Saturday, July 28, 2012

Drachman Montessori Magnet School

If you walk through the arch and past the benches in our previous post, you'll be at the entrance courtyard at the school. (The address is 1085 South 10th Avenue, but the school isn't directly on the street). There are murals all around the courtyard, but please restrain yourself :) long enough to sign in at the office first.

Next to the office is this big mosaic mural (the lighting — part sun, part shade — made it hard to get a good photo):

The quote, by Margaret Mead, says:

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

Here's a closeup around the tree:

Look in the middle of the mural for this small tile:

tile commemorating Christina-Taylor Green in mural at Drachman Montessori Magnet School
(Here's a link to the the Christina-Taylor Green Memorial Foundation website.)

To the right of that large mural is a smaller one near the library:

And, on the south wall of the courtyard, across from the office:

I took the photos on January 18th.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

Santa Rosa Park

A few blocks northeast of the 22nd Street exit on I-10 is Santa Rosa Park. (Here's a map.) I rode in on January 18th and parked in the bicycle rack next to the library, just past this arch:
Between Santa Rosa library and the Drachman Montessori Magnet School, you'll find benches covered with mosaic murals:

Here are a couple of close-ups:

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Tucson murals, spring 2000

Our previous post showed a long-gone mural on South 6th Avenue. One of the photos came from a collection of Tucson mural photos taken sometime around March/April 2000 by Bangbay Siboliban and Bettina Shzu. Bangbay gave me the OK to re-post the photos here, along with links to more recent photos that we already had here. Thanks to both of them for sharing these Tucson murals from 12 years ago!

Christ for Life church


Bangbay wrote “A church sports a mural-in-progress which shows destruction, paradise, and graffiti.” It was somewhere in South Tucson.

Greyhound bus station


Back then, the station was at 2 South 4th Avenue in downtown Tucson.

Update (February 20, 2021): Jenny Kilb emailed to say “I was the painter, in the early 90s. It was meant to be up for 1 year, but I believe it stayed until the end of the building.”

Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl


Here are three photos of a mural on South 6th Avenue in Tucson. The first shows a long view; the others show details. It's “Illustrating the Aztec myth of the two lovers Iztaccihuatl and Popocatepetl, this mural exemplifies the strong influence of indigenous Mexica religion still present today.”

The bottom two photos are versions in Spanish and English. You can click on them for a larger view.

Memorial at a tattoo parlor


Bangbay wrote “This mural, on the corner of a tattoo parlor, commemorates the death of the small child under the Virgin Mary.”

The business here has changed, but the mural was the same — on our August 11, 2011 post In Memory of Crystal — though the color of the wall is different and there's now a “Parking in back” sign above the mural. It’s Rosy’s Beauty Salon, 4453 S. 6th.
 

Mi Casita


That’s Mi Casita Restaurant at 4439 South 6th Avenue, Tucson.

Fast-forward to January, 2011, the wall was yellow, but the two windows in the middle still had what looked like soot over them. Maybe what I thought was a fire inside the building was just everyday smoke coming out of those two windows?

Two Virgin Videos?


This photo shows Virgin Videos on West Niagara Street.

Seven years later — December, 2007 — Erik S. sent Randy photos of a building and a mural that look a lot like this one. Erik wrote, “The Virgin of Guadalupe is on a video store on the southeast corner of Grande and Congress.” At the end of 2010, Melodi King and I found the mural at Grande and Congress being repainted.

San Judas


Yerberia San Judas Tadeo, 4107 South 6th Avenue, Tucson: “A South Tucson shop advertises its religious amulets and medicines with a portrait of San Judas.”

By December, 2010, the store here was named La Orquidea... it had been selling floral arrangements and handling special events... was available for rent... and still had a mural showing San Judas.

More...


Thanks again, Bangbay and Bettina, for those photos! If you have info about or photos of these murals — or any other murals that used to be in Tucson — please leave a comment below or send me email.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Before it was a mural...

...it was another mural. Say what? Here's the story.

Back on July 10th, I posted a photo of the mostly-blank wall below, at 1016 South 6th Avenue (across the street from 1001 S. 6th):

Right away I got an email from an intern at the Arizona Historical Society. She'd been studying old Tucson murals and thought she might have photos of an earlier mural on the same building. Here are the photos she sent me:

Zapata Mural, South Tucson Arizona, 2000
That was taken by Patricia Katchur in 2000. The second photo was on Bangbay Siboliban's website:

The building in all three photos has the same shape. And there's another clue. In the background of the last photo is part of a gas station at El Barrio Market across the street from this building. (The market has since closed.) I had another photo of the market, and the gas pumps look the same in that photo.

So, it looks as if, 12 years ago, the mural here was of Emiliano Zapata, painted by Luis Gustavo Mena. Sometime since then, another mural — the one peeking out around the edges of the solid paint — replaced the Zapata mural. And, after that, the mural was painted over to leave the mostly-blank wall. Or something like that!

If you know more, please write a comment below or send email.

Friday, July 20, 2012

Maybe a mural, part 35: Santa Rosa sidewalk


A couple of blocks north of 22nd Street — South 10th Avenue & La Paz Street — west of our previous three posts — is the west entrance to the library and Santa Rosa Park. These three tiles are on the sidewalk in the middle of that intersection.

Below are closeups of each tile. I found them on January 18th.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Monday, July 16, 2012

Maybe a mural, part 34: entry arch with flowers

Lots of Tucson homes have painted designs that you might call a “mural.” There are so many that we won't show them all here! I thought this one was especially nice, though. I found it at 932 S. 7th Avenue on January 18th.

There are more murals in the block north and south of here (see the previous and the next entries on this blog), and it's near downtown. Stop by!

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Pio Decimo Angel Children's Center

There are two beautiful murals here at 848 S. 7th Avenue.

This tile mural is on the east wall. It's signed at the bottom left Community Artists Project / Carol Kestler / Nancy Martin / Partial funding by (unreadable). At the bottom right Bishop Francis Green / Bishop Manuel Moreno / Director Esther Tang / (P)resident Constance Howard / 1982:

And, on the south wall, behind the playground:

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Our sixth anniversary!

As Melodi King and I were discussing how to update the mural map just recently, I realized that this blog has been online for six years now — since July 12, 2006.

If you'd like to look back, click on the collage above or choose one of the years from the Blog Archive in the right-hand column.

Happy sixth to us! Thanks for reading.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Was a mural

This was the south side of the building at 1016 S. 6th Avenue (south of 20th Avenue) on January 18. There are bits of what looks like the original mural popping out from underneath the paint.

If you know what mural was here, please leave a comment below or send me email. If you have a photo, I'd be glad to post it! (Same goes for any former mural that we haven't shown on the blog. There's a list of mural locations in the table of murals.)

Update (July 22, 2012): More of the story of this wall is in today's post.

Sunday, July 08, 2012

Wednesday, July 04, 2012

Calle de Jardin revisited

Want to take a stroll after your Fourth of July cookout? One of the nicest short streets for murals is Calle de Jardin, just south of Broadway. You can see that street corner in our February 17, 2010 post.

Next south, at 125 S. Calle de Jardin, is a home with some painted plants and pots as well as some real ones:



A few steps farther, at 136 S. Calle de Jardin, another desert scene:



On the other side of the street, at 211 S. Calle de Jartin, is a nural on a wall next to the street:



And, at the corner of El Volador, a pleasant place to sit — in the middle of the intersection!



Here's a map centered at the corner with Cooper Street.

I took the photos on January 11.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Compass High School!

I used an exclamation point on the title because the murals here are overpowering: big, bright, and almost everywhere. This charter school looks to be preparing its students for a career — including one in art. You can see a list of school businesses in the sign at the left. (As always, you can click on the photo for a larger view.)

A lot of these murals are not painted on; they're "wraps," applied with what looks like a printed film of some sort by s student business at the school. But there's plenty of paint, too.

We showed one of the murals here a year ago in Flaming mural on 22nd. That's at the west end of campus, at the school's auto shop. Around the corner is the entrance to the shop, with cars painted on the doors:



(I took the second photo on April 8th.) That name GatorEyez comes from the school team name, the Compass High School (Navi)Gators. (“Compass navigators”... get it? It took me a little while.)


On the right side of that building, next to the auto shop, is a mural with five scenes from the school:



I'm not sure that the middle of the five photos is actually from 2012. A staff member told me that the photo shows the student who painted the huge mural on back of the school; he's standing on the lift that he used to reach the top of the wall. The mural has been there for a while — long enough to be covered by a couple of storage sheds (there was nowhere else to put the sheds, the staff member told me). Here are shots from three angles:



(While you're waiting in line for the Arizona emissions testing facility, look to your left to see that mural.)

On my first visit, January 10th, there was a mural in the outside hallway in front of the art studio. This mural was gone when I came back on April 8th:


Last, here are the “wraps” on the buildings around the northeast-side parking lot:





Quite a place, isn't it? Here's a map.