Loisaida Thrives Canvas

Featuring Art Direction by Toofly (Manhattan 2026)
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Throughout the 2026 Loisaida Festival and mural ribbon cutting, street art legend Toofly collaborated with volunteers to produce the “Loisaida Thrives” canvas mural. The canvas will exhibit on rotation at local community organizations starting with the Lower East Side Family Enrichment Center this fall.

Loisaida Thrives: Thrive Collective's 800th Mural Celebrates the Lower East Side

“Loisaida Thrives” — Thrive Collective’s 800th mural — is extra special for us. Located at the intersection of Avenue C and 6th Street in Manhattan’s Lower East Side, this new community mural sits half a block from where our founding church, Abounding Grace Ministries, began in 1982, and three doors down from where our founding youth group started in 1994. The mural wraps both sides of a windowless corner building, filling two entire walls from sidewalk to rooftop.

A Community-Designed Tribute to Loisaida

Designed with community input by Thrive’s Murals Art Director Marissa Molina, the mural celebrates the resilience and vitality of the Loisaida (Lower East Side) community. It includes portraits of local legends Pastors Rick and Arlene Del Rio, Adela Fargas, Rollie Barnes, and others. Much of the photo reference for the design came from Jeremy Del Rio’s personal photography archive of community events spanning almost forty years.

The NYC Department of Small Business Services honored Thrive Collective with a Public Realm Grant to revitalize a notoriously vandalized building at the geographic center of the neighborhood.

“Public spaces should also reflect the culture and creativity of the communities. By funding the Thrive Collective, SBS is investing in the rich history and cultural identity of the Lower East Side. Murals like this transform high-traffic corridors into vibrant community landmarks that celebrate the people and small businesses that are the foundation of New York City’s neighborhoods.”

Commissioner Kenny Minaya, NYC Department of Small Business Services

6th Street, Featuring Pastors Rick & Arlene Del Rio

Mural Design: Symbols of Lower East Side History and Culture

The design integrates historic and contemporary references to the neighborhood, drawn directly from community engagement feedback. From left to right, the Loisaida mural features:

  • The bandstand — a historic event venue in FDR Park along the East River, torn down during recent park redevelopment.
  • The Basquiat crown — acknowledging the neighborhood’s unique role in art and culture for generations.
  • The sewing machine and fabric motifs — referencing local fashion designers, boutiques, and retailers.
  • B-boys dancing on a spinning record — representing the influence of hip hop culture locally, alongside the East Village’s nightlife that introduced hip hop to the world.
  • The piragua shaved ice vendor — a nod to iconic mom-and-pop entrepreneurs.
  • The portrait of Adela Fargas — an homage to the local restaurateur for whom the street was co-named Adela Fargas Way in 2023.
  • The inflatable slide and festival vignette — highlighting the central role street fairs and block parties play in the local economy.
  • The skateboarder — referencing the neighborhood’s central role in skater culture and street wear fashion.
  • The guitar and dancing older couple — reflecting the community’s nightlife and cultural significance.
  • All modes of transport — bus, train, the Williamsburg Bridge, and pedestrians — lead people along the avenue, with street signage featuring both names, Avenue C and Loisaida Avenue.
  • Three cityscapes — showcasing diverse architecture, from NYCHA buildings to storefronts and brownstones, highlighting the neighborhood’s economic range from low income to private equity.

Avenue C, Featuring Adela Fargas & Rollie Barnes

Additional Community References in the Mural

  • Multigenerational fun, compassion, block parties, and cultural diversity.
  • The central character wears domino earrings, and her braided hair morphs into a media reel painting a moving portrait of the neighborhood through additional vignettes.
  • The central phrase “Loisaida Thrives” captures the prevailing message that emerged from community engagement sessions.
  • The Tompkins Square Park sign, skatepark, and statue point to the unofficial town square two blocks from the mural.
  • Specific flowers, the coquí frog, and other imagery reference the neighborhood’s cultural diversity and distinctly Puerto Rican heritage.

Honoring Pastor Rick Del Rio’s Legacy of Resilience

Throughout the community engagement sessions, stakeholders emphasized honoring the community’s resilience through centuries of immigrant poverty, the drug wars, and national calamities including the HIV/AIDS epidemic, 9/11, Hurricane Sandy, and COVID-19.

The portrait of Pastor Rick Del Rio honors a social entrepreneur from the block (6th Street between Avenues C and D) who has been instrumental in responding to each of those struggles. Notably, he was also the first clergy responder to arrive at Ground Zero after FDNY Chaplain Father Judge died on 9/11. Pastor Rick has served as a pastor, entrepreneur, and community activist in the neighborhood for nearly fifty years, and is currently fighting stage 4 cancer resulting from his work at Ground Zero. This year marks the 25th anniversary of 9/11. His life and sacrifice symbolize the neighborhood’s resilience and vitality.

Additional portraits include Pastor Arlene Del Rio, co-founder and family pastor at Abounding Grace Ministries since 1982, and Rollie Barnes, gazing toward 4th Street where he lived while co-founding Generation Xcel in 1996 — the predecessor to Thrive Collective.

Thank You to Our Partners and Community

Special thanks to the NYC Department of Small Business Services / Public Realm Grant for making this mural possible; Mehra Properties for granting permission to paint their building; and NYC Council Member Harvey Epstein, Abounding Grace Ministries, the Loisaida Center, the Family Enrichment Center, LES CommUnity Concerns, Outer Source, First Street Green Art Park, NYC Dept. of Cultural Affairs, Blue Owl Capital, and hundreds of artists, volunteers, and community stakeholders for your support in bringing this vision to life.

Production of the mural included two community painting days anchored by volunteer groups from Capital Hill Boys Club and Blue Owl Capital. Daily, neighbors offered encouragement and gratitude to the artists for transforming the block and honoring the dignity of the intergenerational neighborhood.

Celebrating the Mural’s Completion at the Loisaida Festival

Thrive Collective proudly celebrated the completion of the project in partnership with the Loisaida Center at their annual Loisaida Festival on May 31, 2026. Elected officials, including NYC Council Member Harvey Epstein, highlighted the project on the Festival’s main stage, followed by a ribbon cutting in front of the mural. Throughout the day, festival-goers collaborated with street art legend Toofly to produce a live canvas mural, which will exhibit on rotation at local community organizations starting with the Family Enrichment Center this fall.

``Loisaida Thrives`` in the News & More

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Project Details

Loisaida Thrives Traveling Mural (2026)

• Art Direction by Toofly
• Project Management by Yvette Hidalgo
• Assisting Artists: Carlos Duran
• Video filmed and produced by Eric Mason
• Appx 42 Square Feet
• Mixed Media on canvas
• Sponsored by NYC Dept. of Small Business Services Public Realm Grant
• With Support from Abounding Grace Ministries, The Loisaida Center, The Family Enrichment Center, LES CommUnity Concerns, NYC Dept. of Cultural Affairs, and scores of volunteers at the 2026 Loisaida Festival
• Powered by Thrive Collective x Projectivity

  • Community Mural
  • Event Mural
  • Exterior
  • Intensive

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