Past. Present. Future. These time stamps represent what 29-year-old Kyle Holbrook paints on his murals.
As a Wilkinsburg native and witness to troubled teens growing up, Holbrook set out to be a mentor to troubled youth by employing them to paint murals with his company KH design. Holbrook is the CEO and executive director of his self-titled company.
Holbrook established KH design and started out selling personalized T-shirts out of the back of his van. After a lot of struggles, Holbrook began to see some progress. "Anything in life that's worthwhile is hard," said Holbrook.
He started these mural projects for artistic and social reasons. He enjoyed the "large scale of beauty" of the murals and also wanted them to have a social meaning. In addition, he decided to bring teens together from rival neighborhoods to help minimize their violence against each other.
Holbrook's desire to be a mentor to troubled and other teens stemmed from the influence of his parents. The teens he's working with will be paid a salary of $1,000 per mural. They are required to participate in mandatory painting classes prior to the mural project and must complete 30 hours of work per week.
Holbrook is not just assisted by teens. He has a staff of 46 artists who also help in several projects, including the biggest one yet: the National City Martin Luther King Busway Mural Project.
Along what is known as the East Busway, the mural stops will include Penn Station (Downtown Pittsburgh), Herron Avenue Station (Hill District), Negley Avenue Station (Shadyside), Oakland, East Liberty, Homewood, Wilkinsburg, Hamlett, Roslyn, and Swissvale Station. The busway connects these communities with what had been graffiti-marked walls. Instead of removing the graffiti, the KH design company converts the negative space into something positive.
Pictured in several murals around town is Holbrook's motivation: his daughter, Kyla. Every mural tells a different story and can be interpreted in several different ways, he said. The murals represent the past, present and future with different shapes and colors.
Holbrook continues to set and achieve goals despite the negativity that continuously hovers over his work. "Believe in yourself" is the advice Holbrook gives up-and-coming artists who may experience lots of animosity.
He also continues to expand his company with projects from Pittsburgh to Atlanta, where KH designs is completing a mural project for the Tupac Shakur museum. Holbrook's ultimate goal is to submit a curriculum to the Pennsylvania Secretary of Education that would put art back into the classroom and beautify the communities through the work of students in schools.
First Published August 3, 2007, 2:30pm