Zürcher Nachrichten - Discarded protest art preserves George Floyd legacy

EUR -
AED 4.223745
AFN 81.833983
ALL 98.012871
AMD 445.210242
ANG 2.058245
AOA 1054.641695
ARS 1342.013348
AUD 1.793092
AWG 2.07018
AZN 1.958023
BAM 1.957621
BBD 2.329007
BDT 141.071218
BGN 1.951315
BHD 0.435097
BIF 3434.975584
BMD 1.1501
BND 1.481827
BOB 7.97031
BRL 6.370284
BSD 1.153493
BTN 99.858015
BWP 15.546731
BYN 3.77501
BYR 22541.955457
BZD 2.317096
CAD 1.582526
CDF 3308.83649
CHF 0.940471
CLF 0.028172
CLP 1081.093777
CNY 8.267489
CNH 8.266796
COP 4695.477821
CRC 582.331531
CUC 1.1501
CUP 30.477644
CVE 110.366698
CZK 24.827215
DJF 205.414639
DKK 7.45911
DOP 68.402435
DZD 150.392272
EGP 58.340762
ERN 17.251497
ETB 158.61728
FJD 2.598593
FKP 0.854856
GBP 0.856393
GEL 3.128132
GGP 0.854856
GHS 11.880948
GIP 0.854856
GMD 82.228398
GNF 9994.035286
GTQ 8.865169
GYD 241.322368
HKD 9.028225
HNL 30.125497
HRK 7.533841
HTG 151.386864
HUF 403.101343
IDR 18960.717294
ILS 4.014625
IMP 0.854856
INR 99.80422
IQD 1511.092408
IRR 48447.952551
ISK 143.015374
JEP 0.854856
JMD 183.884238
JOD 0.815456
JPY 168.575302
KES 149.087672
KGS 100.576622
KHR 4623.139434
KMF 491.657924
KPW 1035.089791
KRW 1589.254173
KWD 0.352345
KYD 0.961286
KZT 602.765423
LAK 24886.147913
LBP 103355.031929
LKR 346.619395
LRD 230.692573
LSL 20.826372
LTL 3.395946
LVL 0.695684
LYD 6.287958
MAD 10.527955
MDL 19.834967
MGA 5154.839608
MKD 61.59229
MMK 2414.869301
MNT 4120.819653
MOP 9.326394
MRU 45.595618
MUR 52.467405
MVR 17.717295
MWK 2000.177862
MXN 22.140231
MYR 4.923003
MZN 73.560352
NAD 20.82619
NGN 1788.283645
NIO 42.448376
NOK 11.652731
NPR 159.771834
NZD 1.936734
OMR 0.44312
PAB 1.153458
PEN 4.142153
PGK 4.82236
PHP 66.206675
PKR 327.307137
PLN 4.274058
PYG 9206.72376
QAR 4.206977
RON 5.029731
RSD 117.338122
RUB 90.3043
RWF 1665.678301
SAR 4.315635
SBD 9.592325
SCR 16.964053
SDG 690.634466
SEK 11.149004
SGD 1.483347
SHP 0.903798
SLE 25.819751
SLL 24117.021304
SOS 659.224643
SRD 44.681556
STD 23804.74316
SVC 10.093301
SYP 14953.425246
SZL 20.82273
THB 37.976426
TJS 11.390596
TMT 4.025349
TND 3.414546
TOP 2.693646
TRY 45.678048
TTD 7.839224
TWD 34.126336
TZS 3052.666138
UAH 48.344588
UGX 4157.831265
USD 1.1501
UYU 47.16387
UZS 14486.348556
VES 117.950435
VND 30088.335086
VUV 137.905048
WST 3.172677
XAF 656.579137
XAG 0.031871
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.108202
XDR 0.816574
XOF 656.579137
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.126
ZAR 20.791216
ZMK 10352.279672
ZMW 26.675276
ZWL 370.331656
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Discarded protest art preserves George Floyd legacy
Discarded protest art preserves George Floyd legacy / Photo: Kerem YUCEL - AFP

Discarded protest art preserves George Floyd legacy

Kenda Zellner-Smith hauled up a corrugated metal door to reveal hundreds of wooden boards covered with graffiti, each telling a story of the protests that followed George Floyd's killing by a US police officer.

Text size:

The 28-year-old has collected and archived the panels that once protected businesses from rioting in Minneapolis, aiming to preserve the legacy of the 2020 murder that shocked the United States.

Five years on, Zellner-Smith said the boards -- kept in a storage unit by an industrial site two miles (three kilometers) from where Floyd died -- still evoke powerful emotions.

They range from blank plywood with text reading "I can't breathe" -- the final words Floyd said as Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, knelt on his neck -- to colorful murals depicting rainbows and love hearts.

"Every time I look at them there's something different I notice," she told AFP. "They reignite an energy or a fire that was felt years ago during the uprising."

Then a university graduate in Minneapolis, Zellner-Smith was among millions of Americans who joined the Black Lives Matter rallies in 2020 that swept US cities.

The threat of vandalism saw many businesses protect themselves with wooden boards -- which became canvases for protesters' slogans and drawings demanding justice.

- 'Resistance' -

Zellner-Smith said she decided to start collecting the boards after seeing one taken down after the protests and thinking "'Oh my god, these are going to disappear just as fast as they showed up.'"

"Every single day after work, I'd grab my dad's pickup truck and I would just drive around searching for boards," said Zellner-Smith, who searched alleyways and dumpsters.

Today, her project called "Save the Boards" counts over 600 in its collection, with each stacked vertically in a pair of storage units measuring 10 by 30 feet (three by nine meters).

But with Floyd's legacy under the spotlight on the fifth anniversary of his death as many hoped-for reforms to address racism have not been met, she said the boards are crucial to sustaining the protest movement.

"Art serves as a form of resistance and storytelling, and it speaks to real, lived experiences, and that's what these are," Zellner-Smith said.

Her next challenge is finding a long-term home for the boards as grants that covered storage costs are running dry.

A handful are already being exhibited -- including in a building restored after it was damaged by arson during the 2020 protests -- and most have been photographed to be archived online.

"My biggest push is just to make sure they're still seen. The stories they have to tell are still heard, and that people understand there's still a lot of work to be done," Zellner-Smith said.

- 'Murals gave me hope' -

Her initiative is similar to another, more expansive one in Minneapolis called Memorialize the Movement.

That nonprofit exhibited around 50 boards during a memorial event held Sunday on a recreation ground near George Floyd Square, the name given to the area where the 46-year-old was killed.

With Afrobeat music booming from speakers, dozens of people scanned the display that included one piece with squares of black and brown, each filled with phrases like "We matter" and "Protect us."

Another mostly bare wooden board had just a black love heart with "No justice, no peace" written in the middle.

"I think it is absolutely vital that these murals and this story that they tell are preserved for future generations," said Leesa Kelly, who has collected over 1,000 pieces while running Memorialize the Movement.

Asked what drove her to start the project, the 32-year-old replied: "I didn't do this because I was motivated or inspired, I did it because I was experiencing trauma."

"A Black man was killed. The murals gave me hope," said Kelly, who also collected many of the boards herself during the 2020 protests.

Darnella Thompson, 43, was one of those looking at the boards on a warm, sunny day, stopping to take a photo in front of one saying "Speak up" and "Hope."

"It's overwhelming," she told AFP. "As a person of color who has experienced quite a bit here in this country, it definitely resonates very much with me."

"It brings up more so sadness than anything because this is continuous," Thompson added.

O.Pereira--NZN