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In 1991, the Boston Youth Clean-Up Corps (BYCC) employed artist Heidi Schork to head up a new
division of its program called the Mural Crew. The main goal of this newly established program was
to eradicate the graffiti problem that was taking over Codman Square in Dorchester. Schork and a
group of eight teenagers set upon the task at hand and began adorning graffiti covered security
grates with art. The artwork was well received by the residents of the neighborhood and soon the
art jumped from the grates to the walls. Since its introduction, the Mural Crew has expanded to
include four crews of teen artists and a staff of five professional artists. In 1995, Schork
employed a group of artists from the Massachusetts College of Art. Gregg Bernstein, Teig Grennan,
Jennifer Rydwansky and Michael Womble joined Schork in bringing art to the public. In the fall of
1998, the Mural Crew expanded again to include an after school program that continues to work on
interior commissions in the winter months. The BYCC Mural Crew has produced over sixty public art
works since 1991 and is presently creating more.
Every summer, four crews of young Boston artists directed by professional mural painters
conceptualize, design, and paint murals that reflect the neighborhood or business district where a
wall is located. The program has given hundreds of Boston's youth the opportunity to be active
participants in the creation of public art. The Boston Youth Fund (or BYF, as it is now known)
Mural Crew gives youth an opportunity to improve skills, gain experience, and contribute to the
vitality of the city. It has also helped members receive scholarships to go on to college and
pursue a career in art. The Mural Crew continues to serve as a model for innovative youth
programming, linking art and community. We'd like to think of Boston as a city connected by murals!
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