Edythe Boone

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Born
Edythe Boone

OccupationsArtist, muralist
KnownforMaestraPeace
Notable work"Those We Love, We Remember", "Let a Thousand Parks Bloom"
Edythe Boone
Born
Edythe Boone

OccupationsArtist, muralist
Known forMaestraPeace
Notable work"Those We Love, We Remember", "Let a Thousand Parks Bloom"
RelativesEric Garner (nephew)

Edythe (Edy) Boone (born 1938), is an African-American artist and activist. She has worked as a muralist, counselor, and art teacher throughout her life in an under-served area in California.[1]

She is the aunt of Eric Garner, an African-American man who was choked to death by New York Police Department officers.[1] His death, along with the death of Michael Brown,[2] led to protests and in part catalyzed the Black Lives Matter movement.

Boone is well known for the many murals she has painted. She started with her painted murals on each floor of a building in Harlem, New York and her work has expanded through the years to one of her most notable projects, designing and painting the Women's Building mural in San Francisco, California.[3] She first was exposed to art when visiting her grandmother, who was a seamstress and Boone found herself surrounded by color, fabrics and textures.[4] During the time she lived in Harlem the problem with crack cocaine was rampant and had a large influence in her artistic development. It was there that she made guerilla murals to protest the situation.[2] It is her belief that art is for everyone, not just for professionals, aiming to empower individuals and communities through the use of art.[2]

Boone’s reputation for being socially conscious could be said to stem from many occasion but in the past she has been influenced by many social movements such as the Black Panthers and other various civil rights movements.[4] Boone is best known for her street murals in the San Francisco Bay Area which focus upon activist issues and the local community. Her topics have included the 1980s crack epidemic in America, AIDS, poverty, racial discrimination, and gender inequality.[1]

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References

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