- Zoo York Wall
The Zoo York Wall was a famous
graffiti wall inManhattan 'sCentral Park , where subway writers and other street artists "made their marks" in the early-70s. It was a temporary wall, erected in 1971 by theNew York City Transit Authority to block unauthorized entry into the site of a new subway extension running underneath theCentral Park Zoo . An excellent photograph of the wall is prominently displayed on the second page of "The Faith of Graffiti ", the noted 1974photo essay book onNew York City graffiti, documented byMervyn Kurlansky andJohn Naar , with text byNorman Mailer . (Praeger Publishers , Inc.)Its name originates from the subway tunnel it was supposed to guard, then called the "Zoo York Tunnel," which still runs below the area of the
Central Park Zoo . During its construction (1971-1973), the tunnel provided a subterranean gathering place for very early subway artists who hung around together inCentral Park , and was namedZoo York for obvious reasons by ALI, founder of theSOUL ARTISTS graffiti crew.Armored with polished aluminum in the futile hope of resisting spray-paint and permanent marker ink, the wall did little to dissuade teenage graffiti writers from climbing over and descending into the tunnel during its construction. There, extensions of both the Broadway
BMT andSixth Avenue IND lines merged below Central Park on two sub-levels, then curved underneath the zoo grounds and out underFifth Avenue to the east, connecting there to the new63rd Street Line . Upon completion of the subway project in 1973, the "Zoo York Wall" was torn down.Resources
* "
The Faith of Graffiti ", documented byMervyn Kurlansky andJohn Naar , text byNorman Mailer , New York: Praeger Publishers, Inc., 1974.* see also:
Zoo York
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