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by Robert Roberg |
Art
Found on a Wall in Gainesville Florida with music by Zircon Mine. http://youtube.com/watch?v=LwzNEpR9V8A |
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| This study focuses on understanding the meaning and significance gleaned from a twenty six month examination of the murals on The 34th Street Wall, Gainesville, Florida, in its local and the larger general context. The Feldman method (1994) of critical analysis was used to interpret the murals. The supporting investigation included defining the local multicultural structure and a review of the historiography of those origins. (Ph.D. dissertation, FSU, 2005) | |||
| Graffitti on the 34th Street Wall in Gainesville, Florida, photographed by Judi Shade | On 34th Street Gainesville,
Florida Every first weekend of November...a HUGE legal wall, and a convergence of southeastern graffiti writers. |
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| The Independent Florida Alligator | Search for articles written in the student newspaper | ||
| Through thick and thin, by Kelley Benham | For decades, the 34th Street Wall in Gainesville has been accumulating messages of joy and sorrow. It makes you wonder, how thick is that paint? St. Petersburg Times, February 24, 2006 | ||
| The Gainesville Sun | Search for articles written in the local newspaper including editorials on the pros and cons of wall paintings | ||
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Writings on the Wall, by by Samir S. Patel | Article in Archaeology, Volume 60 Number 4, July/August 2007. The Graffiti Archaeology Project challenges the definition of archaeology. |
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