A tear gas canister, labeled "Don't let anyone convince you that non-violence is ineffective." George Floyd's face in blue, surrounded by "re" words ("repair, resolve, remake"). A reimagined scene from the Wizard of Oz with this text: "All Mothers Were Summoned When George Floyd Called Out for His Momma."
These billboards hover over the intersection of 38th and Chicago, where George Floyd's life was cut short last year.
Twin Cities artists Xavier Tavera, Seitu Jones and Jim Denomie designed the billboards as part of the Social Justice Billboard Project initiated last July by NE Sculpture Gallery Factory with the intention of elevating the voices of BIPOC artists.
This new series was unveiled Sunday, a day when the messages would soon feel immediately relevant with the death of Daunte Wright.
Tavera's design was inspired by protests last summer. He picked up a tear gas canister used by Minneapolis police outside the 3rd precinct on the night after Floyd's death at the hands of Derek Chauvin, the former officer now on trial for murder.
"I think the timing is precise because all of us are bracing for what's going to happen in the next couple of weeks with the trial," he said. "Hopefully it brings the message to people that no matter what they throw us, we can keep the peace, we can have heated discussions about issues, and we can disagree, all non-violently."
Jones' billboard is based on #blues4george, the portrait he did 10 months ago that allows people to download a stencil and paint their own blue-hued images of Floyd.
The title is also a reference to famed agricultural scientist George Washington Carver. "He re-discovered Egyptian blue, and of all the things he patented, one of them was a formula to that color," said Jones. "So it's actually blues for two Georges."