[2024] Graffiti Alley in Ann Arbor Sucks Now. Here's Why

Key takeaways:
- Graffiti Alley originally started by artists defacing a city commissioned mural.
- The word 'FARTS' is spray-painted everywhere.
- Future artists can improve the space.
Graffiti Alley is losing its artistic integrity.
It is not pretentious to hold a public corridor of spray-paintings to a standard. Graffiti is art.
Since 1999, this alley has functioned as a kaleidoscopic collage. The attraction has attracted thousands of locals and tourists to downtown Ann Arbor.
Graffiti Alley showed the world Ann Arbor had more than academics and athletics. There was also artistry.
My recent visits to Ann Arbor were disheartening. Much of this public space has been tarnished by puerile fiends. Their phallic and scatological contributions have ruined Graffiti Alley. Today, it's a location more befitting of a dystopian film like Idiocracy.
Ann Arbor deserves better.
History of Graffiti Alley
While the discrete alleyway connecting East Liberty Street and Washington Street is known as 'Graffiti Alley' presently, the locale used to go by the names of 'Poet's Alley' and 'Bubble Gum Alley'.
Prior to 1999, this area of downtown Ann Arbor had a less-than-stellar reputation. I am assuming since the troubled city block was a stone's throw from University of Michigan's Central Campus, the city of Ann Arbor chose to make an effort to revitalize the space.
In their attempt to draw more visitors to the area, the city of Ann Arbor commissioned an artist by the name of Katherine Cost to design a mural. The mural was entitled 'Infinite Possibilities', spanned 5,000 square feet, and took five months to complete.
As I was conducting online research for this article, I did my best to find a photograph of Cost's mural. Despite reading that many news periodicals and art blogs wrote about the mural, I was unsuccessful in tracking down an image.
I'm a travel blogger, not an investigative journalist, so if you happen to possess a photograph of Cost's mural, please feel free to contact me. I will, of course, give you credit for providing me the image!
Reception to the mural must have been lukewarm, at best, since within mere weeks of the mural's debut, local artists defaced it with graffiti. Within five months, the entire mural was painted over.
Initially perceived as petty vandalism, people eventually appreciated what was unfolding-- a crowdsourced effort by the people of Ann Arbor to beautify the space.
As the 21st century unraveled, the public space took on the name 'Graffiti Alley' due to all the artists using spray paint. Graffiti Alley soon became a mainstay for Ann Arbor's street art scene, and a highlight for Michigan city tourism.
Graffiti Alley was better just a couple years ago
Back in 2022, there were two ways you could enter Graffiti Alley-- either off E Liberty Street or off Washington Street.
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Graffiti Alley in 2024
Sure, who among us hasn't found flatulence funny at some point in our lives?
But to spray paint it almost everywhere-- in a public space devoted to human creativity-- is outright obnoxious.
It's ironic, given how Graffiti Alley first came into being by painting over someone else's mural. However, the artists in 1999 replaced Cost's mural with something better. In 2024, writing 'FARTS' over the artwork has made the overall space worse.
Earlier, I stated one dimension that gives art value is how easy it can be replicated. If anyone can do what you do with no experience and no skill, then what you do is just not valuable. Anyone can spray paint 'FARTS' on a wall.
See? The word 'FARTS' is on both sides of the wall at the East Liberty Street entrance.
Defiling Graffiti Alley like this makes it more difficult for other people to use this space. It's a public space. Musicians and models will find it tougher to do photoshoots here. High school seniors will find it challenging to do their senior pictures here.
Then, of course, the group of most concern to me are... other travelers! As of 2024, sure, I would still in good conscience recommend visitors to Ann Arbor to at least check out Graffiti Alley, but my enthusiasm as of now is less high.
Conclusion
Let's end this article on some hope.
Graffiti Alley is an ever-evolving concrete landscape for artists to contribute to. Perhaps by the end of 2024, other graffiti artists will spray paint over the juvenile desolation.
What do you think of the current condition of Graffiti Alley? I love hearing from my readers so feel free to email me and share your opinions!