Artist Tyree Guyton has waged a personal war on urban blight, transforming a broken down
neighbourhood on
Detroit’s
East Side
street into a living art gallery.
Geraldine Royds looks at The Heidelberg Project.
Prior to becoming an artist, Tyree Guyton worked as a firefighter, an autoworker
and served in the army. Following his stint in the military, Tyree came back to his childhood neighbourhood
and was astonished to see that it look like a bombsite. The area had begun to deteriorate
after the 1967 riots in
At first, he and his grandfather painted a series of houses on Heidelberg Street with bright dots of many colors, decorating the empty lots and
attaching discarded objects to the houses.
Tyree worked on the project every day with the children on the block using
art to build a sense of community as well as to brighten up the neighbourhood. It was a constantly evolving work that
transformed a hard-core inner-city area where people were afraid to walk, even
in daytime, into the city's first indoor and outdoor museum. At the other end
of the street, there are crumbling houses, rubble and rubbish, with no people
in sight while
The City of
Tyree Guyton is recognized as an artist, educator and community leader. He and his partner Jenenne Whitfield, have spent twenty years raising awareness about urban decay, offering a new approach to the problem of ‘shrinking cities’ and inspiring young people to take ownership of their neighborhoods.
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