Thursday, February 10, 2011
Murals with heart(s)
(To zoom in on a photo, click on it. Return with your browser's "back" button.)
Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Luke's Italian Beef on Alvernon
Update (July 2, 2015): The mural has been changed.
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Three hundredth is Fourth
For this 300th post — almost five years after Randy started blogging about Tucson murals — here's the latest I've found along Fourth: north, central, and south. (I also have lots more to post from South Tucson!)
In a neighborhood on the north, the home at 1248 N. 4th has wraparound murals — mostly on Mabel Street. The first view below is from the east end along Mabel, and the second is from the west:
Head south across Speedway and pass Catalina Park... and you'll be on the university/downtown section of 4th. I'm surprised that I never snapped these next two murals. They're on the northeast corner of Epic Cafe, 745 N. 4th. (As always, you can click on any photo for a larger view... and use your browser's "Back" button to come back.)
Across the street, on the northwest corner of Trinity Presbyterian Church (400 E. University), are two mosaic murals: | |
(There's a third mural on the east side.) Update (November 16, 2012): There's also a mural on the north side. |
At the north end of the Magpies Pizza patio is a storefront that looks as if had another business in it sometime recently. If you know what it was, please tell me. | Farther down 4th, The Fathead Shop has opened a new establishment next door called Mr. Head's Gallery & Bar. |
Sacred Art and Piercing Studios, 315 N. 4th, is one of the businesses that keeps mural-hunters busy. Back in August, we showed two of their murals. Here's the same wall a few days ago (January 22)... the mural is signed Rock Martinez & Ruben Moreno:
On a window of Food Conspiracy Co-op, 412 N. 4th, is the best-hidden mural on the street... this little gem over the shopping carts, a sort of self-reflection:
Let's finish this trip down Fourth Avenue in the section near South Tucson. At the corner with 22nd Street, La Buena Cocina (248 E. 22nd) was closed for renovation when I stopped by yesterday afternoon. I hope this mural will still be there when they reopen. (Check out the "shelf" at the bottom. It's painted onto the flat wall, but — in this photo, at least — it looks like a piece of wood.)
Thanks for coming along on this lengthy tour of one of Tucson's best mural streets. As I said, there'll be lots more to come from farther down Fourth, and the rest of South Tucson, in the next hundred posts (and the ones after those).
Thursday, January 27, 2011
These murals aren't trash
...and the second, at 4215 E. Fairmount Street:
Update (April 29, 2015): I just ran across an article about the dumpster art in the Arizona Daily Star: Midtown area creates 'dumpster art' to beautify streets, deter graffitists effort to discourage graffiti taggers,
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Sunny scene at street's end
It's tucked in a corner between the home at 1521 S. Tucson and the dead-end street. Behind the mural is the wall that separates Aviation Bikeway/Highway from the neighborhood.
Update (February 1, 2016): There's a bench under a tree just up the street… a nice spot to sit and relax. Click there to see it on the Tucson's Pocket Parks blog.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Tucson murals by theme
tucsonart.info/murals/map_theme.html
We're still working on the mural maps, so that link may not work forever. The next one should, though:
tucsonart.info/murals/
Please send comments and suggestions to Melo at tucsonmuralmap@gmail.com
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Is this worth being in a gang?
The photos run from east to west along the alley; the first photo shows the whole series, and the others show individual parts. The original murals have been partly trashed by taggers — including the part that gave me the title for this blog entry. The only date I found was '94, though the tombstones are all dated in the early 1990s.
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
El Mezon del Cobre
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Flash mural?
I snapped the photo yesterday afternoon.
Sunday, January 02, 2011
Half Hidden on Country Club
One of the "other" streets is Country Club. So far I've only spotted four murals along its entire central section — from near the Rillito on the north to the railroad tracks in the south. I've posted two of those so far. Here's the third. It's actually a pair of murals, partly hidden on two sides of the Tucson Alliance for Autism building, 1002 North Country Club (the corner of East 2nd Street):
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Luis Mena's Columbus and America
There's more about Mena and his murals in the August 14, 2007 Tucson Citizen article Buildings are his canvases.
A classic car by Luis Mena
(Update, March 24, 2011: There's another car wash mural at Watch while you wash.)
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Maybe a mural, part 12
Of course, what's graffiti to one person might be art to another. I thought of this as I read a couple of recent newspaper articles about tagging in Tucson. (Here's the one from Tucson Weekly.) What if someone reports a piece of "urban art" as graffiti? I'd guess the company that cleans Tucson walls, Graffiti Protective Coatings, has experience with that.
Maybe a mural, part 11
You'll find another one farther along the street at the corner of Seneca & Chrysler.
Maybe a mural, part 10
Maybe a mural, part 9
What do you think about this wall and mailbox at 4364 E. 4th Street?
Monday, December 20, 2010
Mural map!
I've mentioned the table of murals several times. It helps me keep track of which murals had been posted and when. But it's gotten big, as well. What we really needed was a map with all of the murals pinpointed. This fall, Melodi King took on that project for her mapping class at Pima Community College. (It was her idea, by the way.) She's has put a tremendous amount of work into the project, and it's finally ready to announce... just in time for your holiday mural-hunting.
The map comes in two sizes: small (for your phone or a netbook computer) and large. From the map, you can click on any of the mural locations. A pop-up window will appear with a photo of the mural, details about it, and a link you can click to read the blog entry about it. There's also a page of suggestions for using the map.
Though her class is over, Melo and I will keep working on the map design. The map software is being developed, and it sometimes doesn't work quite the way you might expect. The design of the map pages is also very basic at this point. Please send your comments!
To go to the map pages and the table of murals, click on "Map and table of Tucson murals" under "Favorite links" in the right column of this blog.
Good fences make good neighbors...
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Underwater on First Avenue
I've driven by a few times; there are always cars in the parking lot, blocking part of the view. Luckily, though, I've met the artist, Alexandria Winslow. She sent me close-up photos, including these:
Her website, BackporchStudio.net, shows more of her art.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
¡Mariscos Chihuahua!
Warren's photo was of 999 N. Swan. In the past couple of months, I've snapped photos of the other Tucson locations:
356 E. Grant, on a cloudy October day... check out the bench with a big shell backdrop. | |
Part of the south wall at 1009 N Grande | |
2902 E 22nd, at dusk, with the west side illuminated | |
At 435 W Irvington, the walls are all white — except for this door. I wonder if there used to be more? |
Update (July 30, 2011) I replaced the photo of the Grande store with a better one. (You can still see the original photo if you'd like to.)
Update (July 23, 2015): The 22nd Street location has a new sign next to the mural.
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
May in December
Here's the Fathead Shop at 513 N. Fourth Avenue:
Thursday, December 09, 2010
(Solar) Culture changes (again)
Monday, December 06, 2010
A cut above
Three years ago, Erik S. emailed Randy photos of the mural as it was before — on the west side of what was then Menlo Park Video. Now the building is a barber shop named Money Cutz, and the mural is freshly painted. The article quoted Eddie Urias telling the story of growing up in his neighborhood, Menlo Park, how the mural was a bright spot between two liquor stores at that corner: Grande and Congress. This year, as the shop owner, he wanted to restore the image of the Virgen de Guadalupe. What a great story!
I mentioned the article to Melo King. She told me that she'd caught a photo of the mural as it was being repainted, on October 21 of this year:
Fast-forward to this afternoon, December 6, when I drove by to see the mural. The shop was closed, so I got this view without any cars:
If you're on the west side of town, if you're passing by on Interstate 10, or if you're downtown (just on the other side of I-10) — well, or wherever you are — stop by to see this beacon of hope in the neighborhood. And if you need a barber, come inside to meet the owner and thank him for what he's done — definitely a cut above.
Update (August 7, 2011): Here's a photo of the back side of the store.
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
Adios para siempre...
Farewell to an Icon
Sunday, December 19, 3:00 - 5:00 pmJoin us for Mexican hot chocolate and pastries as we bid a fond farewell to the mural Nuestro futuro/Nuestras raices humana and honor artist David Tineo's contribution to this iconic work of art. The mural will be de-installed in January.
Bring your mementos and memories to this despedida and share your stories about the mural with the artist. Filmmaker Angela Soto will be documenting the event and de-installation of the mural.
There are more details, and mural history, on the museum's press release (a PDF file). Here are parts of it:
I'll hope to see you there on the 19th.Unveiled in 1992 as part of CARA Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation, a temporary exhibition celebrating the Chicano art movement that traveled nationally, the mural was created by applying paint directly to untreated plywood. Originally intended as a short term installation, the long term exposure to Tucson’s weather has made it unstable and a public safety risk. “The mural was commissioned by the Museum and made with the intention of having it on display for a few months,” says Ann Seirferle-Valencia, Curator of Latin American Art, “although we have tried to stabilize it over the years, the plywood has warped to the point that it is separating from the frame. It is with David Tineo’s blessing, and in the best interest of the art and safety of our visitors, that we have decided to take it down.”
“It has fulfilled its purpose more than I could have expected,” says David Tineo, “It’s a piece of history and has been embedded in many hearts. I see this as a transition from public display back into the community.” The mural will be cut into sections and framed by Galeria Mistica, Tineo’s gallery representative and the home of much of his work. Once framed, the sections will be offered for sale to benefit the students at the Museum School for the Visual Arts. “The most important thing to me is that it benefit the kids at the school,” states Tineo.
(Update: Several Arizona Daily Star articles say that Antonio Pazos worked on the mural too. There's more information in the East Valley Tribune story Tucson mural, artist battle ravages of time.)