districts in the world.” The Roosevelt Row murals ▼ Culture Peace Sign Kyle Holbrook sends an anti-violence message with murals on Roosevelt Row. BY TIMOTHY RAWLES Phoenix in August and painted his message of awareness on two walls in Roosevelt Row. As part of his Gun Violence Awareness A National Tour, the painting depicts a left hand doing a peace sign with the words “stop gun violence” right next to it. In comparison to some of Holbrook’s massive murals, the artwork is modest. But he says that’s the point. “I wanted to make it more personal and make something that was — some image that was simple,” Holbrook says. “Sometimes simple is better and connects all the cities, connects the states. Connects the families in some way.” Holbrook has spent much of his life inspiring people through art. As a child from a troubled Pennsylvania neighbor- hood, he was exposed to gang violence. He was a gang member himself and saw many of his close friends and family killed by firearms. He says today, in the world of social media, taking a photo in front of a mural can reach more people than just those walking by it. “Murals are cooler than ever because of Instagram and it’s cool to get pictures with murals,” he says. “You know, it doesn’t have to be 20 stories high and super elaborate to get the message across and to make it more Instagrammable if you will.” Holbrook also points out that the victim isn’t just the person who was killed. Kyle Holbrook Although most memorials celebrate the lives of departed individuals, there is the side of the living perpetrator and the fami- lies who are also grieving. “Many of them are sad and sorry that they did it,” he says. “Sometimes someone was going to kill them — it’s complicated stuff.” This journey also has proven to be more than Holbrook imagined. He has already visited 47 states, with Alaska and Hawaii still to come, but getting to those is a bit more of a logistical challenge. The project also has inspired communities to create their own programs, which leave him humbled. “I’m a spiritual person, not religious, but I pray a lot, thinking about my friends and different stuff, of course, as I’ve been going on in this tour,” he says. “[There is] a As part of his Gun Violence Awareness National Tour, artist Kyle Holbrook (left) painted antigun violence murals on two walls in Roosevelt Row. lot of good energy, a lot of things have been developing from it that I couldn’t have planned. And that’s exactly what I wanted. For instance, like some group in Savannah [Georgia] — some group of artists, now they want to do stop gun violence murals.” Simple Design, Powerful Message The first gun violence mural Holbrook did was over two decades ago. It commemo- rated 27 of his friends, and honored his hometown of Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. His idea was to incorporate them as part of the narrative so they would never be forgotten. Today, his anti-gun violence street art has been seen across the country. He decided on bringing his work to Phoenix with a little help. The interns at his Moving the Lives of Kids Community Mural Project helped find the cities and what locations to put the peace signs. When it came to Phoenix, the decision was easy, as Holbrook points out: “Obviously, Roosevelt Row is one of the best artist rtist Kyle Holbrook’s murals are hand-drawn testaments to the friends and family he has lost to gun violence. The prolific artist visited Kyle Holbrook are black and white; other cities have different colors, but the image is always the same. He says consideration of color choices is talked about among the team, but ultimately, he wants to keep the murals simple. The simplicity in design is partly inspired by renowned street artist Banksy. Holbrook explains he wanted to “bring so much attention to stuff just from two colors and being simple. I don’t use spray paint. So, it’s done in that contemporary street art style; just two colors.” Phoenix also got an extra mural, according to Holbrook. In true street art style, Holbrook saw an open spot and painted an extra peace sign. He figured the empty space would be best utilized with his message rather than blight. “When you do a mural, typi- cally it’s not messed with and so it’s the only absolute deterrent,” he says. “But this was already somewhere where there was going to be another mural, so we all thought about that, and it was more about the message; the courage of my convictions or whatever. I’d rather do it to get the message out there more, and risk if there was repercussions. So that one — I didn’t get permission for the second one.” It’s been 23 years since the Columbine High School shooting in Colorado, and gun violence has seen a huge increase over the past two decades. Nearly 29,000 people have already died due to firearms in 2022, according to the Gun Violence Archive. The total in 1999 was 10,828, about 37 percent of 2022’s number thus far. Holbrook says the epidemic may have started with his generation in the late ’90s, or even before. “Now we’re so inundated, they readily happen and it’s certainly affected, not only our society but I think our psyche. And the younger generations, it’s like the internet, you know? They think it was always there,” he says. Holbrook’s murals are in a small parking lot located at East Roosevelt Street near Second Street. 21 phoenixnewtimes.com | CONTENTS | FEEDBACK | OPINION | NEWS | FEATURE | NIGHT+DAY | CULTURE | FILM | CAFE | MUSIC | PHOENIX NEW TIMES SEPT 22ND–SEPT 28TH, 2022