Sponsored message
Logged in as
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
  • Listen Now Playing Listen
Explore LA

A band of artists skips the gallery to paint murals at LA schools. Their glue: a 5th grade teacher

Mural on brick wall depicting two people looking around a handball court wall.
Mural by Geoff McFetridge.
(
Operation Creative Freedom
/
Operation Creative Freedom
)

This story is free to read because readers choose to support LAist. If you find value in independent local reporting, make a donation to power our newsroom today.

On a recent Monday, students at Breed Street Elementary in Boyle Heights started their day like no other — with a tour of the murals hand-painted over the weekend across the playground.

It’s the latest of seven elementary schools in and around L.A. to get the treatment. Over 70 murals in the last 13 years, brought by a collective of artists to students in under-resourced neighborhoods with little access to art education.

“The kids were so excited,” said Stefanie Barbee, a math teacher at Breed. “Just pure joy.”

The students snaked through the paintings on handball courts and school walls: cartoon animals, bright orange flowers, a circle of meticulously painted lines. The works span genres and sensibilities.

Red and yellow striped circle on light blue wall with windows above
Mural by artist hi-dutch.
(
Operation Creative Freedom
/
Operation Creative Freedom
)

“It's grassroots. We're not getting money from anyone,” said Erik Caruso, the 5th-grade teacher in Paramount who's the group glue. To them, they are just an assembly of likeminded friends — and friends of friends — who spend one weekend out of the year to hang out and paint murals for school kids.

But the collective is anything but typical. It includes artists like the late Rich Jacobs, who died from leukemia this year, and Tim Kerr, pro-skater Jay Barbee, and Japanese artists Yusuke Hanai and hi-dutch. The vibe's always low key, and somehow they've managed to stay under the radar.

Sponsored message

“The kids have no idea that they show in huge galleries or have pieces hanging in museums,” said writer Martin Wong, co-founder the pioneering Asian pop culture magazine Giant Robot. "Or they're famous in the skateboarding scene or surf or music."

Their reward is the Monday morning after, seeing the happiness on the kids’ faces.

“The artists are waiting all weekend – it’s that moment,” Caruso said.

A person on a ladder is painting a mural on a wall.
Mural by artists Sandy Yang and James Hamblin.
(
Operation Creative Freedom
/
Operation Creative Freedom
)

James Hamblin was at Breed for the meet-and-greet earlier this month. He painted a mural designed by his partner Sandy Yang on one of the handball walls.

“Sandy's design is pretty abstract, so it was interesting because the kids were [asking], you know, ‘ What is it?’” Hamblin said. “It was great because I could tell them I had no idea and like, ‘What do you guys think it is?’"

Sponsored message
Trending on LAist

Bring the art museum to the school

A man in glasses smiling and holding up a victory sign.
Erik Caruso.
(
Operation Creative Freedom
/
Operation Creative Freedom
)

The idea came to Caruso in 2011, after he took about two dozen students from his Paramount school to MOCA and discovered that only four had ever been to an art museum.

I wonder if there's a way we can bring the art museum to the school,” he said.

Caruso, a 24-year veteran, was no stranger to bringing art — and artists — directly to his students. In 2009, he launched a monthly art project for fifth graders that culminated in a year-end show where they meet and share work with living contemporary artists.

A classroom wall filled with drawings.
Caruso's 5th grade art project, featuring works by artist Tim Kerr.
(
Operation Creative Freedom
/
Operation Creative Freedom
)
Sponsored message

The murals were next.

They painted their first ones at his school in 2012. Soon, the project expanded to the rest of Los Angeles.

Crew at work

The painting takes place between Friday and Sunday, but planning takes months.

At Breed, the connection was made through math teacher Barbee — wife of Jay — who is on a two-year stint at the Boyle Heights school to help students catch up on the subject.

“I had sort of planted that seed that at some point I would love for a school I was working at to be the recipient of the beautiful work,” she said.

Sponsored message
Gray school building with multiple windows and chain-link fence in front.
Breed Street Elementary in Boyle Heights.
(
Sandy Yang / James Hamblin
)

She brought Caruso out for a site visit last September.

“He has a really amazing kind of vision about where to place the artists … based on just their artwork and where it is in relation to the street view,” Barbee said.

Next came an introduction to the principal and the approval process.

“One of the biggest challenges with what we are doing is, you know, they want flipping dolphins and stuff like that,” Caruso said. “But we want to cross over into fine art pieces.”

Paying it forward

Caruso estimated that as many as 40 artists and musicians have joined the effort.

The core group now, he said, is about 11 people and friends and families often tag along to help out, given they have just 16 hours over three days to finish the job.

Among the regulars: Wong and his wife Wendy Lau, who once organized DIY punk shows to fund music education at their daughter's Chinatown school. In Caruso, they saw a kindred spirit.

Caruso later brought the collective to paint at that school and eventually invited their daughter, Linda Lindas bassist Eloise Wong, to join his 5th grade art and music project.

“All of these kids on the blacktop were all just screaming their hearts out,” Eloise said. “It's cool how Erik — Mr. Caruso to them — shows them, like, raw ways to express themselves through cool art.”

You come to LAist because you want independent reporting and trustworthy local information. Our newsroom doesn’t answer to shareholders looking to turn a profit. Instead, we answer to you and our connected community. We are free to tell the full truth, to hold power to account without fear or favor, and to follow facts wherever they lead. Our only loyalty is to our audiences and our mission: to inform, engage, and strengthen our community.

Right now, LAist has lost $1.7M in annual funding due to Congress clawing back money already approved. The support we receive from readers like you will determine how fully our newsroom can continue informing, serving, and strengthening Southern California.

If this story helped you today, please become a monthly member today to help sustain this mission. It just takes 1 minute to donate below.

Your tax-deductible donation keeps LAist independent and accessible to everyone.
Senior Vice President News, Editor in Chief

Make your tax-deductible donation today