
Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.
10 years later commemorating 9/11, memorial sites from Ground Zero to smaller community based installations have populated streets, beaches and open fields. Last Thursday night, I came across street artist, WK Interact finishing his film strip style mural on N 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
A powerful tribute to our public rescue workers responding to the World Trade Center terrorist attack, unknowingly became America’s first response to our nation’s longest war. WK Interact’s installation compositing a timeline of events follows the length of the entire block.
As WK explains, the emotional graphic piece is fitting in the city’s landscape instead in the confines of a formal display symbolizing the urban destruction and heroic actions that have defined a decade.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Street artist, WK Interact shares a 9/11 memorial film strip style mural on North 5th and Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.




















