Skip to main content Currently Reading Protest art covered shuttered businesses for months at Washington's Black Lives Matter Plaza. Now it has a new home. Marissa J. Lang, The Washington Post Feb. 8, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 8 1of8Art removed from BLM Plaza will find a new home in in the former Aveda studio in Washington, D.C.Washington Post photo by Bill O'LearyShow MoreShow Less 2of8Artist Demont Pinder, left, and PAINTS Institute Executive Director John Chisholm examine the space inside the former Aveda Institute.Washington Post photo by Bill O'LearyShow MoreShow Less 3of8 4of8Artwork leans against a wall in the former Aveda studio in Washington, D.C.Washington Post photo by Bill O'LearyShow MoreShow Less