Home MediaLit Moments Street Art Smart

Street Art Smart

E-mail Print PDF

Say the word “graffiti,” and most people think of young men tagging their territory in the middle of the night, and of thousands of dollars spent to cover the tags over.  Yet artists from Jean Michel Basquiat to Banksy (of the 2010 movie “Exit Through the Gift Shop”) practiced their craft on the street before their work was exhibited at any major museum.  “Street art” might best describe art that is painted in a public space rather than on a piece of canvas.  Moreover, a simple written message which appears in a public space (such as a stencil) might not always be considered graffiti.  

Here’s a good example:  http://boingboing.net/2010/08/26/snapshot-bike-lane-i.html 

Really, this is a piece of street art which delivers a message which nearly anyone in any community in the United States would be willing to rally around.   In this Media Lit Moment, your students will be challenged to re-think their conceptions of art which appears in public spaces, and they’ll also have the opportunity to work on the initial stages of a piece of street art which could grace the wall of their own school.   

Ask students to write or illustrate a concept for a piece of street art which delivers a public service message.


AHA!:  I can create art in public spaces that makes a positive difference in my community! 


Key Question #1 for Producers:  What am I authoring?

Core Concept #1:  All media messages are constructed.

Key Question #4 for Producers:  Have I clearly and consistently framed values, lifestyles and points of view in my content?

Core Concept #4:  Media have embedded values and points of view         

Grade Level:  7-9

Materials:  pencil, paper, imagination 

Activity:  Start a discussion with students about the differences between tagging and street art.  As you do so, you may want to share additional examples:   A mural with a message in Milwaukee:http://scaryideas.com/content/9108

A somewhat more traditional mural in a New York City middle school:http://www.groundswellmural.org/Public_Art_Projects/2008/2008_Nonviolence.html

After you finish this discussion, ask students to write a creative concept for a piece of street art which is also conceived of as a service to the public.  This could be as simple as coming up with some creative lettering for a message, or it could involve sketching out a piece of representational art (like a mural).   Also, their concepts don’t necessarily have to call for the use of permanent materials.   Chalk art on a playground with an anti-bullying message could also fit the bill.   

 The Five Core Concepts and Five Key Questions of media literacy were developed as part of the Center for Media Literacy’s MediaLit Kit™ and Questions/TIPS (Q/TIPS)™ framework.  Used with permission, © 2002-2011, Center for Media Literacy, http://www.medialit.com

Last Updated ( Friday, 31 March 2017 11:38 )  
Previous Issues:

 21st century skills
 a day in the life of a media literacy educator
 a year in review 2014
 a year in review december 2012
 advertising consumer debt and media literacy
 anytime anywhere learning
 artificial intelligence- a new mil application
 big data
 body image and media literacy
 bots terrorism and media literacy
 building a strong foundation
 cell phones as learning tools
 change management in schools
 children and media literacy part 2
 children and media literacy
 citizen journalism
 citizenship in the digital age part 2
 citizenship in the digital age
 cml media literacy trilogy
 comics and media literacy
 community media
 confirmation bias and media literacy
 copyright and media literacy
 covid 19 - shaking up education and family life
 criteria for media literacy instruction
 crowdfunding and media literacy
 data representation and media literacy
 digital britain
 documentary film and media literacy
 education and creative economy
 education creative economy australia
 empowerment theory practice activism
 esl and media literacy
 fair use for media literacy
 faith and media literacy
 frameworks for inquiry
 gender representation media
 global citizenship media literacy
 global education
 globalization
 heuristics nudge theory and the internet of things
 history of media literacy
 institutionalizing media literacy through legislation
 leadership elizabeth thoman
 len masterman and the big ideas of media literacy
 libraries museums and informal learning
 maps and media literacy
 media and body image
 media and information literacy
 media and information literacy part 2
 media deconstruction as essential learning skill
 media literacy computational thinking
 media literacy risk assessment
 media literacy and 21st century skills
 media literacy and arts education
 media literacy and common core
 media literacy and human rights
 media literacy and masculinity
 media literacy and media businesses in the post-soviet baltics  a strategic defense priority
 media literacy and media construction
 media literacy and nutrition
 media literacy and personal data management
 media literacy and pharmaceutical advertising
 media literacy and science
 media literacy and student empowerment
 media literacy and the environment
 media literacy and video games
 media literacy early childhood education
 media literacy for grown ups
 media literacy in the community
 media literacy june 2019
 media literacy march 2021
 media literacy may 2019
 media literacy november 2019
 media literacy pioneers
 media literacy policy and legislation
 media literacy q1 2020
 media morals and empowerment
 media representation lgbtq
 media violence and media relationships
 media violence
 mobilizing for media literacy
 monsters and media literacy
 new curriculum and media literacy
 online privacy and media literacy
 online safety
 parents and media literacy
 participation in what
 professional development for media literacy
 propaganda and media literacy
 public health and media literacy - march
 reality tv and media literacy
 redefining school communities
 research media literacy
 responding to racism and stereotypes in media
 self representation and media literacy
 sexism in media
 social networking
 sports and media literacy
 systems thinking and media literacy
 teaching healthy skepticism
 television and media literacy
 the mediated city and the public
 the role of journalism in society
 trust through technology
 us department of education
 voices of media literacy- guillermo orozco gomez
 what media literacy is and is not
 whats in a name
 where are we now institutionalizing media literacy
 whom do we trust the people
 youth participation in media literacy

CONNECTIONS