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  "path": "/2026/03/31/memento-mori-on-the-block-rip-walls-in-new-york/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-03-31T14:00:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.brooklynstreetart.com",
  "tags": [
    "Artists",
    "Abe Lincoln Jr.",
    "Brooklyn Street Art",
    "Jaime Rojo",
    "Memorial Walls",
    "Mr. Moustachio",
    "Shin3",
    "Steven P. Harrington",
    "Tats Crew",
    "United Bombers",
    "Continue reading Memento Mori on the Block: RIP Walls in New York at Brooklyn Street Art."
  ],
  "textContent": "**Capturing and Archiving with Photos**\n\nIn these recent street photos, the painted tributes read less like “artworks” in the gallery sense and more like public messages—meant to hold their place long enough for the neighborhood to recognize itself in them. The visual grammar is consistent across New York’s “Rest in Peace” walls: the portrait (often larger-than-life), the name set like a headline, the dates, the short dedication, and then the personal details—favorite colors, a car or bike, a sports logo, a prayerful phrase, a few chosen symbols—that insist on a whole life rather than a police report or a death notice.\n\nContinue reading Memento Mori on the Block: RIP Walls in New York at Brooklyn Street Art.",
  "title": "Memento Mori on the Block: RIP Walls in New York"
}