... was (mostly) created during Winta Fresh 2012. (If you haven't heard of Winta Fresh, here's our recent post about it. You can also use the search box at the right side of this blog.)
On January 23, I decided to walk along the length of the empty lot (just south of Und1sputed Fitness at 1240 N. Stone) and snap photos all along the two walls. These are mostly unedited, but I hope they'll help to preserve the art that was replaced on February 2nd.
Here's the north wall (the south wall of the gym) from the east end:
and the same wall from the west end:
Now, from west to east along that wall:
I couldn't help photographing the man at the bottom of that last photo (an exhausted art lover, I guessed, overwhelmed by so much creativity :). Homeless, down and out, or whatever he was, it felt wrong to leave him as a speck there, so I snapped a closeup (with my zoom lens) and I've blurred his face here:
Back to the northern wall — the eastern half:
Now the south wall. Here's a view from the west (right) side:
And the south wall murals, starting at the left (east) side... these works are a lot smaller than the north wall, so there are more to photograph:
If you painted any of these in 2012 and would like to tell us about what you painted (you can stay anonymous if you'd like), you can leave a comment below. Please tell us the number of the photo — which you can get by hovering your mouse over the photo, and a caption like “Click for a larger view of photo 19” should pop up. (If your work has been trashed by taggers, and you have a better photo, please email it to me and I'll add it.) Thanks!
If any of you artists or readers want any originals, let me know. As always, I've kept high-resolution copies of every photo; I'd be glad to share the ones you need — and clean them up first, as I do for most other photos on this blog. To make time for posting the Winta Fresh 2013 photos, I didn't edit most of these.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Friday, February 08, 2013
Bus mural near Machu Picchu
If you're in the Peru's Valle Sagrado (Sacred Valley) near Machu Picchu (as I am — which is why I'm not posting so many murals right now), you'll likely pass by the terminal terrestra (bus station) in the city of Urubamba. Look on the wall at the end of the parking lot and you'll see:
(By the way, if you've flown into Cusco, coming straight to Urubamba can be a good way to acclimate to the high altitude... Urubamba is much lower altitude, and it's beautiful too.)
(By the way, if you've flown into Cusco, coming straight to Urubamba can be a good way to acclimate to the high altitude... Urubamba is much lower altitude, and it's beautiful too.)
Sunday, February 03, 2013
Murals being (re-)made, part 13: Plush parking lot
Polar bear! This new mural caught my eye as I rode by the parking lot for Plush — just east of 5th Avenue and south of 6th Street — on January 20th. (It's in the middle of the parking lot's north wall.) When I rode in, I saw several people painting murals... actually, painting over murals already there. (You can see the parking lot as it was on March 27 and April 16, 2012 in Surrounded by murals: our 700th post.) I can't figure out the name at the left side (if you can, please leave a comment below!), but the name on the right is CyFi, a.k.a. the well-known Tucson muralist Rock Martinez.
They told me the polar bear was finished recently, but that they were doing more. (You can see the first photo of this crew at the end of our May 25, 2011 entry.) Here's the crew — and one of the spectators:
Rock Martinez (CyFi) and Aspir painted the mural. Here are CyFi's photos.
Here's one more. It (which looks to me like a prescription pill bottle) was added after the black background (and the mural at bottom) were painted some time before. I'm not sure if this crew added it or if it was added earlier:
I've been back since to re-photograph the whole parking lot. There's such a backlog of mural photos now that I'll wait to post those. (If you can't wait, stop by the parking lot yourself!)
They told me the polar bear was finished recently, but that they were doing more. (You can see the first photo of this crew at the end of our May 25, 2011 entry.) Here's the crew — and one of the spectators:
Rock Martinez (CyFi) and Aspir painted the mural. Here are CyFi's photos.
Here's one more. It (which looks to me like a prescription pill bottle) was added after the black background (and the mural at bottom) were painted some time before. I'm not sure if this crew added it or if it was added earlier:
I've been back since to re-photograph the whole parking lot. There's such a backlog of mural photos now that I'll wait to post those. (If you can't wait, stop by the parking lot yourself!)
Friday, February 01, 2013
Decorated archways
A lot of Tucson homes have a garland of flowers or plants on stuccoed walls — usually around windows or entrance doors. So we won't show all of them. Here's an example from 1817 E. 10th Street:
I was there on March 24, 2012.
Update (February 5, 2014): Terri Vasquez wrote recently to say that “The artist is Chris Serafini. He is a local teacher and coach.” and “I was working on a rust staining project on the walkway at the time you took the photo.”
Thanks for filling us in, Terri!
I was there on March 24, 2012.
Update (February 5, 2014): Terri Vasquez wrote recently to say that “The artist is Chris Serafini. He is a local teacher and coach.” and “I was working on a rust staining project on the walkway at the time you took the photo.”
Thanks for filling us in, Terri!
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Saguaro tops
These bottomless saguaro are on the east wall of Net Zero Solar, at the corner of 9th Avenue and 5th Street (101 W. 5th). I found them on December 2nd.
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Murals being made, part 12: Tasteful Kitchen
On October 21, 2012, I posted a photo of the south wall of The Tasteful Kitchen, 722 N. Stone.
I drive by fairly often. On January 23rd, I saw a finished mural:
It looks pretty different from the sketch that was on the wall in September (when I took the photo that appeared in the October entry).
Update: Rock Martinez painted the mural. Here are photos from Rock's website on January 21.
I drive by fairly often. On January 23rd, I saw a finished mural:
It looks pretty different from the sketch that was on the wall in September (when I took the photo that appeared in the October entry).
Update: Rock Martinez painted the mural. Here are photos from Rock's website on January 21.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Chicago Store murals gone for good?
The Chicago Store, at 130 E. Congress, for years has had music inside and outside. Inside — as Mayor Jonathan Rothschild said in an interview (see below), the store “buys, sells, rents, trades and repairs all sorts of instruments from kazoos to pianos.” On two of the three outside walls were murals of musicians (photos above and below), of a Tucsonan who died tragically (far too young), as well as a couple of murals in an urban-art style:
May 9, 2008 | |
November 23, 2008 | |
May 29, 2009 |
When I saw that the building was being refaced, I watched for news of changes. The facade was cleaned, and I waited. A few weeks ago, I found this story on DowntownTucson.org:
Façade Improvement Restores the Pride of 1903 in Chicago Store Building
I rode by the store last week. The walls are Quite White (actually, a light shade of beige or salmon).
The murals were fading, I guess... murals do change... and I understand that people who don't love art like this could have seen the building as an “eyesore.” Tucson moves on. Still — and especially in the story of McKenzie — we've lost a special place to “Façade Improvement.”
Friday, January 25, 2013
Winta Fresh 2013 is Saturday February 2!
On Sunday the 20th, I rode by the amazing mural-lined parking lot for Plush. (You can see it in our October 29, 2012 post.) Around ten people were there painting or watching. I mentioned that this scene looked like the WintaFresh space on North Stone. One of them told me that this year's WintaFresh is coming soon: Saturday the 2nd.
I searched online and found a Tucson Weekly calendar article confirming the date and time (11am - 4pm) and calling this year's event “Tucson's fifth annual Graffiti Expo.” The artist I talked to said that painting costs $50; you get some cans of paint and a space that's yours.
The article says this is “a mural incorporating the work of more than 50 Tucson artists,” but I think that may not be quite true. From what I've understood before — and from another of the artists I talked with on Sunday — these are artists from all over the country who come to Tucson just for this event.
I have a feeling that the 50 artist slots are already taken, but that you can pay $5 to watch it happen. If you can't make it, I'm going to try to be there... expect a full report here on the blog soon after. :)
That's one of the many murals from WintaFresh 2011. If you'd like to see other WintaFresh art, look for 1240 N. Stone in the North of Downtown section of the table of murals.
Update (February 3, 2013): I've uploaded WintaFresh 2013 video (hand-held, unedited, stereo sound) to the TucsonArtInfo YouTube channel.
I searched online and found a Tucson Weekly calendar article confirming the date and time (11am - 4pm) and calling this year's event “Tucson's fifth annual Graffiti Expo.” The artist I talked to said that painting costs $50; you get some cans of paint and a space that's yours.
The article says this is “a mural incorporating the work of more than 50 Tucson artists,” but I think that may not be quite true. From what I've understood before — and from another of the artists I talked with on Sunday — these are artists from all over the country who come to Tucson just for this event.
I have a feeling that the 50 artist slots are already taken, but that you can pay $5 to watch it happen. If you can't make it, I'm going to try to be there... expect a full report here on the blog soon after. :)
That's one of the many murals from WintaFresh 2011. If you'd like to see other WintaFresh art, look for 1240 N. Stone in the North of Downtown section of the table of murals.
Update (February 3, 2013): I've uploaded WintaFresh 2013 video (hand-held, unedited, stereo sound) to the TucsonArtInfo YouTube channel.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Have some extra white paint?
Image from pixabay.com
Sometime in February, I'll help to paint a new Tucson mural. (You'll see the story here, of course!) We'll need flat white latex acrylic paint as the base coat (the primer).If you have some to spare, please either send me email or call me at 520-302-4402. Your paint will be the foundation for part of the Tucson mural scene. Thanks!
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Murals for sale (restaurant included)
OK, I admit that I've used a title like that before. Anyway, the former Farmhouse Restaurant building, 660 N. Ocotillo Road in Benson, was for sale when I drove by on January 10th. The main attraction for art lovers is that it's covered with murals.
Here's a view from the southwest (as always, you can click for a larger view):
And the north side:
Both of the large murals are signed in their lower-right corner:
Here's a view from the southwest (as always, you can click for a larger view):
And the north side:
Both of the large murals are signed in their lower-right corner:
- GORMAN -
2007
2007
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Salvador Corona murals at the Bates Mansion
On July 7, 2008, we published photos by Warren V. of the mural on the Stone Avenue side of the Bates Mansion (283 N. Stone near Franklin).
Two days ago, the Arizona Daily Star article by Ernesto Portillo covered that mural, as well as two others (mostly the magnificent mural inside the mansion that's deteriorating). It said that the murals were painted by Mexican artist Salvador Corona, who was active in Tucson until the 1990s.
Here's the other mural that the article mentioned; it's over the north entrance. You might not call it a “mural” because it's not paint on a wall. I grabbed a photo of it on Sunday so you can make up your own mind:
Two days ago, the Arizona Daily Star article by Ernesto Portillo covered that mural, as well as two others (mostly the magnificent mural inside the mansion that's deteriorating). It said that the murals were painted by Mexican artist Salvador Corona, who was active in Tucson until the 1990s.
Here's the other mural that the article mentioned; it's over the north entrance. You might not call it a “mural” because it's not paint on a wall. I grabbed a photo of it on Sunday so you can make up your own mind:
Monday, January 21, 2013
Murals being made, part 11: King Commemoration
Just in time for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Tucson illustrator Sabrina Vincent sent photos of the mural she finished this month. It's at the corner of Columbus & Cooper (just south of Broadway):
The mural is tied together with red scarves — and red yarn, as on the part of the mural around the corner to the left. It's a quote from MLK Jr:
The crossbars on the "t"s are Cupid's arrows — clever, eh? Sabrina is better known as SLOV. Here she (or a fan of hers) appears in the mural:
You can see the mural's progress — from an empty wall, to the finished work I showed first above — on her blog SLOVLY. (She shows this mural in her January 7 entry.)
I think she started painting at the end of November. (That's from the camera data inside her first photos.) The last photo was dated January 2.
Thanks for the mural (and the photos), SLOV!
An Arizona Daily Star story, Tucson Oddity: Fanciful mural greets passers-by (April 1, 2013) tells more of the story.
The mural is tied together with red scarves — and red yarn, as on the part of the mural around the corner to the left. It's a quote from MLK Jr:
The crossbars on the "t"s are Cupid's arrows — clever, eh? Sabrina is better known as SLOV. Here she (or a fan of hers) appears in the mural:
You can see the mural's progress — from an empty wall, to the finished work I showed first above — on her blog SLOVLY. (She shows this mural in her January 7 entry.)
I think she started painting at the end of November. (That's from the camera data inside her first photos.) The last photo was dated January 2.
Thanks for the mural (and the photos), SLOV!
An Arizona Daily Star story, Tucson Oddity: Fanciful mural greets passers-by (April 1, 2013) tells more of the story.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Yet another mural at 7th & Toole
On December 30th, I posted two different murals on the same corner of 7th & Toole.
Today, as I was going through my backlog of photos, I found yet another mural at that corner — a photo I took on November 21st:
I've added this photo to the middle of that post, but I also wanted to show it here in case you're (trying to :) keep track. I've also added the names of the artists who made those three murals.
Today, as I was going through my backlog of photos, I found yet another mural at that corner — a photo I took on November 21st:
I've added this photo to the middle of that post, but I also wanted to show it here in case you're (trying to :) keep track. I've also added the names of the artists who made those three murals.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Sunflowers on Marana auto shop
Village Automotive of Marana, at 13111 W. Marana Road, got this new sunflower mural in the autumn of 2012. You can read more about Paul Frederick's shop, and see some other fun photos, on the Village Automotive Facebook page (which is where I got the photo; it's near the bottom of the page).
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Artistic home and library, part 2 of 2
On January 15th, we showed murals on the walls of the home at 4102 E. Lester. (It's the corner of Lester Street and Justin Lane — one block north of Pima, halfway between Alvernon and Columbus. As always, you can click the address above for a map.)
Today I'll show you the surprise that I mentioned in the home's front yard. First, the front (the south side):
...the back (facing Lester Street):
...and the inside (without some of the books):
The library's roof hadn't been added yet. Also, if you look carefully at the back side (click on the second photo for a larger view), there are tiny letters around the flower. In case you can't see them, here's the beginning:
"If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need."
There's much more. Why not bring stop by the corner, read the back, take a book... maybe leave a book... and enjoy what these dedicated people have given to us through their hard work and their art?
This is a Little Free Library. You can read more about the movement by visiting LittleFreeLibrary.org.
The artist was Judy Ostermeyer. The home's owner is Meg Johnson; she's currently secretary of the Garden District Neighborhood Association.
Meg told me that, as far as she knew at that point, this was the second Little Free Library in Tucson.
I had a very enjoyable conversation with Meg there, next to the library, two months ago — November 20, 2012. (I hope that my notes were correct... I was riding on my bicycle, not expecting to find something like this, and was surprised by what happened next!)
Update (January 26, 2013): Meg Johnson sent new photos. One shows the front with the new roof:
The other is of the back. It has a new Little Free Library sign at the top, as well as the date and Judy Ostermeyer's signature at the bottom:
Thanks again, Meg.
Today I'll show you the surprise that I mentioned in the home's front yard. First, the front (the south side):
...the back (facing Lester Street):
...and the inside (without some of the books):
The library's roof hadn't been added yet. Also, if you look carefully at the back side (click on the second photo for a larger view), there are tiny letters around the flower. In case you can't see them, here's the beginning:
"If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need."
There's much more. Why not bring stop by the corner, read the back, take a book... maybe leave a book... and enjoy what these dedicated people have given to us through their hard work and their art?
This is a Little Free Library. You can read more about the movement by visiting LittleFreeLibrary.org.
The artist was Judy Ostermeyer. The home's owner is Meg Johnson; she's currently secretary of the Garden District Neighborhood Association.
Meg told me that, as far as she knew at that point, this was the second Little Free Library in Tucson.
I had a very enjoyable conversation with Meg there, next to the library, two months ago — November 20, 2012. (I hope that my notes were correct... I was riding on my bicycle, not expecting to find something like this, and was surprised by what happened next!)
Update (January 26, 2013): Meg Johnson sent new photos. One shows the front with the new roof:
The other is of the back. It has a new Little Free Library sign at the top, as well as the date and Judy Ostermeyer's signature at the bottom:
Thanks again, Meg.
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Artistic home and library, part 1 of 2
The home at 4102 E. Lester has murals on the front of the home, along Lester Street, by Pat Redmon (I hope I'm spelling her name right; she's a woodworker) on the left, and by Meg Johnson on the right:
There's also a mural on the wall along Justin Lane. This one is by Pat Redmon:
Out front is a surprise that I'll show in the next post (January 17th).
There's also a mural on the wall along Justin Lane. This one is by Pat Redmon:
Out front is a surprise that I'll show in the next post (January 17th).
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