micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet
micdotcom: Ferguson now has America’s most powerful street art Damon Davis spent Thursday zigzagging across West Florissant Avenue, a paint roller in one hand and a bundle of posters under his arm. His idea was simple: Since last summer, the quiet