A close-up of some of the tile flowers in the garden:
I took the photos on February 20th.
A close-up of some of the tile flowers in the garden:
I took the photos on February 20th.
Just a bit south of the photo in part 23 of this series is the home at 422 N. Forgeus. This is a close-up (from the street, with a zoom lens) of one of the works on the wall of this home. The lower right corner is signed "Guini".
A number of Tucson homes are similar, but this one was a nice example. This is on the wall of 450 N. Forgeus (on the southeast corner with 6th Street).
As with photos before and after, this is from my long bike ride on February 20. The home was at 2548 E. 7th Street.
A row of tiles probably isn't a mural, but that's what's on the low wall around the home at 2010 E. 7th St. It's the horse on the side of the home that caught my eye (and put this into the "maybe" mural category). As always, you can click on the photo for a larger view; use your browser's "Back" button to come back here.
This post and the next one show two faded murals that face each other across Arizona Avenue, just south of Broadway in downtown Tucson. (Here's a map showing the corner.)
What would you expect from a business that makes tile designs? This sign/mural is on the west wall of 450 N. 6th Avenue, but the business is farther east along the south side of the building.
...too late. (By the way, there are more murals on the north and east sides, but they were trashed too.)
If something is still called "way out" when it's wonderful, fantastic, "cool," or whatever... well, this mural is of scenes way out of Earth. It's on top of 210 S. Plumer, the (former?) Tucson Optical Research Corp. building. I snapped it (way back) on February 17th.

I found these murals on February 15th.
Murals seem to go with car repair shops in the southern area of Tucson. In fact, just about everything has a mural in this part of town. You can get your start mural-hunting right here at Chato's Auto Service, 5124 S. 12th Avenue.
The painting here (within the mural) of a building like this tortilla factory — including a sign warning that the parking lot is for customers only — seems to have flames or smoke coming out of its chimney.

Here are another freestanding bench and mural in the arch theme that you'll find all around South Tucson. This photo was from January 16th, on the sidewalk in front of Quality Custom Ornamental Ironwork, 2114 S. 4th Avenue.
Last in the series from the House of Neighborly Service, 243 West 33rd Street in South Tucson, on January 16th, is this mural on the west wall of building 1, along 9th Avenue.
Next in the series from the House of Neighborly Service, 243 West 33rd Street in South Tucson, is this mural from the west wall of Building 2. It's signed MICHAEL ORTIZ / ISAAC.
I found this mural (and two others — coming in the next two posts) at the House of Neighborly Service, 243 West 33rd Street, in South Tucson, on January 16th. It was facing a playground, on the east wall of building 5, and signed Karina A Gonzales.
I spotted this sunny bench on the sidewalk in front of Jeff's Auto Parts, 2412 S. 4th Avenue in South Tucson, on January 16.
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| (As always, you can click for a larger view of a photo — and use your browser's "Back" button to come back.) Here's a detail from one of the arches: | |
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The front of Leader Public Auction, 2626 S. 4th Avenue, is a 3-D desert mural.
A mosaic mural in the center of the basketball court...
...and another (partly destroyed — the day I visited, at least) behind the bleachers:
And last: This school sign by the parking lot entrance was far away, fenced-off on the Sunday I was there. I used a zoom lens to snap it:
This sunny mural is behind a tree that tells the true story: it was January (2011) in Tucson. I snapped the photo with a zoom lens from a walkway between two fences in the back yard of Tucson Nursery School & Child Care Center, 2385 S. Plumer.
This Columbus Day post is from the artist Aurore Chabo, her piece Cellular Synchronicity (7 parts) on the east side of Marley Building, 1145 E 4th. It's made of tile with embedded creatures from the College of Agriculture,Entymology, and Plant Sciences. She took objects that researchers were working on and cast them into tile. This is one of many outstanding murals and sculpture at the University of Arizona.


A Google map shows GPS coordinates of 32.184583,-110.815989 and guesstimates the address as 8231-8273 East Stella Rd. (there are no houses along this part of Stella Road).
Welcome! Come inside and soon murals will be the last thing on your mind. At least, that's the promise on the website for The Slaughter House, Tucson's non-profit (big) shop of horrors:
Enough already? Let's get back to the murals. (Aaaaaahhhhhh.) These photos are from the end of 2010, by the way:



