FEDERICO GARCÍA LORCA MURAL #2 – CUIDAD SIN SUEÑO/NOCTURNO DE BROOKLYN BRIDGE
2012
CAMILLE PERROTTET, designer/lead artist
JANE WEISSMAN, project coordinator/artist
KAYLA WELBANKS, assistant project coordinator
Principal artists: Jules Hollander, Nick Pelafas, Welbanks
Artists: Hagar Aviram, Janet Braun-Reinitz, Misa Dayson, M-T Hausig, Alison Kruvant, Rosemarie Schiller, David Wilson
Young Artists: Eric, Wilson
Himrod Street at Knickerbocker Avenue, Brooklyn, NY
8’ x 89’, acrylic on brick and concrete
Photos © Jane Weissman, Camille Perrottet
The second of the four Federico García Lorca Murals, it is sited directly across Knickerbocker Avenue from Lorca Mural #3. Begun in 2011, the three-year project celebrates the multiculturalism of the people of Bushwick, Brooklyn. The murals were inspired by the poem Sleepless City / Brooklyn Bridge Nocturne by Spanish poet and dramatist Federico García Lorca (1898-1936). Each mural includes a stanza from Lorca’s poem, in both Spanish and English translations, as well as a feature of the poet’s face — in this mural, his ear.
Lorca lived in New York for nine months from June 1929 through March 1930, sharing the loneliness and alienation experienced by immigrants new to the city. These feelings are expressed in the poem written during this period. English and Spanish versions of the poem can be found at here and here.
Bushwick’s residents and workers determined a major design element in each mural. In Lorca Mural #2, dots on the silhouetted map of “A World Without Borders” indicate the places of origin of Himrod Street’s residents.
Additional photographs and information about The Federico García Lorca Murals can be found here.