A Guide to the Best and Brightest New Street Art in Dallas
Dallas has long been an enclave for this impactful yet temporary art form. One of the earliest street artists — pop surrealist Ron English — started tagging abandoned billboards over a freeway overpass. And what was once a secretive, illegal practice is now welcomed by businesses that offer up walls from the Design District to Deep Ellum, the Tin District to the East Quarter.
In past years, organizations such as Wild West Mural Fest have lent space to established painters and brand-new talent. The theme of this fall’s fest was “Celebrating Art Out West,” with 12 new walls serving up an “Old West” vibe, according to festival organizer and muralist Will Heron.
And Heron is thrilled to see the recent work of superstars like Ron English and Shepard Fairey popping up on local walls alongside the up-and-comers of the Wild West Mural Fest.
“I’m a proponent of supporting the local scene, which is why I do the mural festival,” Heron says. “But I’m also a proponent of bringing some of these bigwigs to our city. I think it’s super cool we don’t have to go to Miami or New York to see Ron English’s work. Shepard Fairey inspired me a decade ago even to question what public art and street art are. It’s only going to get more young students inspired to ask questions and want to know more about what it means to be a street artist.”
Use this guide to take your gang to see the best on view (and capture them for the ‘Gram) before they disappear. A
Jeremy Biggers, “Dream”
3005 Commerce St.
Muralist and fine artist Jeremy Biggers’ career has exploded recently, with walls commissioned everywhere from Houston to Washington, D.C. In the latter city, a piece representing his 4-year-old daughter Tesla was painted over for no real reason in the space of a day. When Biggers sent out an open call to create more murals in his hometown, Gianna Madrini of the nonprofit Deep Ellum 100 answered, giving him a new home for an iteration of the D.C. mural — his little girl turned superhero.
“I wanted to represent people that grew up like me who didn’t really get to see art in public spaces,” he explains. “It’s that aspirational aspect of a kid who hasn’t lived long enough to be cynical, so they see themselves as heroes and believe in the mythos of superheroes. It’s a reminder to never give up your dreams and keep going.”
Ron English, “Texas Tantrum Tot and Friends”
Good Latimer Expressway and Elm Street
One could argue that English invented the concept of street art in Dallas, so this vibrant Deep Ellum mural is a well-deserved homecoming for the legendary pop surrealist painter. The piece shows off only a few of English’s vast array of characters.
Shepard Fairey, “While Supplies Last”
2200 Commerce St.
Shepard Fairey made his street art imprint on the Dallas scene more than a decade ago. Still, his latest mural, “While Supplies Last,” cements the East Quarter’s status as the city’s neighborhood du jour, as well as highlighting his passion for causes he cares about (in this case, the environment). Created in conjunction with his current Shepard Fairey: Backward Forward show at the Dallas Contemporary, “While Supplies Last” offers a minimal palette of red, teal, yellow and black. The stamp at the bottom of the work references the limited availability of natural plants, but it could also reference the short lifespan of public art.
Will Heron (aka Wheron)
3203 McKinney Ave.
As an artist liaison for Meow Wolf, Heron was given a chance to create a black-and-white landscape as a present to the city from the arts organization (which will open in Grapevine next year).
“It’s actually a gift that Meow Wolf is giving to the city before they come here,” says Heron of the piece. “And it’s also playing off of my motifs of surrealist plant life. Ultimately, it’s a representation of growing up in Texas as a queer male and what that means. The muddy waters of Texas still allow a lot of queer people to bloom and grow.”
Raytrill Harvey, Anthony Chavez, Cat Rigdon
2720 Bataan St.
Newbie Wild West muralists Harvey, Chavez and Rigdon chose to adorn the doors on the old West Dallas Carpet building with imagery that expresses their aesthetics. In this case, a woman playing with flame, the iconic Dallas Pegasus and a Greek death pot vessel, respectively.
Macho My Dude (Christopher Mochorro), “Hotdog Rodeo”
Pyramid Guy (Kris Kanaly), “Wild West Galactic”
515 Singleton Blvd.
2-D artist Macho My Dude dropped his first-ever mural featuring Big Tex toying with a finger skateboard as part of the fest. Next to it is a rainbow mix of trippy iconography from Oklahoma artist Pyramid Guy from the Plaza Walls Crew, which operates an artistic exchange of sorts with Dallas muralists.
Eli Paek, “Unalienable Rights”
331 Singleton Blvd.
As Paek lives and works on a farm outside of Dallas, her painterly, impressionistic piece on an Art Park wall references what it means to be part of a small town and a big city simultaneously. The horses pictured represent “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,” according to the artist.
Oddgrass (Josh Snodgrass)
707 Fabrication St.
Asheville/Dallas-based artist Oddgrass created his biggest mural on the walls of his Tin District studio for Wild West. This striking piece lets the viewer know there’s something arty happening inside and out, and it features some of his favorite elements such as eyeballs, roses, cowboy hats and skulls.
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