Rapid City, SD
Rapid City's mural scene is anchored by the remarkable downtown transformation centered on Main Street Square and the legendary Art Alley, a two-block stretch of back-alley walls that has become one of the most interesting outdoor galleries in the American West. The proximity to Mount Rushmore and the Black Hills gives Rapid City's mural culture a unique relationship to both Indigenous sovereignty and American mythmaking.
Featured Artists
All artists →Wren Ellison
Ellison has been Art Alley's most prolific contributor for over a decade, creating a body of work that documents the Black Hills landscape in all its seasonal variation. Her geological knowledge of the region informs compositions of extraordinary specificity—ponderosa pine root systems, quartzite cliff formations, Badlands erosion patterns—rendered in a color palette derived directly from the place rather than imposed upon it.
Dakota James
James works in the uncomfortable territory between American myth and Lakota historical reality, creating murals on and around Main Street Square that tell American founding stories from multiple perspectives simultaneously. His work deliberately places the faces of Lakota historical figures at equal or greater scale to the presidents, creating visual arguments about whose histories belong in Rapid City's downtown.
Winona Eagleheart
Eagleheart is an Oglala Lakota artist who creates murals in the Lakota visual tradition, using the language of painted hide, quillwork pattern, and winter count pictography at mural scale to assert Indigenous cultural presence in the city nearest to Mount Rushmore. Her Art Alley work is among the most culturally significant public art in South Dakota.