Danielle Mastrion (born 1982) [1] is a New York City-based mural artist. She is also a painter and aerosol artist.[2] She was raised in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn,[3] and studied fine arts at the Parsons School of Design, where she received her BFA in illustration.[1][2] Among her street murals are “The Notorious B.I.G.” in Bushwick, Brooklyn;[4] DJ Kool Herk;[5] Beastie Boys singer MCA;[6] “Little Girls” in Flatbush, Brooklyn;[7] and a portrait of New York Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm for the 2019 opening of the Shirley Chisholm State Park.[8]
Her first solo art exhibition was held in March 2013 at MY NY in Brooklyn.[9] In 2012 she was Art Battles’ NYC Champion.[1] She is a teaching artist with Creative Art Works in New York City, and is trained in oil painting and has a background in live painting. Her work appeared in the A&E channel's “In Focus” series; “Made Mondays” for New Balance; Budweiser's ad campaign “Respect the Hustle;” and Spike Lee’s Netflix series “She's Gotta Have It.” Her art was also featured in the documentaries “No Free Walls,” and “Street Heroines."[10]
Her art has been exported to cities outside of New York[11] as well, including Los Angeles, Miami,[12] Newark, Washington DC, and Arecibo, Puerto Rico. In addition she has competed art projects outside the United States, including in Cuba, Mexico, Belize, Berlin,[13] Israel,[14] England and Paris,[15][16] France.[17][18]
At the end of 2018 Mastrion participated in a dual art exhibit with fellow street artist and muralist Lexi Bella, at the 3rd ETHOS Gallery in Brooklyn, called The Grit & The Glam.[19] She has also painted subjects representing world events and cultural icons, such as a mural dedicated to and in solidarity with the kidnapping of 270 Nigerian school girls kidnapped by Boko Haram; political leaders such as Nelson Mandela, and for French painter and sculptor Marcel Duchamp. She has also painted human rights activists, including Malala Yousafzai.[20]