Greater Greater Washington

Public Spaces


Wall at Brookland Metro serves as a canvas for a memorial

While Washington is home to numerous stately memorials to national figures, murdered Redskins player Sean Taylor has his own unofficial memorial in the form of graffiti at the Brookland Metro station.


Photo by the author.

A few days after Taylor was killed in Miami, Florida, a spray-painted memorial mural appeared on the wall of the CSX rail line adjacent to the Brookland Metro station, where it remains today, untouched.

The mural, painted in the team's colors of burgundy, gold, and white, is seen by tens of thousands of Red Line riders going in and out of the city every day.

Taylor, 24, was in his fourth year with the Redskins. In the twelfth week of the 2007 season he had 5 interceptionsthird in the league, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. His reputation as one of the hardest hitting players in the league and his all-out style of play had endeared him to fans.

News of his death during a home invasion on November 27, 2007 quickly spread across the region, leaving his teammates and fans in a state of disbelief and grief. While the Redskins organization honored Taylor's memory on the field, an established DC graffiti artist took to the red line in a public display of deference.

"The Red Line has been a hot spot since the mid-80's, but became the spot in the early 90's," according to Roger Gastman, a Bethesda native and author of Free Agents: A History of DC Graffiti and the forthcoming The History of American Graffiti. "If you wanted to be someone in the DC graffiti scene, you had to hit the Red Line."

"The Brookland station, you can walk right up to it. It is a very good location, if you can pull it off," says Gastman.

"The best writers interact with their environment," asserts Gastman, citing graffiti as the fastest growing art movement of the past forty years.

CERT

Beginning his graffiti career with the tag of "CERT" in 1992 at the age of 14, the well-known writer of the Sean Taylor mural declined an interview request for this article.

"The Red Line was CERT's backyard. He basically lived there and owned it. CERT could disappear, but, to this day he holds enough respect that his spots will remain untouched for years to come," reads CERT's profile in Free Agents that describes his graffiti as "hardcore and illegal" and "always in highly visible spots."

"Graffiti to me is my childhood, my teen years. That's what I was about 100 percent. But I'm still representing. Don't count me out. Don't forget me. I can come back at any moment and in a month I'll take king of the Red Line again," contends CERT in the 2001 book.

"Whatever his reasons for slowing down, CERT is a true D.C. king. It's time for him to sit back and let the mark he left on the city soak in. And like he said, don't count him out. With a closet full of paint and heart that's true to the game, CERT will be back," Gastman foretold in the conclusion of CERT's profile.

The mural has remained untouched since its appearance more than 3 years ago. Gastman says there is a code among writers that is being followed.

"Brookland station can be considered a museum for DC graffiti, because of the pieces that have endured over the years," says Saaret Yoseph, a graduate student at Georgetown University. "Brookland is unique in that the art is eye level. The graffiti is looking right at you as you wait for your train."

Yoseph is directing, "The Red Line D.C Project," a documentary exploring the "communal experience" of graffiti on the Red Line as a public art space. It will be released later this year.

Rider Reactions

"What struck me about that one was here was a memorial to someone we actually knewor knew of. So much graffiti is inscrutable. Who are the people named there? What's the purpose of it? But this was one we could grasp immediately," said John Kelly, a writer for The Washington Post and Red Line rider since 1983. "And then a few years later, just across the platform was another one that fell into that category: some memorial paint for Michael Jackson."

On a recent morning at the Brookland Station, riders' reactions to the graffiti suggested a sense of pride in the station's distinction as the home of the Sean Taylor mural.

"If they cleaned it up we would be really hurt behind that one," said Milford Obendorf, a Brookland resident waiting with his wife on the northbound train to Silver Spring.

"It's been here since he passed away. People come here to look at it," said Marquette Obendorf.

"It's real creative," said LaWanda Swain, a custodian with Metro for 6 years. "He played here so they have respect for him."

"It spices things up. If they cleaned it up then you'd be staring at a wall for 15 minutes," said Mike Young, 20, a cell phone sales rep downtown. "People remember Sean Taylor because he shouldn't have died. He hit the hardest like when he cracked yungin' in the Pro Bowl."

Numerous videos on YouTube have compiled Taylor's highlights as a Redskin, including a tackle of punter Brian Moorman in the Pro Bowl that lifted Moorman off his feet to a point where he was parallel to the field.

However, some riders expressed frustration with the station's illegal art.

"It grows and grows until they clean it up," said Joe, an older man in a white dress shirt, a Brookland resident for more than two decades. "The kids that do it are talented, but they can put their talents to better use."

As a regular rider of the red line for more than a decade, I can remember the walls at Brookland being cleaned, "buffed" in the language of graffiti, about five years ago.

"The graffiti is on CSX property, not Metro property. Typically, when we become aware of graffiti, our goal is to remove it within 24 hours," said Angela Gates, a Media Relations officer with Metro.

CSX did not respond to email and phone call requests for comment.

"There have been no graffiti-related arrests or citations in the last year at Brookland-CUA," said Gates who emphasized that the property is outside of Metro's jurisdiction.

With no apparent plans to clean the walls and a lack of enforcement around graffiti, the Sean Taylor mural will continue to be a distinctive cultural landmark for the Brookland Metro station.

A print version of this article will appear in the forthcoming spring edition of The Brookland Heartbeat.

John Muller is a local journalist and historian. His first book, Frederick Douglass in Washington, DC: The Lion of Anacostia, was published by The History Press last year. John is now at work on Mark Twain in Washington, DC.  

Comments

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Cool Disco Dan 4 life!!!

Also, a little bit down the tracks before you go into the short tunnel, there's a portrait of the Joker. Heath Ledger memorial?

by JessMan on Mar 10, 2011 12:37 pm • linkreport

@JessMan -you beat me to it! (Cool Disco Dan ref.)

by Tina on Mar 10, 2011 12:55 pm • linkreport

fyi...

http://cooldiscodan.net/

by John on Mar 10, 2011 1:16 pm • linkreport

Its still just graffiti. Cover it up.

by spookiness on Mar 10, 2011 1:22 pm • linkreport

Meh... publicising this kind of thing only perpetuates it's spread.

"Graffiti is art, graffiti is special", blah blah blah.

No it isn't. It's the destruction of someone else's property. I would have a lot more "tolerance" for stuff like this if these so called artist's tagged their own homes as well, but of course they would "never" do that.

Paint over it. This is as much of an eyesore as watching the redskins play.

by freely on Mar 10, 2011 1:37 pm • linkreport

The graffiti does not help fight the perception that this is a dangerous area.

Cover it up.

by andrew on Mar 10, 2011 1:43 pm • linkreport

I posted on an earlier thread that a certain graffiti "artist" who writes his name all over the place tagged my house and a neighboring public building, both of which managed to remain unpainted brick for over 100 years.

Graffiti is vandalism and in some cases it can really rob a community of its treasures in a very tragic way.

by Ward 1 Guy on Mar 10, 2011 2:01 pm • linkreport

I live in Brookland, and I like the graffiti not only at Brookland metro, but all the way down the ride line to NY Ave. I like that NE DC still has its rough around the edges look in some places. If the graffiti give you the perception that this is a bad area, then you are in the wrong part of DC. Move to NW.

Having said that, I would rather the graffiti be confined to the rail corridor on the vacant, derelict warehouses and CSX tunnels. I don't like it when I see it show up on buildings that people recently spent a lot of money to build, like the back of the new hotel at NY Ave. Not cool.

by Will R. on Mar 10, 2011 2:33 pm • linkreport

It seems that if CSX is responsible for the wall, and they haven't done anything to clean up graffiti there for decades, then it's fair game. I agree that it's not fair to graffiti a new building or someone else's house, but as far as private property is concerned, this is about as appropriate a place to graffiti as you can get.

Either way, I really appreciated this post, having grown up on the Red Line and seeing something new every time I rode it. The other day, I saw a new tag memorializing the artist's father. DC is a city of memorials. A tag for Michael Jackson isn't the Lincoln Memorial, but it still holds meaning for people. And it didn't have to spend years at an architect's desk or being debated by the Planning Commission or at fundraisers seeking donations. Someone just did it. If only more "legal" alterations to the built environment in DC came about that easily.

by dan reed! on Mar 10, 2011 3:17 pm • linkreport

"Meh... publicising this kind of thing only perpetuates it's spread."

There are some of us who are more concerned with perpetuating the spread of wrong 'it's' usage.

RIP ST21

by horseydeucey on Mar 10, 2011 3:23 pm • linkreport

There's graffiti, and then there's vandalism.

Like the famous quotation from Potter Stewart about the difference between obscenity and pornography, "I know it when I see it."

I enjoy the Red Line's street art. I would also be pissed if someone just tagged my house. There's a line there between what I think is OK and what is just petty vandalism. I don't know if I can explain it, but "I know it when I see it."

by Alex B. on Mar 10, 2011 3:23 pm • linkreport

@dan reed.

"It seems that if CSX is responsible for the wall, and they haven't done anything to clean up graffiti there for decades, then it's fair game"

Complete nonsense. CSX has more than 21,000 miles of track and 20 billion in associated infrastructure (bridges, tunnels, retaining walls) etc to maintain and spend their money on. Only god knows how many hundreds of millions it would cost them yearly to run out and paint over all the tagging on their property.

This would be like me coming by your house, arbitrarily deciding it looked run down and then using that ridiculous self created premise to justify making it look worse.

You can believe graffiti is art if you like, but keep it to your own property. Thats the only appropriate place for it. Personally I, along with 99% of the rest of the world thinks it looks like crap and gives places an unwanted run down ghetto feel. Hence the reason that these so called "edgy" and enlightened "artists" never tag their own property.

by freely on Mar 10, 2011 3:32 pm • linkreport

@ dan reed!

Doesn't matter anyone destroying or defacing other persons or companies property should be dealt with no excuses it is not yours so don't touch it. It does not matter what is painted/written you did not get permission of the owner.

If you want to go graffiti a wall go buy a damn building or workout something with the owner of a building; there is no excuse to touching others property and if someone did it to my property outside of DC they would shot or have their asskicked.

by kk on Mar 10, 2011 8:07 pm • linkreport

Perhaps the ANC can ask the HPRB to designate it an historic tagging. There's a lot of that historic stuff going on in Brookland, you know.

by Mike on Mar 10, 2011 10:17 pm • linkreport

What's Lance's view on this? He comments on EVERYTHING else, kinda surprised to see that he doesn't have something to say here, too.

by Geoffrey Hatchard on Mar 11, 2011 9:24 am • linkreport

@Geoffery Hatchard:
Nah. Graffiti isn't made out of overhead wires, so it's okay to have it in the Federal City.

by Matt Johnson on Mar 11, 2011 9:26 am • linkreport

What's Lance's view on this? He comments on EVERYTHING else, kinda surprised to see that he doesn't have something to say here, too.

He's still on the fence, biding his time to see which side of the issue is most likely to piss off cyclists, pedestrians, and most importantly, David C.

by oboe on Mar 11, 2011 10:23 am • linkreport

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