Yesterday I was ____, Today I am ____, Tomorrow I'll be ____.

  • Participants incorporated plant growth into the mural to represent both a connection to the garden and individual growth.
  • The young men, tasked with making a mural about identity without using faces, chose the hand, a symbol that is both individual and universally identifiable.
  • Lead Artist Chris Soria explains the concept to an excited community member.
  • Before youth participants can paint, them must first lead to grid and outline the approved design on the wall.
  • By the time painting begins, our mural teams become like families, providing friendship and support throughout the summer, and often beyond.
  • Participants gain skills in design, creative thinking, and painting, but are also expected to take an active role in presenting at sharing days and the dedication.
Sixteen Years of Making an Impact

Project Description

“Yesterday I Was ____, Today I Am ____, Tomorrow I'll Be ____.” is installed in Brownsville, Brooklyn, on a monumental wall overlooking a community garden. The mural asks Brownsville residents to consider the past, present, and future of the community’s identity, and engages them in a continued conversation. A youth mural team made up exclusively of young men, over half of whom had a history with the juvenile justice system, came together during an intensive afterschool session to explore a topic for a large-scale summer mural project. Through a series of guided discussions and research opportunities, the team responded to the theme “the male identity, stereotypes, and role models." They then visited the Brooklyn Museum to learn more about contemporary artists and art techniques. Inspired by the artwork viewed, particularly the text-based work of contemporary artists Hank Willis Thomas and Barbara Kruger, the young men began to explore their theme through the creation of imagery for a large-scale mural. Deliberately leaving its message incomplete, the all-male mural team chose to address the topic of male identity while leaving room for receptivity, reflection, and transformation. The text-based mural image reads, "Yesterday I was _____, today I am _____, tomorrow I'll be ______.," a proclamation that is a statement and a question at the same time. It is bold and affirmative, yet beckons a response. The slogan is accompanied by what the group of young men consider a symbol of personal identity - a hand - expanding the analogy to say "I know these streets like the back of my hand," to capture the identity of the community as well. Underlying credits express qualities the youth artists would like to see more of in the community, each other, and themselves. 

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Project Info

Location: 512 Rockaway Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11212

Fun Facts

Research
The New York Times reports that an eight-block area in Brownsville has the highest concentration of police stops in the city, a rate 13 times higher than the city average. The imprisonment ratio for young men in Brownsville ages 16 to 24 is one in twelve.
Suggested Activity
Check out the video installation "Question Bridge: Black Males." Imagine how you might respond if asked by the artists for your thoughts on the past, present, and future of Black men in American society.
Quote
"So often we don't ask men in our communities to talk about who they are and where they want to go. This mural will force people to ask themselves that question - a question we hope will lead to action." - James Brodick, Center for Court Innovation