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Visite d'art de rue à New York avec un guide expert local

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Having been a place where many various cultures, races and ages meet each other, New York has developed a unique cultural background. Street art now is a valuable and important part of modern art because of its convenience and audience – people create right on the streets and other people see it, so it lets creator realize whether he is moving in the right way or not. Moreover, as it was said, various cultures are mixed, so street art is expressed in many ways, from graffiti to paintings, from painted pieces to digital art. Now you have a chance to dive into New York street culture and enjoy significant masterpieces.
Ville: Brooklyn
Mon 29 Sep
i
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Mon 29 Sep
À partir de $159.00
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Ce qui est inclu
Iconic places for photoshoot
Must see and off the beaten path
Expert advice where to go and what to do after the tour
All Fees and Taxes
Friendly local guide
Casque, genouillères et coudières
Must see and off the beaten path
Information additionnelle
  • Infants and small children can ride in a pram or stroller
  • Public transportation options are available nearby
  • Travelers should have at least a moderate level of physical fitness
À quoi s'attendre
1
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
2
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
3
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
4
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
5
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
6
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
7
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
8
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
9
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
10
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
11
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
12
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
13
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
14
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
15
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
16
Dumbo
Le premier point est le 20 Jay St. # 510, qui est DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery s'est associé au DUMBO Improvement District et à Two Trees Management Co pour organiser l'espace d'art de rue bien-aimé DUMBO Walls. Des artistes acclamés tels que CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister et Yuko Shimizu ont créé des peintures murales pour le projet. L'espace est composé de huit murs. Trouvez plus d'informations en visitant le site officiel du DUMBO Improvement District. Il y a la puce de Brooklyn, un marché géant où vous pouvez trouver tout ce que ce monde a vu ou simplement observer les gens dans leur vie commune. Vous pouvez vous déplacer par le pont de Brooklyn ou de Manhattan jusqu'au prochain point de l'itinéraire. Observez l'architecture de la ville à partir d'un autre chef-d'œuvre d'architecture ! Vous pouvez également visiter le musée d'Eldridge Street sur votre chemin.
17
Petite Italie
Le point suivant est le projet L.I.S.A, Mulberry St., Little Italy. Depuis environ cinq ans, la L.I.S.A. Project NYC a chargé des artistes du monde entier de créer des œuvres d'art de rue captivantes dans la Petite Italie et les localités voisines. En collaboration avec la Merchants Association of Little Italy, le collectif à but non lucratif a construit un vaste portefeuille de travaux publics avec les plus récents créés par Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash et BKFOXX. Sur votre chemin vers la prochaine destination, vous trouverez deux musées à la fois : Tenement Museum et International Center of Photography Museum.
18
La ville de New York
E. First St. est le projet d'art public du Centre-Fuge. Jonathan Neville et Pebbles Russell, originaires du Lower East Side, ont lancé le projet d'art public Centre-Fuge en 2011. Le duo voulait transformer les chantiers de construction ennuyeux de la région en toiles pour des peintures murales colorées. Périodiquement, les artistes arrosent les murs extérieurs des roulottes de construction avec leurs chefs-d'œuvre peints à la bombe. Les artistes visuels Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts et Kwue Molly sont les plus récents contributeurs au projet.
19
SoHo
La fresque rend hommage à "tous ceux qui ont fait et continuent de faire vivre le vrai hip-hop", ont-ils déclaré dans un communiqué. Plus précisément, l'œuvre rend hommage au graffiti, au rap et à l'époque du break dance new-yorkais des années 1970. Côté détails, la casquette est ornée d'une rame de métro bombardée de graffitis, la boombox joue "Planet Rock" de Afrika Bambaataa, et une épingle Mugsy peinte par Doze Green, membre du Rock Steady Crew, se trouvent attachées au haut de survêtement de la vieille école. Passant à la dernière étape, vous pouvez voir le Whitney Museum of American Art, le Ground Zero Museum Workshop et la galerie d'art David Zwirner à proximité les uns des autres.
20
La ville de New York
Enfin, au parc linéaire du côté ouest, vous pouvez voir Highline Art. La High Line à New York est un parc surélevé où vous pouvez non seulement admirer des vues captivantes sur le bas de Manhattan, mais aussi découvrir une multitude d'art de rue saisissant. Le collectif artistique Friends of the High Line a invité des artistes du monde entier à placer leurs œuvres sur les murs des bâtiments situés près de la passerelle. En 2011, l'artiste français JR a créé un portrait mural à grande échelle pour son "Inside Out Project" et en 2012, l'artiste brésilien Kobra a orné un mur d'une peinture murale colorée inspirée de la photographie emblématique d'Alfred Eisenstaedt de 1945 surnommée V-J Day.
21
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
22
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
23
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
24
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
25
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
26
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
27
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
28
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
29
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
30
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
31
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
32
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
33
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
34
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
35
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
36
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
37
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
38
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
39
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
40
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
41
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
42
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
43
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
44
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
45
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
46
Dumbo
First point is 20 Jay St. #510, which is DUMBO Walls. Jonathan Levine Gallery teamed up with the DUMBO Improvement District and Two Trees Management Co to organize the beloved DUMBO Walls street art space. Acclaimed artists such as CAM, DALeast, Eltono, Shepard Fairey, Faith47, MOMO, Stefan Sagmeister and Yuko Shimizu have created murals for the project. The space is comprised of eight walls. Find more information by visiting the DUMBO Improvement District’s official website. There is the Brooklyn flea, a giant market where you can find anything this world has seen or just watch people in their common life. You can move whether by Brooklyn or Manhattan bridge to the next point of itinerary. Watch the city’s architecture from another architecture masterpiece! Also you can visit Museum at Eldridge Street on your way.
47
Little Italy
The next point is L.I.S.A project, Mulberry St., Little Italy. For approximately five years, the L.I.S.A. Project NYC has commissioned artists from all across the globe to create captivating works of street art in Little Italy and nearby localities. In collaboration with the Merchants Association of Little Italy, the nonprofit collective has built an extensive portfolio of public works with the most recent ones created by Sonny Sundancer, Nick Walker, GATS, KaNOkid, Crash and BKFOXX. On your way to the next destination you can find two museums at once: Tenement Museum and International Center of Photography Museum.
48
New York City
E. First St. is Centre-Fuge Public Art Project. Lower East Side natives Jonathan Neville and Pebbles Russell started the Centre-Fuge Public Art Project back in 2011. The pair wanted to transform boring construction sites in the region into canvasses for colorful art murals. Periodically, artists will drench the exterior walls of construction trailers with their spray-painted masterpieces. Visual artists Cycle 21, Julia Cocuzza, Mike Kuhn, Damien Miksza, Col Wallnuts and Kwue Molly are the most recent contributors to the project.
49
SoHo
The mural honors “everyone that has made and continues to keep the real hip-hop alive,” they said in a statement. More precisely, the work pays homage to graffiti, rap and the era of 1970s New York break dancing. As far as details go, the cap is embellished with a graffiti-bombed subway train, the boombox plays “Planet Rock” by Afrika Bambaataa, and a Mugsy pin painted by Rock Steady Crew member Doze Green can be found attached to the old school tracksuit top Moving to the final step, you can see Whitney Museum of American Art, Ground Zero Museum Workshop and David Zwirner art gallery close to each other.
50
New York City
Finally, at the Linear Park on the West Side you can see Highline Art. The High Line in NYC is an elevated park where you can not only get captivating views of lower Manhattan, but also spot a slew of striking street art. Art collective Friends of the High Line has invited artists from all parts of the world to place their artwork on the walls of buildings located near the walkway. In 2011, French artist JR created a large-scale mural portrait for his “Inside Out Project” and in 2012, Brazilian artist Kobra adorned a wall with a colorful mural inspired by Alfred Eisenstaedt’s iconic 1945 photograph dubbed V-J Day.
Show 47 plus d'arrêts
Politique d'annulation
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
Photos de voyageurs
Commentaires (2)
Kim_C
Dec 2023
Our tour guide Adam knew so much about the city. He was a great tour guide, and we saw many of the neighborhoods. Saw great street art, as well as learned a lot about the city! Thanks, Adam!
UofMgarcia
Sep 2021
To celebrate my one-year anniversary in New York City my partner booked a walking tour with Monia. She was so friendly, welcoming and knowledgeable - it was honestly like taking a tour from a family member! We started the walking tour in Dumbo and then took the subway into lower Manhattan to explore various street art pieces around the city including murals and graffiti art - we even got a chance to stop for one of the best coffees I’ve ever had in Little Italy. I highly recommend Monia’s tour for anyone who is visiting the city, new to the city, or even residents that want to see a different side of NYC. It was a casual, relaxed, but active way to spend the early afternoon with an awesome tour guide! Thank you Monia for treating us like family and showing us a ton of new spots to revisit! :)

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