Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A fresh coat of hope

New works of art brighten pandemic-shuttered businesses

- By Janna Karel •

Aweek ago, Derek Stonebarge­r removed all the alcohol, valuables and toilet paper from his bar, locked the doors and shuttered the building with plywood.

He hated seeing his small business, ReBar, boarded up as though it were waiting for a hurricane.

So on Monday he posted on social media, asking whether any artists would be interested in brightenin­g up his stretch of Main Street in exchange for a surface, surplus paint and a small stipend.

By Tuesday morning, 30 prominent local artists had paired with 10 small businesses on Main Street

and Charleston Boulevard to transform plywood into hope-inspiring works of art.

As with all nonessenti­al businesses in Nevada, Stonebarge­r needed to close his antique shop and bar for 30 days because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Fearing break-ins, he boarded up the windows.

“I hated the look of it. So I had some leftover blue paint and painted it. Then I asked artist James Henninger if he could do something,” says Stonebarge­r, looking at the facade that now features an image of The Dude from “The Big Lebowski” next to the words “ReBar will ReOpen soon.”

Next, ReBar’s gallery curator, Geneva Marquez decorated the boards over Stonebarge­r’s other bar, Davy’s, inscribing the phrase, “Tough times don’t last, tough people do” in bright colors with hearts and flowers.

“We went to the extreme of boarding up the back. And I felt secure, but it was so ugly,” Stonebarge­r says. “I thought let’s hire an artist.”

Stonebarge­r says 30 or 40 artists answered his social media post, among them Izaac Zevalking, who works under the name Recycled Propaganda out of his studio on Main Street, and the late Alex P. Huerta’s Three Baaad Sheep partners, who have a studio in the Arts Factory.

Marquez is pairing business owners with artists who embrace a similar aesthetic, such as an artist who uses floral motifs for the facade of Gaia flowers and one who uses geometric shapes for cityscapes

‘ We went to the extreme of boarding up the back. And I felt secure, but it was so ugly. I thought let’s hire an artist. ’ Derek Stonebarge­r ReBar owner

for Novus Architectu­re’s storefront.

“We’re trying to get this looking artistic in the Arts

District,” Marquez says. “Rather than just looking at wooden boards, which is kind of sad.”

Marquez is scheduling artists for alternatin­g time slots, so that no one works less than 6 feet from another

artist.

“This community is really a family down here,” says Becky Miller, who owns Main Street Mercantile and has owned most of the buildings on the 1-acre block since 2007.

Stonebarge­r says participat­ing artists can charge $5,000 for murals of this scale, but because he is still paying his employees’ wages for 30 days, he can offer only $50 or $100.

“They’re like, ‘Dude, I don’t even want that,’ ” Stonebarge­r says. “I want to do it so that later we can sell it and raise money for something.”

When this passes, and Stonebarge­r is sure it will, he plans to show the murals in a warehouse or gallery space and sell them as a fundraiser, though he is not yet sure which cause he will support.

“It’s probably something art-related, Arts District-related,” Stonebarge­r says. “But there are so many people who are going to be affected by this and need help.”

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal@KMCannonPh­oto ?? Artist Alexander Sky answered a social media call to paint a mural on the boarded-up back entrance to ReBar in the Arts District in downtown Las Vegas.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal@KMCannonPh­oto Artist Alexander Sky answered a social media call to paint a mural on the boarded-up back entrance to ReBar in the Arts District in downtown Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? Artists Ashley Fox and Alexander Sky created a mural that features a paintbrush and a thermomete­r.
Artists Ashley Fox and Alexander Sky created a mural that features a paintbrush and a thermomete­r.
 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal@KMCannonPh­oto ?? Derek Stonebarge­r, owner of Rebar in the Arts District, hired an artist to paint the plywood on the front of his bar. It inspired him to seek out other artists who would lend their talents to the boarded-up city block.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-Journal@KMCannonPh­oto Derek Stonebarge­r, owner of Rebar in the Arts District, hired an artist to paint the plywood on the front of his bar. It inspired him to seek out other artists who would lend their talents to the boarded-up city block.
 ??  ?? Geneva Marquez painted a mural on the boarded-up windows of Davy’s that reads “Tough times don’t last, tough people do.”
Geneva Marquez painted a mural on the boarded-up windows of Davy’s that reads “Tough times don’t last, tough people do.”

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