Milwaukee High School of the Arts unveils mural to educate students about gun violence
The creation of "This Is Not A Drill," was a collaboration between the Wisconsin Anti-Violence Effort Educational Fund and the the school's student-led club Artists Against Gun Violence, according to an MPS news release.
Student collaborators included lead organizer Izzy Polewski with Adriana Cruz, Andre Ceballo Olea, Catherine Kimbakimba, Ash Lawton, Eliott Stugard and Zach Boettner. The students were supported by MHSA visual art teachers Posy Knight and Julia Stacey, as well as other school and WAVE Educational Fund staff.
Students in the group began meeting weekly in January, Polewski said. Once the mural layout was decided upon, small groups designed different sections. Cruz then created a digital painting from the students' sketches and transferred it to a wall in the school's mini-park, where students spent March, April and May bringing the mural to life with acrylic paints.
"We worked so hard on this," Polewski said in a speech before the mural reveal. "All of us could not have created this without each other."
Polewski, who uses they/them pronouns, is a junior visual art major at the school and serves as the founder and president of the Artists Against Gun Violence club. They are also a member of the Youth Advisory Board at WAVE.
Polewski came up with the idea of the mural after their boss at WAVE asked them to find ways to reach out to the community and engage it in gun violence prevention.
Knight, the school's mural club adviser, said the mural developed through private conversations with students that created a sense of vulnerability with one another. She explained how hearing from students similar in age to the victims of mass school shootings like Columbine illustrated the atmosphere these students grew up in: one permeated with culture and conversation around gun violence.
"It's like that passion is coming from a visceral place," Knight said.
In speaking to the crowd at the mural's unveiling, Polewski said they think youth in Milwaukee have the biggest problem with gun violence. They said they know many students who know how to get a gun, and not many who feel safe from gun violence.
"You're all scared, and I think that's dumb," Polewski said. "My goal for tonight is to make other students realize just how dumb that is. I want students feeling empowered."
The students' mural is split into three sections, Polewski explained.
The first is dystopia, which represents the desensitization of the current gun violence climate. The section features a heart with bullet holes, a bullet shattering glass, a crow and a weeping woman's eyes staring as if "history is looking at us right now."
The middle section is rebellion, which features protest and methods of coping with gun violence. It includes a boom box "filled with music and love," a car with peace signs on it and a vigil to remember the lost.
Finally, the utopia section represents what Polewski said students want to see after the storm of gun violence. It features a dove, music and a bird feeding its chicks.
"We really want to represent peace and love and hope in that utopia section, but we also made sure to still include some signs that gun violence was a thing," Polewski said. "If you look super closely, you can find guns broken up with flowers growing out of them, like yes, if once we finish this fight, there will still be gun violence."
The mural unveiling ceremony, which was held outdoors in the school's mini-park, featured a general art gallery that rotates each academic term and an open mic for students after the reveal. A number of students participated in the open mic by performing reciting various literary works like poems.
Polewski said solutions to gun violence can happen through art and activism because creativity shows that anger doesn't always have to result in violence. Instead, acting with peace can create an effect.
"By activism through art, I think it's really all about education, like this helps educate us," Polewski said. "This helps show us what's happening, but also shows us what we can do."
Students and staff working on the mural were given a $250 budget from Principal Larry Farris and mainly used supplies donated by the school's art department, Knight said. She added that every contributor worked without pay in order to make the creation of the mural possible.
Knight called it an "epic effort" to scrape together sufficient funding for the mural project and find community members to support the artists' efforts. She said more resources should be available to schools to make positive changes through creative projects.
"Art is a vehicle for change because it creates empathy in the viewers, and it's something the mural does so well," Knight said.
Now, Knight is calling upon community members to support the efforts of local high schools and students who are creating art like the mural. She said one of the best ways to do this is by attending student showcases like theater productions and gallery nights to show students that the community cares about their works.
Knight said she felt hopeful seeing a number of community leaders show up to the event with genuine data and a call to action.
While Mayor Cavalier Johnson was not able to attend the event as originally planned, Milwaukee County Director of Community Outreach Kyle Ashley spoke to the crowd on his behalf.
Ashley said gun violence is now the leading cause of death for kids and teens in Wisconsin. He said this statistic is a call to action for adults and policymakers to invest in prevention and keep youth safe.
"This mural isn't just a painting, it's a statement," Johnson said. "It's a voice of young people refusing to be silent about the reality they live in every day."
Tyler Kelly, policy and engagement associate at WAVE, hosted a table at the mural unveiling. He said he was excited for the community to see how the mural conveys that gun violence is an unnatural and unacceptable issue.
"Having that reminder that gun violence is still happening, that it's wrong and we can do something about it, I think that has tremendous value to our young people," Kelly said.
MHSA's mural unveiling precedes Gun Violence Awareness Month in June. This year, National Gun Violence Awareness Day takes place June 7.
Contact Mia Thurow at mthurow@gannett.com.
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Milwaukee High School of the Arts raises awareness about gun violence
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
2 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Suge Knight says Tupac begged for death and friends smoked his ashes
Marion 'Suge' Knight, the embattled former CEO of Death Row Records, has come forward with bombshell claims about the death of rapper Tupac Shakur, revealing in a new jailhouse interview that Shakur asked to be killed in the hospital after being shot — and that his friends later smoked his cremated remains. Knight, 60, the only living witness to Shakur's final hours, recounted the chaotic night of Sept. 7, 1996, when their black BMW came under fire in a drive-by shooting near the Las Vegas Strip. After the pair were rushed to the University Medical Center of Southern Nevada, Knight said Shakur, fearing prosecution for a gang-related assault earlier that night, begged to be killed. 'Kill me. Shoot me,' Shakur allegedly pleaded, according to Knight's interview with People. Shakur's mother, Afeni Shakur, a former Black Panther, allegedly gave her son pills to ease his suffering, Knight claimed. When doctors attempted to revive him, Knight says she intervened: 'Don't ever do that again ... Let him go.' Shakur was declared dead six days later, on Sept. 13. According to Knight, Afeni insisted on an immediate cremation. He paid $1 million in cash to have it done. That same night, in what Knight described as a symbolic tribute, several of Shakur's close friends allegedly rolled his ashes into a blunt and smoked them. Knight, on probation at the time, says he abstained. Despite a tumultuous music career that spanned just five years, Shakur made an indelible mark on the world of hip-hop. He sold more than 75 million records worldwide, including the diamond-certified album 'All Eyez on Me,' which included the hits 'California Love (Remix),' 'I Ain't Mad at Cha' and 'How Do U Want It.' He also found success as an actor, starring in the films 'Poetic Justice,' 'Juice' and 'Above the Rim.' Although Shakur was born in New York and spent his youth in Baltimore and Marin City, he credited Oakland with launching his music career after he connected with the East Bay rap outfit Digital Underground. In 2023, the Oakland City Council unanimously approved the renaming of a section of MacArthur Boulevard to Tupac Shakur Way in honor of the rapper. In 2016, the city also issued a proclamation naming June 16 as Tupac Shakur Day. 'I give all my love to Oakland, if I'ma claim somewhere I'ma claim Oakland, even if I don't live there,' Shakur said in a 1993 interview. The new revelations come amid renewed scrutiny over Shakur's killing. He has claimed Sean 'Diddy' Combs ordered the hit, an allegation Combs has repeatedly denied and which authorities say has never led to Combs being considered a suspect. Afeni Shakur died at the age of 69 on May 2, 2016. The cause was believed to be cardiac arrest, according to the Marin County Sheriff's Office. Nearly 30 years after the shooting, Knight says he still can't bring himself to listen to Tupac's music. 'It was a part of me that changed my life forever,' he said. 'When Pac died, I saw the whole sky turn a reddish orange.'


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Tupac's friends and family smoked his ashes hours after his death, Suge Knight claims
Tupac Shakur's closest friends and family rolled the rapper's cremated ashes into a blunt and smoked it just hours after he died, his pal Suge Knight sensationally claimed in a new interview. The former Death Row Records CEO told People on Tuesday that he coughed up $1 million in cash to have the slain rapper immediately cremated so the bizarre ritual could take place — and because he was so terrified of Shakur's mom. 'A bag with his ashes was passed around,' Knight said. 'His homies rolled him up. They smoked him. Advertisement 4 Tupac Shakur was shot and killed on September 13, 1996. Getty Images 4 Former Death Row Records CEO Suge Knight is currently serving a prison sentence. Getty Images 'You gotta understand, that's what made sense. It was symbolic. It's like… you keep part of him,' he added. Advertisement Knight — who was behind the wheel when Shakur was shot dead in the passenger seat — claimed he was the only one who didn't partake. 'I was so happy to say I was on probation — I couldn't smoke,' Knight said. 'I told his mother, 'Moms, I'd love to, but if I hit that, I'll get in trouble.'. I was probably the only one who didn't hit him.' 4 Tupac Shakur was 26 years old at the time of his death. Getty Images Advertisement Knight, who is currently serving time in California for manslaughter, said he paid a huge sum to have his pal cremated because Shakur's mom, Afeni Shakur, demanded it just moments after he was pronounced dead. 'She came up to me and said, 'Get it done. Now,'' Knight recalled. He said he hesitated because Shakur had told him just weeks earlier that he didn't want to be cremated. 'He told me, 'When I go, I want every rapper at my funeral to grab the mic. I want them to kiss me head to toe. Just like in 'Life Goes On.'' Knight said. 'He didn't want to be cremated.' Advertisement 4 Suge Knight with Tupac Shakur in 1996. BEI/REX/Shutterstock After telling his mom he didn't think he could make the cremation happen so soon, Knight said the rapper's grieving mom 'gave me one of those mama looks, like, 'Shut your a– up and do what I said.'' 'Then she started cussing me out. 'Get this sh-t done!'' Knight said, adding, 'I paid someone a million dollars cash to take care of it.'


The Hill
13-06-2025
- The Hill
Infant highchairs recalled over ‘risk of serious injury or death'
(NEXSTAR) – A high-end highchair was recalled Thursday over a potentially deadly flaw and several reports of serious injuries, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). CPSC officials said the decision was made after multiple parents blamed the Bugaboo Giraffe highchair for serious falls that resulted in injuries including a hematoma, facial bruising, abrasions and a temporary loss of consciousness. The screws that attach the legs to the chair are apparently prone to loosening over time — and even detaching by themselves, the CPSC said, citing incident reports on as well as posts by parents on Reddit and Amazon. Under one Reddit post titled 'An Unsafe Scam Disguised as a Premium Product,' one parent described what happened after two years of using the highchair, which retails for over $400 on the Bugaboo site. 'I went to pick up the highchair to move it—and it crumbled. Just completely fell apart in my hands. I was furious. This was supposed to be a safe, durable, premium product, and instead, it was falling to pieces right in front of me.' The post contains a number of complaints about the customer service process, ranging from hang-ups to weekslong waits for email replies. Parents who bought the chair are advised to stop using it immediately and contact Bugaboo for a repair kit. No refunds are currently being offered. 'Safety is paramount to ensure the well-being of our customers and their children,' Bugaboo states on its website. 'To decrease the potential for incorrect installation of the screws, we have developed a free Repair Kit.' The kit apparently includes: 'If you have ordered a Bugaboo Giraffe after May 1st, 2025, you will already have the Repair Kit included in your Bugaboo Giraffe box and no further action is needed,' according to Bugaboo. The recall page contains a link for parents who want to check their highchair's serial number. The recall comes after Consumer Reports sent a letter to the CPSC earlier in the week urging an investigation into the injury reports. 'While we are glad to see the product being recalled, it is unacceptable that Bugaboo is not offering a refund to consumers who want one,' said Gabe Knight, Senior Policy Analyst at Consumer Reports. 'Babies have been injured falling from this high chair, and parents may not feel comfortable using it anymore. 'We applaud the CPSC for recalling this product and alerting consumers to the potential safety risks, but Bugaboo should let caretakers decide whether they want the free repair kit, or their money back,' Knight continued. As of Friday, 18,280 highchairs had been recalled in the U.S., with another 2,325 in Canada.