Art 180 teens collaborate with local artist on Black Hand Coffee mural

by | Nov 8, 2016 | ART

It seems every time you drive down one of Richmond’s bustling streets, walk down an alley way, or visit a popular restaurant or gallery, a new mural catches your eye. And as they continue to grow in numbers and variety, the city more and more vibrant.

It seems every time you drive down one of Richmond’s bustling streets, walk down an alley way, or visit a popular restaurant or gallery, a new mural catches your eye. And as they continue to grow in numbers and variety, the city more and more vibrant.

A new mural was recently painted on the side of Black Hand Coffee, but it’s not world-renowned muralists who are behind the new work of art this time.

The local coffee shop at 3101 Patterson Ave., teamed up with Art 180’s Atlas Team program along with two local artists to create a piece that encompasses the community’s identity and sustainability while also representing different facets of our city.

Art 180 is a local community organization that provides opportunities for artistic expression to the youth community that are faced with challenging circumstances. The program has worked for 18 years to establish themselves in the community and give teenagers positive opportunities such as yoga and watercolor, poetry, and of course art.

The Atlas Teen program at Art 180 is a group of selected kids that are already involved in Art 180 and show potential leadership skills and maturity. This program takes on bigger and public projects such as the mural on the side of Black Hand.

The mural was created over the course of six days with the help of a group of 15 to 18-year-olds and was led by local artists Steve Hedberg and his creative assistant Latasha Dunston.

Hedberg has been a supporter of Art 180 over the years, and has donated paintings along the way to their gallery, but this is his first involvement with the Atlas program and first exterior mural.

“The biggest challenge was working with the kids, because you become the teacher,” said Hedberg. “So finding a way to create one idea from all of these different minds was really part of the challenge but also the most memorable.”

Michael Zetlan, program manager for Atlas Teen Program describes their public projects as a chance occurrence. While Art 180 was already in collaboration with Black Hand Coffee with their coffee bag series that features Steve Hedberg, the idea of painting a mural came through casual conversation.

“Clay Gilbert [owner of Black Hand] was hoping for something that tied coffee, the Richmond community, and the process of those two together with this mural,” said Hedberg.

The mural features the kids’ version and interpretation of Richmond. It Includes a bike and a mustache giving Richmond the hipster vibe, a guitar representing the music scene, and even the Richmond skyline.

“For them, they were talking about their community and then they actually got to contribute to their community,” said Zetlan.

The importance of Art 180 and a creative community goes without question, given that Virginia’s juvenile arrest rate for violent crime in 2012 was 76 per 100,000 population aged 10-17 according to Virginia Performs.

“I don’t think there could be a bigger value placed on creative expression,” said Zetlan. “We’re seeing kids get put away for years for a mistake they made at 15. I know myself, I made some dumb mistakes when I was 15.”

Getting kids out of the school-to-prison pipeline and putting them in a space where they can express their feelings is part of Art 180’s mission statement.

“Some of these kids are expressing real pain and real trauma and the unfairness and injustice they’re either seeing or experiencing in their life,” said Zetlan. “I think it’s really important that comes out in an expressive form and not in a violent form. They might not realize that when they wrote that poem when they were 15-years-old, they didn’t act out.”

Amy David

Amy David

Amy David was the Web Editor for RVAMag.com from May 2015 until September 2018. She covered craft beer, food, music, art and more. She's been a journalist since 2010 and attended Radford University. She enjoys dogs, beer, tacos, and Bob's Burgers references.




more in art

Review | ‘As You Like It’ is Just How I Like It

If you’ve been reading these reviews for a while, you’ll notice I love me some context. Especially surrounding William Shakespeare’s plays. One of my favorite things about the existence of Richmond Shakespeare is that they’ve forced me to go back to the English Lit...

IllumiNATION Tells America’s Story on a Monumental Scale

Editor’s Note: RVA Magazine is partnering with the Virginia Museum of History & Culture on coverage related to America’s 250th anniversary, including Richmond SailFest and IllumiNation. It's hard to impress people with just a building. Yet standing in front of the...

Blöthar: “GWAR Didn’t Change. The World Freakin Changed.”

Richmond metal band GWAR says the Secret Service contacted the group following a recent performance at the Vans Warped Tour in Washington, D.C., that featured the mock execution of a Donald Trump effigy. Video of the performance, which showed band members...

Review | ‘Come From Away’ is the Best We’ve Ever Been

Do you remember the rollerblading guy with the American flag kit on September 12th? We will never forget the 11th for the horrors, but do you remember the 12th? The 13th? If you do, I don’t even have to say which year. If you don’t, let me tell you a little bit about...

Before Richmond Was an Arts City, There Was Best Products

Imagine pulling into a suburban shopping center to buy a toaster and finding a department store that appeared to be falling apart with corners breaking away, walls peeling open like a giant cardboard box, or facades seemingly collapsing under their own weight. For...

Review | ‘I Love You Because’ Is Pure Joy 🏳️‍🌈

It could be said that Shakespeare invented the rom-com. It could also be said that Jane Austen improved it a couple of centuries later. Between the two of them, meet-cutes, notices of love or rejection arriving at exactly the wrong time, and breathless affirmations of...

Stay Hungry pt. 1 | Band on the Road

Editor's Note: Writer's Block is a space for Virginia writers to share personal essays, fiction, memoir, and works that fall somewhere in between. In Stay Hungry, Richmond local Eric Kalata looks back on a cross-country tour and the restless optimism of...

Local, Latino and A New Richmond Cosmos

Tucked into the alley behind 2512 West Main Street, a fever dream of the cosmos has taken shape across a brick wall. The mural is the collaborative work of four Latino artists working in and around Richmond: Visibly Hidden, Monolith, Mars, and Sol. A distant Earth...