
 
        
         
		OUR ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO THE BOROUGH OF KINGS 
 ART SCENE: (Clockwise from top left) Kendra J. Ross leads the crowd in a dance during the annual STooPS Art  
 Crawl in Bed-Stuy. Robin “Dragonfl y” LaVerne Wilson leads the crowd for a variety of games. Brooklynites  of  
 all ages gather for the annual event.  Photos by Caroline Ourso 
 COURIER LIFE, JULY 30-AUG. 5, 2021 23  
 BY BEN VERDE 
 Brooklynites hit the streets  
 this weekend as the eighth annual  
 STooPS Art Crawl took  
 over the front steps of some  
 Bedford-Stuyvesant brownstones. 
 Pitched as a celebration of  
 creativity  in  Brooklyn,  the  
 festival has brought dance,  
 music, spoken word, theater,  
 conversations, and workshops  
 to the stoops and sidewalks of  
 Bed-Stuy since 2013. 
 “While  the  event  has  become  
 an  anticipated  mainstay  
 of  Bed-Stuy  summers,  
 it has become even more  important  
 in  the  midst  of  the  
 pandemic,” said founder Kendra  
 J.  Ross.  “As  many  NYC  
 performance  venues  remain  
 closed,  opportunities  to  experience  
 the power of live art  
 in our vibrant city have been  
 limited.  Since  being  outside  
 has  always  been  our  model,  
 we  offer  a  premier  opportunity  
 for folks to experience  
 live  art  while  still  being  socially  
 distanced and safe.”  
 This year’s art crawl along  
 Hancock  Street  featured  performances  
 from Ross, who is  
 a dancer, as well as vocalist  
 Courtnie, 15-year-old Bedford- 
 Stuyvesant  poet  Kai  Diata  
 Giovanni,  Robin  “Dragonfl y”  
 LaVerne Wilson, dancer Cheri  
 L. Stokes, and more. 
 Dozens of locals packed the  
 street  to  witness  the  performances  
 on Saturday, July 24. 
 Event  organizers  say  
 the annual art walk aims to  
 bridge the “then” and “now”  
 of the rapidly changing Central  
 Brooklyn  neighborhood,  
 with  gentrifi cation  pushing  
 out some longtime residents  
 and changing the face of the  
 community.  Through  local  
 arts events, the organizers say  
 they hope to bring together all  
 factions  of  the  neighborhood  
 and increase the cohesion of  
 the community. 
 Stoop dreams 
 Bed-Stuy festival brings art to Brooklyn streets