Chris Pape

Chris Pape (aka Freedom) is an American painter and graffiti artist. He started tagging subway tunnels and subway cars in 1974 as "Gen II" before adopting the tag "Freedom".[1] Pape is best known for his numerous paintings in the eponymous Freedom Tunnel, an Amtrak tunnel running underneath Manhattan's Riverside Park. Prominent paintings in the Freedom Tunnel attributed to Pape include his "self-portrait", featuring a male torso with a spray-can head,[2] and "There's No Way Like the American Way" (aka "The Coca-Cola Mural"), a parody of Coca-Cola advertising and tribute to the evicted homeless of the tunnel.[3] Another theme of Freedom's work is black and silver recreations of classical art, including a reinterpretation of the Venus de Milo and a full train car recreation of the iconic hands from Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel. Chris Pape also was one of the first documentarians to cover the mole people, homeless living underground in the Freedom Tunnel.[4]

Sources

  1. Graffiti
  2. "Archived copy". www.citynoise.org. Archived from the original on 18 December 2008. Retrieved 19 April 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. http://www.urbanlens.com/files/freedom/freedom2.html
  4. "[WATCH] How a Train Tunnel Became the Center of NYC's Art Scene". June 29, 2020.


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