It’s a great idea to go window shopping these days —as opposed to actual shopping.
Since 70% of the American economy is fueled by shopping instead of manufacturing, we’re all supposed to be doing our patriotic duty accordingly. But sometimes the wallet is bare, bro. And sometimes the local dollar doesn’t stay local.
In yet another case of Street Art improving a community, the Willoughby Windows project in downtown Brooklyn officially opened this weekend with 17 artists, babies, scooters, costumed dancers, a sidewalk DJ, and inquisitive mildly bewildered citizenry slowing down to peek through the glass into artists’ clever minds.

- Artist Logan Hicks leans into his multi-layered screenprint piece depicting crowds of New Yorkers on the street. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

- A stupendous animal centric 3D installation utilizing the full space of the display window by print expert Dennis McNett can only be appreciated fully in person (photo Steven P. Harrington)

- Garrison and Allison Buxton; anchors and visionaries, bring Willoughby Windows to Brooklyn (photo Steven P. Harrington)
In a joint effort with Ad Hoc Gallery and the local BID (Business Improvement District), Garrison Buxton and Allison Buxton and all the Ad Hoc interns have worked tirelessly for a few weeks with artists to install this show behind glass and to revive a moribund block in this sector of retail Brooklyn.

- A detailed storyline from Cannonball Press also features a giant old -style cash register (not pictured) that reminds you there once were real businesses and customers here (photo Steven P. Harrington)
At the very least, it’s not so friggin depressing to pass this block on the way to work. At most, it can inspire creative impulses and conversations. Friday’s opening featured many children, gawking families, kooky creative types, chalk games on the side walk, even a feeling of “community”. Huh.

Willoughby Window gazer (photo Jaime Rojo)

- In a window display case that featured bagels and home-baked goods, the late afternoon shadows slide across photographs of shadow-tracing by street artist Ellis G. (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Ironically a neighbor to bailout-happy JPMorgan Chase, whose skyscraper casts a shadow over this district of mom and pop businesses displaced by developers, the Willoughby Windows Project gives creative stimulus to the community with a fresh way to think of the shop window.

- Stencil artist Chris Stain invokes the imagery of Brooklyn neighbors (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Josh MacPhee brings his Celebrate People's History poster series to this window, creating a patchwork of text and images (photo Steven P. Harrington)
In the wake of boom-era blustery press conferences and erect Powerpoint bar-graphs that fell limp, this project doesn’t bring back the businesses or feed their families, but it does invite a conversation about what a locally created economy means to the people who live here. Pedestrian? Yes, actually. Moribund? No way.
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
BSA Film Friday: 07.11.14
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.
Now screening :
1. Auckland's Al Fresco Festival
2."Where The Food Grows" by Noah Throop
3. Herakut: ...
Bifido Listens to and Tells Stories on the Streets of Stigliano
IItalian Street artist Bifido has perfected his technique of dissolving his wheat-pasted photography into aerosol painting on the street, producing a seamless atmospheric story that leaps from the wa...
Photos Of BSA 2021: #3: The 3-Eyed City Kitty
We’re celebrating the end of one year and the beginning of the next by thanking BSA Readers, Friends, and Family for your support in 2021. We have selected some of our favorite shots from the yea...
Street Art Behind Glass: Artist Ryan Seslow
Street Art behind Glass in Park Slope: Artist Ryan Seslow, Brooklyn Street Art. The neighborhood of Park Slope in Brooklyn is more known for beautiful Brownstones, impossible parking, towering maples,...
Aryz Celebrates Workers in Providence, RI Mural
Loosely layered and color-blocked figures in the desaturated tones of pre-Depression 1910s, the new lineup on these walls in downtown Providence, Rhode Island recalls a proud industrial age here – as...