New York’s Sidewalk Prophets Are Heirs of the Artisans of France’s Lascaux Caves


Green aliens with signs of empathy and solidarity for Black Lives Matter on Canal Street.
"About 17,000 years ago, in the caves of Lascaux, France, ancestors drew on grotto walls, depicting equines, stags, bison, aurochs and felines. They wanted to convey to other humans a political reality crucial to their survival: They shared their environment with other beings that looked and behaved differently from them. ... These portraits and discrete stories are not very different from our contemporary forums: the street art adorning boarded-up storefronts in New York City. They tell us about our shared political realities, the people we coexist with in social space and the ways in which our stories and fates are tied together. If you walk the streets of SoHo, the alleys of the Lower East Side, and heavily trafficked avenues in Brooklyn, as I did over the last few weeks, you will see these symbols and signs and might wonder at their meanings. ..."
NY Times
33 powerful Black Lives Matter murals

A prehistoric cave painting of stags, bison and horses in Lascaux, France.

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