art a lot? That they're permanent.
That's so existential. Yeah.
Because nothing is. You know, nothing is, period.
So when it comes to paint on walls, murals, development can make a mural go away.
Time and weather can make a mural go away.
Disinterest from the community can make it go away.
Murals, even if they have all the best materials in the world applied to them, that coat I'm
talking about, the parachute cloth, will still need to be touched up every decade or so.
So if a decade goes by, two decades go by,
and the neighbors, no one really cares about anymore,
might refresh.
In that sense, murals can be that semi-permanent stamp in time
where they're gonna come and go.
Some might last, like Common Threads, for example,
the one we talked about earlier from Meg Saligman,
was so beloved that when it started to show signs of deterioration
Fundraising happened. It was updated. We don't say repainted but uh, it was fixed
Mm-hmm, and then a building was gonna be built in front of it
The neighbors freaked out started a petition got whatever the developer changed the plans of the building so that the mural would still be able
To be seen. Oh my god
Now since that developers lost funding and he's gone away. So maybe a new developer will come in and do the same thing, yeah, most murals are going to come and go.
Well what's the hardest part do you think about creating a mural?
Is it prepping the wall?
That's what my guess would be, prepping the wall or having people throw milk cartons at
you if they don't like your work.
Most of the projects I curate and work on, I'm working with artists who've never created
a mural before and it's their first mural.
And most of the projects are temporary,
but even in the temporary situations,
the biggest concern is what is the mural about?
So even if you have a lot of freedom,
some projects need to represent one thing or the other, right?
Like if we're creating a mural in the gayborhood,
maybe it's themed around queer history,
but a lot of the projects I work on,
we're building walls somewhere,
and maybe the general theme is voting, go.
Oh my God, I don't know what to say.
It's always that.
I think the most challenging part is like, what do I want to say to the world?
It's what we all do every day.
I'm on this podcast, you create a podcast.
Goes back to that, like, what are you wearing every day?
What do you want to say to the world with your actions,
with what you choose to put out there?
You know, most people have social media and post things every day.
Like, what do you want to say to the world?
So I think some people maybe are less intentional or thoughtful about it, shoes to put out there. You know, most people have social media and post things every day. Like, what do you want to say to the world?
I think some people maybe are less intentional
or thoughtful about it, but artists really are.
I mean, I think they feel that weight of like,
not only will people judge me, but just like,
I have this opportunity, what do I want to use it for?
What about your favorite thing about murals?
I really love how, you know,
I think ads in the public space work
and advertisers spend millions of dollars on them
because they make you feel things
and feelings change our behavior.
When we, Swoon is a really incredible artist
who came from the street art world in New York City
in the 90s.
She did We Pace back then, got very famous from it
and now does projects around the globe. I interviewed her for my podcast, I think in the 90s. She did We Pace back then, got very famous from it and now does projects around the
globe. I interviewed her for my podcast, I think in the first season. Swoon, very incredible person.
And she said something really interesting that has always stuck with me on a panel once where she said,
you know, take climate change for example. We know it's here. The climate crisis is here. We
know the numbers. We know the science, and yet we still are doing so
little to change the future that's on our doorstep.
Numbers and stats and articles and journalism are so important, but they rarely make us
feel things in our heart and in our souls.
So art can do that, right?
Art can make you feel something and then that feeling that will change your behavior.
For more on the intersection of art and climate you can check out the nonprofit
FunctionalMagic.org which makes these gorgeous collectible gig posters with
climate messages and we have a whole interview with founder Andy Hall who
because of that episode and you Oligites was able to raise $25,000 for rainforest
conservation on his first print run.
So we also have a field trip episode with him coming up.
So functionalmagic.org.
But yes, dream big and don't quit, as they say.
So when I think about the projects I want to create
with like the streets department walls part of my project,
you know, I think about the voting project.
How can we create art that can make people feel things, right?
Feeling's really important. And when we we feel things we change. I wonder if
there's anyone listening who's like, I'm gonna make a mural. I hope so. You know
and can I put that in another point of view too? I don't know if I mentioned this but I'm a
gay man, 38. So when I was growing up and I was in high school no one even talked
about gay. It was really hard to come out. Luckily I had great parents. Like my
experience was fine. I lived in a big city, it was pretty accepting of it.
But the idea of gay marriage was insane.
And it was never gonna happen.
Not that it was insane,
but just that it was insane that it was never gonna happen.
And the idea of like gay rights, that a politician,
whatever, be on the side of gay people was so outlandish.
But over the last like 15 years, we saw like modern family.
And I know it's like, you could roll your eyes at it
because like they couldn't even kiss
for the first couple of seasons.
It's so annoying.
Mitchell, do you take Cameron to be your husband?
I do.
But, you know, if you live in a small town
or anyone who votes, you might not know a lot of gay people.
You might know one, you might know none.
So being able to see through art the experience of gay life,
out of nowhere opened up the floodgates
for people's emotions towards queer people, towards gay people.
And now we have, like, overwhelming approval
for gay marriage and for gay rights, generally speaking.
So that's the value that we can create
with art in the public space.
You know, the public space, advertisers use it
to sell us talent and all, God bless talent and all,
if you wanna work with me, let me know.
But we can also use the public space
to share the lived experiences of folks from our community,
from the folks around us,
and maybe open up our hearts, minds,
and souls a little bit.
You know, what is the experience
of being elderly in this country?
It seems, from what I hear, very isolating.
Can we create public art that reminds people like,
hey, there are elderly people in your community that might be alone right now.
Maybe you would volunteer at some community center
or make a friend who's outside of your age group.
Why don't we have older friends, you know?
Maybe a mural depicting the lack of murals to black and brown histories in your city,
whatever it might be, you know?
I think that that's the power of art.
Art is really powerful, you know?
And I think it's so wonderful that you are celebrating it
and cataloging it and amplifying it.
I will leave us with one last listener question.
Gordon Haas wants to know,
Alli Ward, I assume you've talked with
toothologist Sarah McAnulty. She's
working on a mural in Philadelphia right now with muralist Sean Marterana.
That's right.
Yeah. Have I talked to Sarah about it?
Yeah. Hey, we did a mural. It's in Fishtown.
I just thought it was funny that that was particularly mentioned.
That's a mural that's supposed to teach us like, hey, this is our river.
Don't put stuff down the drain.
You know?
So yeah, the mural reminding us like, oh yeah, the river's right there.
This is what's there.
Life is precious.
Thank you so much for letting me ask you 1 million questions forever.
I couldn't have enjoyed this more.
This was great.
I really enjoyed this interview.
And yeah, I encourage people, go be creative and don't put that wall between you and the
art.
Art is nothing but feelings.
Go feel stuff, go feel stuff.
You're the best.
Yay.
So ask articulate people, artsy questions and vice versa.
And thank you so much to Conrad
for letting us ask you so many
and for letting me tag along
for that upcoming field trip episode
to watch some local muralists doing their thing
on a summer street in Philly.
And thank you again to Dr. Sarah McAnulty of Skype a Scientist.com for
the intro and for hosting me in your house in Philly while we galavanted
around town on some science safaris. You can go to squidfacts.net to get a
handcrafted frog facts advent calendar. Let's sell 5,000 because someone told
her there's no way she could do it and for 25 bucks you can help prove that
jerk wrong. So you can also find Conrad's work at StreetsDepartment.com and we'll link the
charities in the show notes and we have more links up at our website
Alliward.com slash ologies slash toycographology which is all linked in the show notes.
We are at ologies on Instagram and X and I'm at Alliward on both. We have
kin-friendly episodes up on a new feed with a spinoff show called Smologies,
which you can find wherever you get podcasts.
They are classroom safe, kin-friendly episodes.
We put them up every week.
There's a new green logo designed
by Portland artist Bonnie Dutch,
and you can seek her out for your custom art needs.
Bonnie Dutch is working on a new mural right now in Portland
for Uptown Properties on Southwest Capitol Highway.
You can go check it out, Wave to her as she's painting.
Bonnie Dutch also does amazing customs
like pet portraits and illustrations.
So B-O-N-I, Dutch.
Also Hay Arden, who works at Uptown Properties.
Erin Talbert admins our Allogy's podcast Facebook group.
Aveline Malik makes our professional transcripts.
Kelly Ardwyer does our website.
Noelle Dilworth is our scheduling producer.
Susan Hale is managing director and did so much extra research and fact-checking for this
episode. Thank you, Susan. Jake Chafee is our wonderful assistant editor and
putting it all together as Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio. Nick Thorburn
of the band Islands made the theme music and if you stick around to the end of
the episode I tell you a secret. And so I'm recording this in a closet in New
York. It's so noisy outside my hotel room but I'm in the closet and I'm
surrounded by pillows. So I came out here because the UN is meeting up in New York right now and
there are a bunch of climate events around it but when I was asked to come
out here and do this fireside chat for the Wildlife Justice Commission this
week I was like I'm not gonna get on a plane and go do a climate event that
seems counterintuitive. However it is also our favorite diabetologist Dr. Mike
Natter, his wedding is this weekend
so I was like okay I can pair that and I'm also doing a couple different
interviews while I'm out here one of which will be up first of October so I'm
having a little bit of a gallimanting around New York this weekend and hence
I'm recording this in a closet. And the other thing the other secret about this
is that we actually did this interview not this past summer but the summer
before it was right before I got pneumonia and went into the hospital.
And if you listen to our recent episode on suicidology in which we discuss mental health,
I took a little break just to chill out and get my stress levels down.
So this episode has been a long time in the making and I'm really stoked to get it up
finally.
But I've got a bunch of things I have to go to this week and I did not have time to
dye my hair before I left LA.
So I had to pack my hair dye with me and now I've got to go and ask the hotel folks if they have any old rags I can use on my hair or
some paper towels. And the reason why I know that I can do that is because I've had to do it before.
Many times I have left LA with hair dye in my luggage and been like, well,
I'll do it on the road. We'll do it live. Okay. Bye-bye. Hacodermatology. Homology.
Cryptozoology.
Litology.
Nanotechnology.
Meteorology.
Phytophatology.
Nephology.
Seriology.
Pseudology.
I need to see all the murals.