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...neighbors weren't thrilled when Tyree Guyton began hanging hundreds of old shoes in the big tree on Heidelberg Street on Detroit's east side back in 1986. A few complained to him but were calmed by Guyton's passionate explanation that the dangling shoes celebrated their black ancestors lynched in the South. Residents probably should have asked Guyton whether Soles of the Most High completed his artistic vision for their block. It didn't. Eleven years later, thousands of used shoes are piled by the sidewalk and hanging in the trees--along with rusty car hoods and tires strewn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DETROIT: PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS POLKA-DOTTER | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

Even as artists from across the globe marvel at the Heidelberg Project, Guyton is becoming persona non grata on the street where he grew up. Tourist traffic is heavy. The bulk garbage collectors are so confused by what is art and what isn't on Heidelberg Street that they have stopped picking up there. And there's concern that the heaps of stuff are becoming a breeding ground for rodents. "Really, the problem has exploded this year because Tyree has put his polka dots everywhere," says Angela Brown Wilson, executive assistant to Detroit's Mayor Dennis Archer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DETROIT: PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS POLKA-DOTTER | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

Perhaps the biggest gripe among residents is that Guyton's ghetto gallery will push economic development away from Heidelberg Street. To be sure, the community has been an urban wasteland, a place where crime, drugs and vagrancy flourish in buildings still charred and hollowed from the 1967 riots. But a fledgling enterprise zone has sparked hope that new housing, businesses and jobs will flow into the area. Thus Guyton's suggestion that the street be turned into an artists' colony has generated little enthusiasm. "It is an embarrassing eyesore," fumes neighbor Anthony Dicus. "Nobody will want to invest here...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DETROIT: PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS POLKA-DOTTER | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

Mayor Archer's position on the issue is no clearer than a Guyton painting. His first instinct is to force Guyton to remove his artwork from the city-owned property. In 1991 the mayor's predecessor, Coleman Young, bulldozed a couple of abandoned houses that Guyton had decorated. But Archer's handlers have counseled otherwise, pointing out that the Heidelberg Project has become the area's most popular destination point and that its creator is a headstrong folk hero who would only benefit from a confrontation with city hall. As a result, Archer has gone so far as to quietly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DETROIT: PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST AS POLKA-DOTTER | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

...Donna Guyton's experience bears this out. Her son Patrick, 9, has viral encephalitis and a seizure disorder. When he got an ear infection, her health plan refused to authorize the medicine he needed, but the cheaper medication aggravated his seizure disorder. Eventually, he got seriously ill and had to receive intravenous antibiotics. "What really aggravated me," says Guyton, "was that the [plan's] own physician said this is what Patrick needed, but then they wouldn't approve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A TALE OF TWO STATES | 12/18/1995 | See Source »

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