HONOLULU — Honolulu is famous for golden sand beaches and big waves. ADVERTISING HONOLULU — Honolulu is famous for golden sand beaches and big waves. But the city’s warehouse district, called Kakaako, is famous for a different sort of attraction.
HONOLULU — Honolulu is famous for golden sand beaches and big waves.
But the city’s warehouse district, called Kakaako, is famous for a different sort of attraction.
You won’t find kitschy Hawaiian souvenir shops or hordes of tourists here, but you will find a thriving urban arts scene, with colorful street murals so big they stretch across walls and sometimes entire sides of buildings.
In one mural, a skeleton with a surfboard in tow flashes the shaka. In another, a snarling panda ferociously snaps its jaws near a doe-eyed maiden. A third shows a banana in grass skirts dancing a hula with a talking pineapple.
Kakaako sits between Honolulu’s downtown and the touristy Waikiki. In ancient times, the area was home to a native Hawaiian fishing village. In the 20th century, the area industrialized, with warehouses, auto repair shops and car dealerships. The neighborhood has declined in recent years as landowners struggled to find ways to use its prime real estate, smack in the middle of Honolulu.
It wasn’t until 2011 that Honolulu artist Jasper Wong sought to revitalize the area with urban art. Wong created a group called POW!WOW! Hawaii with the goal of beautifying Kakaako and bringing people together through art. Artists from around the globe participated, painting murals on walls across the decaying neighborhood.
Wong says the art represents a unique local style, mixing the elaborate urban graffiti seen in places such as Brooklyn, Miami, Tokyo and London with Hawaiian cultural influences and Asian anime. It’s also a far cry from the graffiti-tagging that once plagued the neighborhood.
One of the more powerful murals covers the sides of a building near a popular gym, the UFC Gym at 805 Pohukaina St. The faces of Hawaiian royalty — King David Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani — appear on the wall in a swirling mist of fantasy, history, and social commentary. It was created by native Hawaiian artists Solomon Enos and John “Prime” Hina, along with mainland artist Gaia.
But the Kakaako murals are not just colorful paintings.
Many have political messages and social commentary well beyond anime references and bright spray-paint colors.
And while you can spot most of the artwork easily by walking around, some is hidden down alleyways and backstreets.
According to Wong, the murals are replaced with new art every February. But with much of Kakaako currently slated for redevelopment, the old warehouses and buildings that now serve as canvases will eventually be demolished and replaced with residential high rises.
POW!WOW! Hawaii is working with landowners to create initiatives to keep the art alive as the area changes. So, visitors to the area might not catch the dancing banana or the faces of Hawaiian royalty, but there’s hope that as time goes on, they’ll still be able to see new and equally exciting murals.