Osbr Final Project
Osbr Final Project
Osbr Final Project
Ava Perego
History. Culture. Art. Old South Baton Rouge’s foundation originated and thrived on
these three things throughout the 1960s and ‘70s until desegregation broke up parts of the
neighborhood. Founders of the Museum of Public Art and The Walls Project decided in 2012
that it was time to capitalize on the rich potential that OSBR’s original foundation left. They did
Dr. Kevin Harris, a local dentist, founded the Museum of Public Art, an open-air building
decorated with murals, in 2012. His inspiration came from graffiti writer James Conti, also
known as VE, from New York City. The OSBR community is in a continuous battle with land
abandonment and blighted properties. People, like Civic Association President Christine
“It may look like something is blighted from the outside, but you don’t know what it
This “inside” that Sparrow talks about is the historical and cultural presence the OSBR
community fights to preserve. Harris thought that public art would show outsiders the beauty
“What many people see as graffiti can be used by communities for cultural awareness
and economic development,” Harris said during a Ted x LSU Talk this past March.
This cultural awareness lies within the history of the community, which Harris
commissioned artists from across the world to paint. Graffiti artists James Top, Part-One and
King Bee painted the first mural in 2012, and it can still be seen today. It shows a variety of
Baton Rouge culture so that it can resonate with anyone who sees it.
“The reason for the murals was to give us a little faith in what looks so blighted,”
Sparrow said.
The 40 murals that went up in OSBR from 2012 to 2014 through the Museum of Public
Art provided that faith by portraying pivotal historical events like artist Wayne Johnson’s mural
“Bus Boycott” located on Thomas Delpit Drive. On St. Joseph and Terrace streets, the struggle
of African-Americans is painted on three different houses telling the story of their journey.
The murals remind the community of the struggles African-Americans overcame, and
the legacy they left. The paintings give residents faith that one day OSBR will thrive how it once
did, and encourages them to continue the legacy set by their predecessors.
“It picks the curiosity of young people who are in their teens or early twenties that
haven’t had a connection. They say, ‘Who is that? Why are they important?’” Ed Pratt, a
columnist for The Advocate and OSBR native, said. “They can ask their parents, ‘Who are these
Harris says that using art in OSBR drives out darkness. He witnessed this first hand when
the Museum of Public Art painted the back of the historic Lincoln Theatre on Myrtle Walk
Street.
“Before the mural went up, people were tagging the walls and using it as a memorial for
slain drug dealers, and it had a negative vibe to it. When the mural went up, there was no more
tagging, and people looked at it with a sense of respect,” Harris said during his Ted x LSU Talk.
Despite the positive aesthetic energy the Museum of Public Art brought to OSBR, some
people do not have the same appreciation that Harris and Sparrow have for the artwork.
“You have some people that don’t like that stuff period. They don’t like anything that is
painted on the walls. They think it’s a distraction,” Pratt said. “They don’t want artwork to be on
one side of the wall, and the other side of the wall to be collapsing.”
One historical mural at South Boulevard and Eddie Robinson Drive that showed the
1972 riot that took place in South Baton Rouge, was painted over because some members of
“This is history. History is not sweet. How did Jesus die? Did he die sweet? No. He died
The Museum of Public Art stopped commissioning artists in 2014 due to a lack of
outside funding. Sparrow and Harris remain hopeful that the project will start back up again in
the future.
“As Jesse Jackson said, ‘keep hope alive,’” Harris said. “[The murals] illustrate that with
Even though the Museum of Public Art stopped funding murals, The Walls Project has
continued to recruit artists to decorate walls within South Baton Rouge and OSBR. This
nonprofit also focuses on diminishing blight, preserving history and connecting different
communities.
“Merging artists from different cities and giving them a canvas, a public canvas, to speak
on is very important,” Kristen Downing, a painter for The Walls Project, said.
Though the two institutions are separate entities, both keep education and preservation
at the heart of their messages. Over 700 members from the Baton Rouge community have
worked on more than 90 murals with The Walls Project. The Walls Project also invites artists
from other communities to bring change to OSBR and South Baton Rouge using their talent.
Downing painted a second bus boycott mural during Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend
in 2018. She taught students about painting murals, the history behind the boycott and then
“I like to see other things and be inspired by what is going on in other cities,” Downing,
who is originally from New Orleans, said. “It [the art] tells a lot of stories.”
These stories in OSBR are the history of the community. Moments like Martin Luther
King Jr.’s visit to OSBR to discuss the bus boycott with Reverend TJ Jemison have been
Harris said that these artists consider themselves writers first, and that is what they
came here to do. They wrote a fleeting history through paint, reminding a community everyday