How to Summer: Explore Murals and Art in Eastern Market and the Dequindre Cut with Jason Hall

Bike advocate Jason Hall gives riders an up close and personal look at emerging and established artists to check out around Eastern Market and the Dequindre Cut

WDET’s “How to Summer” is a season-long series that offers insider tips and advice from social media and listeners on how to maximize the season. This week we bring you an art tour you can do by bike or foot through Eastern Market and the Dequindre Cut curated by Jason Hall.


As the co-founder of Slow Roll, the popular weekly group bike ride that takes cyclists through all corners of the city, Jason Hall helped advance Detroit’s bike culture.

Courtesy of Jason Hall
Courtesy of Jason Hall

When he left the organization he co-founded a few years ago, he didn’t have a job lined up but Roula David, founder and executive festival director of Murals in the Market, “really brought me into the family,” says Hall. David has not only been instrumental in helping Hall figure out life post-Slow Roll but also other artists through the popular arts festival. “I probably wouldn’t be doing tours if it wasn’t for Roula and lot of artists wouldn’t be artists if Roula hadn’t pushed them to do that.”

Now he’s melding his love and advocacy for bikes and art. Through RiDetroit, Hall takes riders on more intimate tours of the city, showing people from all walks of life Detroit’s art landscape on bike (including Tony Hawk, who needed a guide recently while filming a music video with photographer Joe Gall).

“Bikes are the best way to see a city.” — Jason Hall, RiDetroit

For Hall, who can be found at Electric Ave. Bikes when he’s not riding around town, bikes and art are intertwined.

“Bikes are the best way to see a city,” he says, helping art explorers and enthusiasts discover more than they could accomplish by foot.

Bikes themselves are a form of art, he adds. “The welding, the building, the manufacturing — since Day 1 it has always been an art … paint on canvas or welding on steel … art is art.”

Here are some murals that Jason includes on his tour list. For more on his bike tours and to see more of how he sees the city, check out his Instagram or go to ridetroit.com.

Askew One x Sydney G. James

Courtesy of Jason Hall
Courtesy of Jason Hall

“I point this mural out because of its strong message regarding how women’s rights isn’t exclusive to them is an issue we all need to address,” Hall says. James has had other Murals in the Market pieces (check them out here) in addition to many more works around the city, including a 3,500-square-foot Malice Green mural that she created in collaboration with other artists last year at the corner of Hamilton and Puritan Avenue in Highland Park.

James is also one of the organizers of the upcoming inaugural BLKOUT Walls Festival, which will feature 19 large-scale murals by national and local multicultural artists in the North End and New Center neighborhoods. The Black-led art festival will be from July 24 to July 31.


Ed Irmen and Ivan Montoya

Courtesy of Jason Hall
Courtesy of Jason Hall

“What’s rad about them is not only are they artists who have murals [featured] they both work for Murals in the Market so they have an incredibly interesting outlook on the whole picture of [local art].”

Their work was featured in 2019 when the artists could create and have their work in the same spot, like this row of murals with Irmen’s and Montoya’s pieces, Hall explains.

“It created an awesome synergy with all the artists working at same time, they could help each other out if someone ran out of paint or offer pointers on colors … that [collaborative camaraderie] really helps the artists.”

Hall adds that Irmen’s knowledge of graffiti helped put those artists on that building on Riopelle.

“We jokingly call it a museum for graffiti on the inside and Ed knowing that made that spot a little more [fitting for the art],” he says.

“That was Ivan’s first piece ever,” Hall says, adding that Montoya is part of a new generation of street artists who went to school to hone their craft. Murals in the Market is a mix of intergenerational artists.

“That’s another cool thing [with Murals in the Market], you have these legendary artists doing graffiti but also up and coming street artists.”


Freddy Diaz, aka SW Freddy

Courtesy of Jason Hall
Courtesy of Jason Hall

Freddy Diaz has had several murals at Murals in the Market and that’s helped him build a thriving art career and impressive resume.

“What he’s doing right now, he’s really pushing the boundaries of what people are doing with art,” he says.

Through his vibrant artwork, Diaz — who was born and raised in Southwest Detroit — stays true to his culture, especially in this particular mural that Hall points out during his tours.

The young artist has been commissioned by several local businesses in his Southwest Detroit community, where his murals inspired by a mix of Hispanic and Arab influences can be seen.


Scott Hocking

Courtesy of Jason Hall
Courtesy of Jason Hall

This installation fashioned out of former sewer tubes near the Dequindre Cut is one of Hall’s favorites, and he notes that Scott Hocking has created a public space for people to gather.

“It’s the true definition of what art is, you put something up and it creates a space. People don’t realize that it’s sewer tubes and Scott created a space for that to happen,” says Hall, adding it was just a gravel parking lot before and now it’s a place for people to take wedding pictures.

“That’s why I love art,” he says.


More “How to Summer”

3 Michigan Road Trips for Food Lovers
Add These Family-Friendly Southeast Michigan Destinations to Your 2021 Summer Bucket List
Summer in Detroit: What We’re Looking Forward to This Season After Last Year

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  • Dorothy Hernandez
    Dorothy Hernandez is Digital Editor for 101.9 WDET, creating digital editorial content. Her love of radio began when she had a radio show in college when she and her roommate played '80s music in the middle of the night.