鈥楤old and bright鈥: Belle Vernon art teacher uses spray paint to beautify communities
During the school year, you鈥檒l find Chris Galiyas in a classroom, teaching art to elementary school students in the West Mifflin School District.
But when summer rolls around, Galiyas, of Belle Vernon, spends his time in a lift or on a ladder, spray painting murals in and around Pittsburgh.
Since early June, Galiyas has set up shop at the Arc Human Services building on West Pike Street in Canonsburg.
The nonprofit, which serves people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, has enlisted Galiyas to paint a mural on the three-story brick building, which houses an art gallery that highlights exhibits and work from local artists of all abilities.
鈥淚 absolutely love doing this. I love bringing someone鈥檚 vision to life and creating new things,鈥 said Galiyas, armed with a milk crate filled with spray paints and a sketch of the mural. 鈥淚 do a lot of interior murals, but exterior ones are so much fun because you get to meet people, and the murals become instant landmarks. Your building almost becomes known for the mural. It gets people talking. It鈥檚 fun. It brings color to the community.鈥
Galiyas aims to complete the mural in time for the borough鈥檚 annual Fourth of July celebration.
It鈥檚 not the first outdoor artwork Galiyas has tackled in Canonsburg. He recently painted a mural on the exterior of L&M Flower Shop.
The blooms that adorn the front of the building 鈥 orange daisies, calla lilies, yellow roses and bird of paradise 鈥 have gotten plenty of attention, said L&M owner Harold Smith.
鈥淚t鈥檚 beautiful. I am so pleased. It was incredibly amazing to see him work on it every day,鈥 said Smith. 鈥淗e is an incredible, gifted artist and a great person. I told him that people are going to crash their cars when they drive by because everybody looks at it.鈥
Soon after Galiyas finished the L&M mural, Arc reached out to him.
鈥淚鈥檝e found that once you do a mural in a small town, word gets around and it snowballs into other ones,鈥 Galiyas said.
Galiyas鈥 murals are known for their vibrant colors and hard, black edges.
鈥淚n today鈥檚 world, everything is grays and blacks and whites and beige. If someone says I have free range on the palette, I鈥檓 going bold and bright,鈥 he said.
Among his favorite artists are Vincent Van Gogh and Pittsburgh鈥檚 Andy Warhol, and his left arm bears tattoos of the artists and their works 鈥 Campbell鈥檚 Soup cans and Marilyn Monroe, and a self-portrait of Van Gogh.
Galiyas, 48, got his start in mural painting in the mid-鈥90s, when he worked for a house painting company in high school. A client asked his boss if she knew anyone who could paint a dinosaur mural in her son鈥檚 bedroom.
鈥淗e said, 鈥楾his guy over here could do it,鈥 and so I did my first mural. There was a brontosaurus, a T-rex, other dinosaurs, a volcano and leaves. Her son was obsessed with dinosaurs. All of a sudden, the neighbor got one and then another neighbor wanted one, and it took off from there,鈥 said Galiyas.
Galiyas thinks it鈥檚 important for his students to know that he鈥檚 a practicing artist.
鈥淚 want them to know and see that I do art. They actually see what I鈥檓 doing and that I鈥檓 walking that walk,鈥 said Galiyas. 鈥淭he kids are like, whoa, he knows what he鈥檚 talking about.鈥
He throws his heart and soul into every project, and is committed to bringing a client鈥檚 vision to life.
Arc director Darrilyn McCrerey said the nonprofit met with Galiyas to share its mission statement and the vision it had for the mural.
鈥淥ne reason for having the mural is to share with the community what we do and to show that everyone contributes to the bigger picture of inclusive opportunities,鈥 said McCrerey.
Galiyas hopes his latest mural gets people talking about it as they drive by.
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e creating a piece, people are trusting you to tell their story through paint. It鈥檚 so satisfying when they get to see the canvas for the first time, or the painting, and you see their reaction, and it鈥檚 like, 鈥業 did this.'鈥





