(I couldn't stop myself from using that title. :) The mural, and the old shelf, graced the east end of the north wall of Dulceria Ruiz, 4558 S. 6th, on December 23, 2010.
Humble murals are welcome here on the Tucson Murals Project. This one is both humble and small, almost a "maybe a mural." It's on the lower left part of the sign for the former Torres Taqueria, 4634 S. 6th Avenue. I rode by on December 23 and snapped this through the fence with a zoom lens.
The first photo below is a view into an inner patio with murals standing along a wall. The second shows the south wall with the sign from above and empty spaces for murals.
Deconstructed art is a term for some contemporary art and architecture. But I think it's probably also a good word, by now, for this mural that I saw almost a year ago. It was around a construction site at 44 E. Broadway — last December 15 — where the Sonoran Institute was planning to move in. I haven't had a chance to check it in the last few months, so I'll let you do that as you drive by. If you have a chance, please let me know (by email or with a comment below) if it's been "de-constructed" by now...
I found this memorial mural ("In Loving Memory... Gabriel Rene Cruz") on the south wall of the Grand Central barber shop last December 12. It's signed Gorman 2009.
(Howard's blog is Sky Island Riders Tucson Scooter Club.)
Not long after 5:30, the multi-purpose room inside was mostly full. The group headed outside, and people who contributed to the mural (with support, ideas, and the actual brushstrokes) yanked off the tarp that'd been covering the mural against rain (as well as sneak peeks):
... then posed for photos as everyone else applauded:
You've seen the mural in the announcement from August 15, so here's a close-up of the "heart":
The mural has eight panels, each painted by a different group but designed to fit together (and bolted in place, for sure). You can see that above, along with some participants' signatures.
It was a real community-building project. Around the edges of the indoor festivities was a table full of people — kids and above — painting another set of works to be made into a collage. People in recovery through CODAC worked side-by-side with residents of the Hedrick Acres Neighborhood — and anyone else who wanted to join in. I had a long talk with an artist named John who said that art has let him express himself, helping him recover in a way that words alone can't. (Some of his work hangs at Café 54 downtown.) ![]() | ![]() |
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This street-side mural is along South 10th Avenue, at the southwest corner with 29th Street, in South Tucson. (Here's a map.)
If you've been reading this blog for a while, you've seen some of the murals on sidewalks and next to main streets all through the city of South Tucson. I snapped this mural on December 12. It's along South 10th Avenue, in front of the lot at 2222 South 10th.
Just north of the murals from yesterday's post is this one. It's on the north wall of 395 W. 33rd Street in South Tucson — La Jaliciense Candy Factory & meat market. (If you're looking for it, note that the sign on the west wall says "The Gizmo Factory, S&G Embroidery"). The artist was Ruben Moreno, and the credits panel at the bottom shows the other muralists:
These murals are on walls south of The Gizmo Factory and S&G Embroidery, 395 W. 33rd Street in the art-filled city of South Tucson. I took these photos from the corner of S. 10th at W. 33rd on December 12th, 2010.
This close-up of the middle mural shows a date of Jan 2 2010, and what might be the artist's signature: TIGGER.
Even if you aren't looking for tires, you can't help seeing this mural on the front of Martin's Tire Shop at 4701 S. 12th. I spotted this (couldn't miss it!) on my mural-overload bike ride around southern Tucson last December 12.