Chinatown New York gets a grand dragon makeover

Xinhua
One of the oldest streets in Manhattan's Chinatown in New York got a high-fashion makeover as a Chinese artist painted a grand dragon on it.
Xinhua

One of the oldest streets in Manhattan’s Chinatown in New York got a high-fashion makeover as a Chinese artist painted a grand dragon on it.

Located in the heart of Chinatown, Doyers Street was infamously known as the “Bloody Angle” in the early 20th century.

With just one block in length and a sharp bend in the middle, the shape of the 61-meter street inspired Chen Dongfan, an artist from Hangzhou in eastern China, to visualize a dragon winding its way up and resting at the intersection with Pell Street.

Chinatown New York gets a grand dragon makeover
Xinhua

Doyers Street in Manhattan’s Chinatown get a high-fashion makeover with a technicolor painting of a winding dragon. 

“The Song of Dragons and Flowers” is the name Chen gave to the vibrant painting he installed on the 450 square meters of removable and environmentally friendly paint.

“This street has a very complicated history. It’s where the earliest Chinese immigrants stayed,” Chen said upon the completion of the work.

The artist believes that dragon, both from its visual form and cultural meaning, can best represent the area.

Instead of depicting the form of the dragon on the street, he chose to capture the soul and spirit of the mythical animal, as a visual embodiment of Chinese cultural heritage.

“Chinatown’s history is full of hardship, but also full of love. For me, the dragon and flower represent love and peace that Chinese people value most,” Chen said.

“The painting is abstract. At a moment I am not sure what I have painted, yet people living here told me they saw the head of a dragon, the eyes of a dragon and also flowers. I did capture how they perceived this neighborhood as home.”

Chen’s work is in partnership with Art Bridge and part of the NYC Department of Transportation’s Doyers Street Seasonal Street Public Art program, as well as the Chinatown Partnership’s pedestrian plaza project.

The technicolor painting is part of the organizers’ efforts to boost foot traffic to Chinatown, attracting tourists, domestic or foreign, to appreciate the unique culture Chinatown boasts, Wellington Chen, executive director of the Chinatown Partnership said.

“We want to show people our history, our culture and what we are proud of,” Chen said. “Over the years, this street is less known to outsiders and there are a few cars going through it. We did a similar project last year. This year’s will be a greater success.”

Chinatown Partnership was formed in 2006 to bring residents, business owners and community groups together to rebuild Chinatown following 9/11, and to preserve the neighborhood’s unique culture while ensuring its vitality in the future through strategic positioning.

If Chinatown’s legendary woman Mabel Lee were alive, she would be very happy to see what this street has become today, Chen said.

The post office at 6 Doyers Street will be renamed “Mabel Lee Memorial Post Office,” as the US House of Representatives approved the legislation authored by Representative Nydia M. Velazquez in March, he added.

Lee, who died in 1966, was the first Chinese woman to receive a PhD from Columbia University. She is known for organizing classes for Chinatown’s residents to build skills in areas like carpentry, radio and typewriting. At just the age of 22, Lee led Chinese and Chinese-American women in a May 1917 pro-suffrage parade in New York.

In addition to the arrival of “The Song of Dragons and Flowers” to Doyers Street, Chinatown residents have another piece of good news to rejoice: a long-closed route from their neighborhood to lower Manhattan finally reopened — 17 years after 9/11.


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