Friday, May 11, 2012

Twenty murals (and a plaque) for #600

Randy started this blog almost six years ago: July 12, 2006. Today's post is our 600th, and we've got a ways to go! (The unpublished murals pages show some of the murals that aren't on the blog yet.) Today we've got 21 more murals for you: 20 murals and a plaque (that you might count as a "mural").

The Adult Learning Center at El Pueblo Neighborhood Center, 101 W. Irvington, is filled with murals. Back on May 4, 2010, we posted four murals on the north side of the center. When I rode by from the south on October 9th, 2011, I found 21 more (and I might have missed a couple!). I discovered them when I spotted one of the mosaic-topped arches at an entrance to the courtyard that runs between the buildings. What a mural-lovers’ Mecca!

Above is the plaque on the wall by the south entrance. Below, the southern entrance portal: the south side, then the north:


Next, let's take a walk past the first ten classrooms, from south to north. By each door is a mural with a desert plant and the name that English-speakers typically use for it. There's also a square plaque with the room number and the name of that same desert plant in Spanish. (At least, that's my guess from looking at the pattern...) I'll list the room number and Spanish name (from the plaque) next to each mural:

Room 1
Maguey
Room 2
Biznaga
Room 3
Cholla
Room 4
Alamo
Room 5
Palo Fierro
Room 6
Pitahaya
Room 7
Sotol
Room 8
Jojoba
Room 9
Mezquite
Room 10
(Palo Verde)
GED Testing
Examen de GED
The signs for the next four classrooms, 11 through 14, touch the mural and are wrapped in the same border. So I'll show them without labels:

I was here on October 9, while the building was closed. But the classroom doors have small glass windows, and I saw that rooms 5 and 6 have spectacular stained glass on the opposite walls. I shot these two photos through the little windows. (As always, you can click on a photo for a larger view.)

At the other end of the courtyard (which is on the west side of the buildings) is another arch with mosaic murals on top. Here are the east and west sides of the arch:

Wednesday, May 09, 2012

New in Dunbar/Spring

Melodi King sent this photo of a street corner in the art-filled Dunbar/Spring Neighborhood. It's a new mural painted on a street junction by Rock Martinez and Joe Pagac.

I haven't had a chance to check out the area recently, so if you know the address, please send me email or leave a comment below. Thanks, and enjoy!

Update (May 15, 2012): I realized that I could check the Dunbar/Spring Neighborhood website. Sure enough, the first listing, Neighborhood Mural Complete!, said that the mural is at the corner of 11th & University. It mentions that neighborhood residents helped paint. And it has three photos.

Update (October 10, 2014): The mural has faded quite a bit in three years. You can see it being painted in Rock Martinez' photos.

Monday, May 07, 2012

Around Artemis

On April 6, 2010, we showed a mural on the south wall of Artemis Design, 2943 N. Stone. On October 4, 2011, I noticed that the north side of the building also has art:

Saturday, May 05, 2012

Winsett Park mural (before) being restored

If you've walked along Fourth Avenue or been to one of the festivals there, you've probably seen the mural “Together We Thrive” that wraps around Winsett Park, 316 N. 4th.

The Tucson Arts Brigade is restoring the mural. If you're between 13 and 17 and you want to help, they meet each Tuesday between 3 and 5 PM at Howenstine Magnet High School, 555 South Tucson Blvd. There's more info on the Tucson Arts Brigade website murals page; though it (currently) says the project will finish in April, Michael Schwartz (TAB's Executive Director) told me that the target date is now June 15th. If you'd like, you can bring a mentor up to age 22 or so.

I stopped by the park on October 4, 2011 — before restoration started — and found the gates were open. (The park is often closed when there isn't an event going on.) I snapped a series of photos in a semicircle from the rear wall southeast, to the beans and seeds under the west end of the back wall, to the west end of the north wall, to the right (east) end of the north wall:


We've posted some earlier photos of two parts of the mural, as well as a photo of the stage (which isn't shown above).

Thursday, May 03, 2012

Uncle Bob's second mural

Back on March 11, 2010, we posted a photo of the mural along Glenn, just east of Stone, at Uncle Bob's Used Cars.

On October 4, 2011, I noticed another car-and-road mural just south of the one mentioned above. It was along the south side of the parking lot for Uncle Bob's. Though the official address for Uncle Bob's is 20 E. Glenn, I guesstimated that the wall was at 2756 N. Stone. Whatever... here's a photo (as always, you can click for a larger view):

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

On fire on Stone

When I rode by on October 4, 2011, this store at the corner of Stone and Jacinto had flames coming out of the roof. I didn't call 911, of course, but I thought it was a fun idea for a mural.

Here's a closer view of the mural on their middle window:

Come on down! Aloha! Assuming those flames weren't real, I'm sure they have some hot deals...

The bottom mural is signed Gorman 696-3480.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

29th Street overpass dedication May 9th

The pedestrian bridge over 29th Street at Columbus has been getting a mural makeover for the past two years. (If you haven't seen it recently, there are photos in our March 14th entry.)

The Tucson Arts Brigade press release says that the project is almost done. The unveiling celebration will be Wednesday, May 9th, from 3:30 to 6:30 PM. See you there!

Update (May 15, 2012): I missed the celebration. Here's a news report and some new photos of the overpass from TucsonNewsNow.com (KOLD/KMSB): Murals showcase Tucson talent, fight tagging.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Lone Palm

Sounds like a cool place to pull over for a drink along a hot desert road, doesn't it?

Sorry if I got your mouth watering. :) Around the home at 115 E. Alturas is a wall with peaks and saguaro. ’Most every peak has its scraggly saguaro — except one:

I spotted this lonely palm tree between the other saguaro. The photos are from October 4, 2011.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Mural backdrop at 2012 Tucson Festival of Books

If you attended this year's Tucson Festival of Books, you probably saw the six-by-sixteen-foot stage backdrop "Nuestras Raices." I missed the unveiling, so I didn't know until this week that Mel Dominguez painted it. I read about it on her new blog. Here's the story.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Critters on a wall, part 2

Just along the street from my previous post I saw this mural-like address sign on the home at 2002 E. Lee:


But take a closer look at the lower right corner. It's...


...a critter, not a part of the art (at least, not permanently).

I looked down at my camera for a moment — to go to the macro setting, to get another photo — and our friend was gone.

Monday, April 23, 2012

Critters on a wall, part 1

My last couple of posts have been about “critters” (animals. bugs, or, I guess, basically anything alive that's not human). Here's the first of two new posts with more of the same.



I found these along the alley between Adams & Lee, on the sides of the carport for 2050 E. Lee. This kind of discovery is one of the main reasons I like to do mural-hunting on my bicycle.

I took the photos on April 6th.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Maybe a mural, part 32: critters glued on

From time to time, I post a photo of art that might or might not be a mural — depending on how you define “mural.”

The previous post was of critters painted onto a sidewalk and wall. This time, they're bigger, three-dimensional, and made (I think) of plastic:

They're on the wall around 2350 E. Elm... but that's just the address, and you'll find them on the west side of Norton Avenue, just south of Elm. I took the photo on September 29, 2011.

Update (May 16, 2013): There's much more art around the home. You can find photos of some of it, and links to the rest, from the page 2350 Elm Street on TucsonArt.info.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Park Place Chalk Art Festival revisited

Last Sunday, I made a quick visit to see the artists drawing at the Park Place Chalk Art Festival. Then, on Tuesday, I came by on my bicycle around 7:30 AM to see the finished works. There were just a few people around, so (I realized after a few minutes) I could lay down the chain barriers around the bigger works to get better photos.

I'll start with the bigger works along the north side of the mall — and give each artist's name after their work:

Susan Kay Johnson

Audra Cobelis

Cindy Guare

Joshua Woodhall

Katy May Goodson

Jose Ignacio Garcia

Chris Leon (too wide for my camera, so I snapped it in three sections)

Matt Cotten

Martin Quintanilla

Toward the west end were smaller works — mostly, I think, by kids and others who just walked up and started to draw. There were hundreds of them! Here are three that caught my eye:


The long walkway to the mall entrance...


...and a 12-minute HD video. I took it as I walked along the rows of murals above. (If you can't play it from the window below, you can try opening the video directly from YouTube.)

Update (April 11, 2013): The first of three pages of photos of the 2013 Festival are here: Park Place Chalk Art Festival, part 1 of 3.