- published: 20 Jul 2009
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The Heidelberg Project is an outdoor art project in Detroit, Michigan. It was created in 1986 by artist Tyree Guyton and his grandfather Sam Mackey ("Grandpa Sam") as an outdoor art environment in the McDougall-Hunt neighborhood on the city's east side, just north of the city's historically African-American Black Bottom area. The Heidelberg Project is, in part, a political protest, as Tyree Guyton's childhood neighborhood began to deteriorate after the 1967 riots. Guyton described coming back to Heidelberg Street after serving in the Army; he was astonished to see that the surrounding neighborhood looked as if "a bomb went off".
At first, the project consisted of his painting a series of houses on Detroit's Heidelberg Street with bright dots of many colors and attaching salvaged items to the houses. It was a constantly evolving work that transformed a hard-core inner-city neighborhood where people were afraid to walk, even in daytime, into one in which neighbors took pride and where visitors were many and welcomed.[citation needed] Tyree Guyton worked on the Heidelberg Project daily with the children on the block. He and director Jenenne Whitfield gave lectures and workshops on the project around the country. Their main goal was to develop the Heidelberg Project into the city's first indoor and outdoor museum, complete with an artists' colony, creative art center, community garden, amphitheater, and more.
The Heidelberg Project
THE HEIDELBERG PROJECT BY TYREE GUYTON
The Heidelberg Project: An Art and Culture Revolution in Detroit
Fire destroys Heidelberg Project's "Doll House"
Before Burned Down - Houses of Heidelberg Project Detroit, 2013 / 2014
Anadarko: Heidelberg Project
Heidelberg Project - Tyree Guyton remembers now and then
Heidelberg project | Jenenne Whitfield | TEDxOaklandUniversity
Heidelberg Project hit by fire again- Detroit Drone Aerial Video
Heidelberg Project break-in surveillance video