- Source: Lincoln Street Art Park
- Linkin Park
- Cakupan Google Street View
- Universitas Anglia Ruskin
- Daftar museum dan institusi budaya di Kota New York
- Kota New York
- Washington, D.C.
- Central Park Tower
- Kingston upon Hull
- Perang Dunia II
- San Francisco
- Lincoln Street Art Park
- Lincoln Park
- Warren Motor Car Company Building
- Lincoln Park, Chicago
- Recycle Here!
- Lincoln Park, Newark
- Ryan Doyle (artist)
- 66th Street–Lincoln Center station
- Abraham Lincoln: The Head of State
- Lincoln Street
The Lincoln Street Art Park is a sculpture garden and outdoor art gallery located in the Northwest Goldberg neighborhood in Detroit, Michigan. The Lincoln Street Art Park includes murals, street art, site-specific installations made from salvaged materials, and a stage. It is behind the Recycle Here! drop-off facility, and parts of the park pass under a railroad viaduct.
The property includes the Warren Motor Car Company Building a once Lincoln Motor Car Company factory, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2020.
History
The Lincoln Street Art Park started as a 2011 community effort to clean up an industrial, vacant area on the Recycle Here! recycling center property. The efforts to remove illegally-dumped material from the lot were organized by Matthew Naimi, James Willer, and Michelle Demercuria. Some of the material from the vacant lot was salvaged and used for Park building materials, including pathways and a bonfire pit. Organizers then worked with local muralists and sculpture artists to refurbish existing structures, and developed spaces for outdoor recreation and cultural events. A Kickstarter campaign helped support the initial creation of the park.
On October 30, 2011, the park opened under the name, “The Lincoln Street Sculpture Garden”. The park was renamed to Lincoln Street Art Park in 2012. Over the course of the Park's history, community members continue to organize and steer events/programming, with the requirement that activities within the space adopt 3 principles: Never exclude anyone from a gathering;
Never sell anything or charge any money on the property; and “Share your candy."
In 2017, the nonprofit Make Art Work was formed by organizer Matthew Naimi, to give structure to the ideas of community-space making and sustainability. In 2020, the Lincoln Street Art Park closed for remodeling and redesign, and was reopened in July, 2023.
In 2022, work began on Dreamtroit, a mixed-use affordable living complex located on the property. The development involves building a new structure within the Warren Motor Car Company Building.
Recycle Here!
Recycle Here! is a recycling center and drop-off facility located at the Lincoln Street Art Park, that opened in 2007.
In 2010 the 501c3, Green Living Science, was created by Recycle Here! to extend the work of the recycling center into educational outreach in the Detroit Public Schools and other public programs.
Art and Installations
Artistic projects at Lincoln Street Art Park are commonly made of salvaged materials, some sourced from the Recycle Here! recycling center.
"The content of the park is constantly changing and as a result generates a new urban landscape constantly in flux where the public can enjoy some of the salvaged materials that Recycle Here offers [as] a medium to the local creative community."
= Permanent works
=Freak Beacon (2017), Artists: Ryan Doyle, Ben Wolfe, Jon Isbell, and Zeph Alcala. Brendan Burke designed permanent lighting for the installation.
= Former/temporary works
=Metal sculptures by Robert Sestock, Sean Hages, John Sauve, and Eddy Bullock
Murals by Malt, WC Bevan, Carl Oxley III, Ghostbeard, Bana Kablan, and TEADout
Reception
The Lincoln Street Art Park has been described by press sources as an accessible, autonomous space focused on encouraging self-expression and community engagement. Playground Detroit called the space, “one of the city’s most beloved destinations for not only recyclers, but artists and creatives."
Brian Brown discussed the city of Detroit's support of “neighborhood-based public art" as part of a city-wide urban planning and revitalization strategy.
See also
Recycle Here!
Warren Motor Car Company Building
References
External links
Make Art Work Detroit website
Recycle Here! webpage
Lincoln Street Art Park - Atlas Obscura