(Update: By October, the mural was gone. You can read more here.)Update (January 15, 2015): BreakOut Studios has a new mural on the north side of their new location.
(Update: By October, the mural was gone. You can read more here.)
And, next, the north side during and after:
Painted in July, it's at the corner of Grant and Forgeus.
Besides making your porch a more pleasant place to sit, isn't a mural a great gift to give to passersby? You'll find more of the murals that grace Tucson homes as you browse through this blog.
The shadows are from early-morning light.
Does a floor-to-ceiling piece of glass count as a "wall"? (And hey, what's with the yellow door saying "rain rain go away?" :) Please remember that you can click any image for a larger view and use your browser's "back" button to come back.
It's basically some angel figures on top of a desert-looking background. Mural or not? What do you think?
A block west of the mural at Charlie's are these two families of smiling sunflowers. They're along the parking lot at The Parent Connection, 5326 E. Pima.
The deep colors and the shadows are from early-morning light.
and at Bookmans (remember, you can click on any image for a larger view; use your browser's "back" button to come back):
This scene is on the side of the Magpies Pizza building, along 5th Street at 4th Avenue. (There's more farther along the wall, at the west end... but I'll let you find that on your own. Fourth Avenue is a great place to see murals.)
Residents here contribute by, for instance, decorating their windows to fit with the murals on the walls outside.
This mural covers the west side of the Steinfeld warehouse along the little piece of Perry Avenue, just south of 6th Street. (The actual address is 101 W. 6th.) I took this shot near sunset; that's the shadow of a tree at the bottom.
These mosaic panels are along Aviation Bikeway, just east of Country Club.
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The Arizona Department of Transportation has been unloading downtown land and buildings. (Another example is the former Art's BBQ.)
This plot, tucked between 538 N. Stone (the first photo) and 546 N. Stone (the second), includes wraparound murals and a few "bonus" tags.
This mural, on the side of a gallery at 1416 S. 6th Avenue, is about as simple as you can get. (To me, it's more than a generic "wall treatment" because the design isn't regular and it fits the wall and the windows.) The live cactus in front look great — especially with all the rain we've had this spring.
A spot on the side wall lists students' names.