Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Park Place Chalk Art Festival, part 1 of 3



This 800th post on the Tucson Murals Project (Happy Birthday to Us! :) shows part of the second annual chalk art festival, April 6th & 7th. Held at Park Place Mall, it's organized by SAACA and bankrolled by merchants — as well as Park Place. (You can see last year's festival there.)

Last weekend, when I posted my announcement of the second day, I'd only seen the professional artists on the north side of the mall — and some of the Community Participation mural. I didn't realize how big the festival would be! I ended up with more than 150 photos — including every bit of the kidZONE art. So I decided to wait until today to post the first part; I'm aiming to post the rest by the end of the week.

Let's go! Here are the works by professional artists, from east to west along the north side of the mall. First I show each work as it was being made, mid-afternoon Saturday the 6th. Next I show the finished work, mid-morning Monday. As always, you can click on a photo to get a larger view.

Marisa Salazar



Park Place Merchants sponsored Marisa's work. Her email address is b1stmrs12@yahoo.com (click there or, if you type the address, both of the "1" are the number one, not the letter l).

Matt Cotten



Matt's website is www.PuppetsAmongUs.com. His sponsor was Arizona Virtual Academy—Insight Academy of Arizona.

Jamie Tooley



There's more of Jamie's work at www.TooleyCreations.com.

Chris Leon



You can reach Chris at artworx.leon@gmail.com. Park Place Merchants sponsored his mural.

Martin Quintanilla



Martín's phone number is (520)333-9999. His work shows traditions of Michoacán, México. The Southern Arizona Attractions Alliance sponsored him.

Michael Schwartz



Michael's personal website is www.MichaelBSchwartz.com. (He's also the Executive Director of the Tucson Arts Brigade.) His sponsor was RBC Wealth Management — Tom Binder.

See that little hole in the wall above Michael's finished work in the second photo above? It's some sort of drain. While I was there on Monday morning, workers opened a valve and water washed away parts of the mural. There's video of the sad scene on the TucsonArtInfo YouTube channel; click there or on this photo...

(Here's a larger version of the photo.) Parts of some murals farther west of Michael's had already been washed away; I'm not sure if others met the same fate later. Chalk art isn't supposed to be permanent, but I wished the workers could have used a hose to direct water around the mural... or the organizers had placed every work away from the drains!

Susan Kay Johnson



Her website is SusanKayJohnson.com. NexCare Urgent Care supported this work of Susan's.

Wesley Fawcett Creigh



To see and read about more of her work, visit WesleyFawcettCreigh.wordpress.com and PaintingByNumbersProject.wordpress.com. This mural was sponsored by Park Place Merchants.

Kati Astraeir



Kati wasn't there when I took the first photo (or the second photo!) above, but I found her website www.KatiAstraeir.com with a Web search. The work on her home page is quite different than this chalk mural, but I recognized her style because met her outside Solar Culture Gallery on Christmas Day — when she and Steven Eye showed me their amazing rotating wooden sculpture.

This chalk mural was sponsored by merchants here at Park Place.

More photos are coming...

...in Part Two and Part Three!



Notes about the photos

  • They're in the public domain. I've cut the size and detail, though, for posting online. If any you'd like an original photo, please send me email. (If you use the photo somewhere online or for profit, I'd suggest asking the artist's permission first — and giving their name so they get credit for their hard work.)
  • Most of these are geotagged. So you can use geotagging software to find the exact location of the art.

Sunday, April 07, 2013

Park Place Chalk Art Festival continues today!

Tucson’s second annual Chalk Art Festival started yesterday at Park Place Mall. It's sponsored by the Mall, as well as by merchants there and in other parts of Tucson. Professional artists are making chalk murals on the north side of the mall. At the northwest corner, there's also a “Kids’ Zone” (where anyone can make chalk art... my guess is that you only need to be a kid at heart to “chalk” there):

These two “kids” had just spilled their Jamba Juice, and (it turns out that) it doesn't stick to chalk... they found that they could blow it off their mural. :)

I’ll post lots of photos here on Monday or Tuesday. In the meantime, head over to Park Place! The artists are supposed to be there in person today from 11 am to 3 pm.

Update (April 10, 2013): The first of three pages of photos starts in today's entry, Park Place Chalk Art Festival, part 1 of 3.

Saturday, April 06, 2013

The pets of Dunbar/Spring

On the southeast corner of 9th & University is this community bulletin board for the Dunbar/Spring neighborhood:

(The other side has announcements, etc.) I snapped it on April 16, 2012.

Thursday, April 04, 2013

Mural Heaven at Harelson

The front (south) side of Harelson Elementary, 826 W. Chapala Drive, is covered with murals. Some are far enough away that you can only see them well when the school is open — or with binoculars. I had a zoom lens when I stopped by on April 15, 2012:









There might be more murals that I couldn't see when campus was closed. If you know of other work here at Harelson, please tell me!

Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Sun and Moon over Santa Cruz Park

On the northeast corner of St. Marys & Riverside is this entrance to the Santa Cruz River Park:

The mural has Santa Cruz River Park and Dedicated May 16, 1992. Here's a closer look (you can click for an even larger view):

I didn't spot an artist name, though, when I took the photo on April 11, 2012.

Tuesday, April 02, 2013

Oasis Fruit Cones on St. Marys

In November, 2011, we posted the mural on Oasis Fruit Cones on 12th Avenue. Six months later — April 11, 2012 — I visited their location at 1002 W. St Marys:

(That's part of the east wall. There's a photo of the front wall on the Yelp review.)

They may be open for the season by now. Yum.

Monday, April 01, 2013

Under (and over) I-10

The sides of the Speedway underpass below Interstate 10 are lined with photos of what's above I-10... far above I-10:

The two murals are different from each other. Here are close-ups (as always, you can click on them for a larger view):


Sun, Global City Lights, Phoenix Mars Mission, Jupiter and Ganymede, Rings of Saturn, Neptune and Triton


Horsehead Nebula, NGC 891 Galaxy, Trifid Nebula, Thousands of Galaxies, Orion Nebula, Supernova Remnant, Milky Way Galaxy

I took the photos on April 11, 2012.

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Flowers for Easter

The wall around the home at 4137 E. Kings Road (which is just northeast of Broadway and Irving) has a flower garland painted on the wall by the gate. Here's a long shot of the wall and a close-up of the garland:

I spotted it on April 8, 2012.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Saddlin' up the dragon

This fun mural, on the southeast corner of Broadway and Longfellow, was painted sometime not too long before I photographed it on April 8, 2012.

Update (March 8, 2015): @VisitTucsonAZ lists the artist as @raycleveland. Here's an Instagram photo.

Friday, March 29, 2013

Two doors at Duffy

These two outside classroom doors are at the west end of the south side of Duffy Elementary School, 5145 E. 5th Street:

The school was closed in 2010. But a news article published not long after I took these photos said that the school would be reopened as a district community service center.

(I haven't been by there since. If you have and you know whether these murals are still there — or if you know the story behind them — please leave a comment below or send me a message.)

I found these doors on April 8, 2012. By the way, I'm going to try to find the time to post a new mural every day for a while — to cut my big backlog of photos.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Wide on Wilmot

This wide mural is on the north side of the wall along a parking lot at 102 N. Wilmot. I took the photo on April 8, 2012.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Sad news from Mary's Street

If you've been following this blog for a few months — or a few years — you've seen our story about the bank's foreclosure on an artist's home,
just northwest of Glenn and Country Club (at 2939 E. Monte Vista). Back in November, 2010, the story was all sunshine and murals — including two of my favorite Tucson murals: the artist's children all along the front wall, and their mother, doing a cartwheel, in a mural on the side of their home.

By the end of 2012, the home was surrounded by weeds and in decay. Mary's oldest daughter, Crystal, told us why. This blog — and KGUN 9 news — spread the story of this art-filled home being foreclosed on. I had hope that things might get better. Yesterday, though, Crystal sent me an email message with (what I hope isn't) the sad end of the story:



Good morning Jerry.

I was just letting you know that my mom is officially out of her house. And it pains me to say that she is having to stop by there almost every day to check on it because transits/thugs are breaking in/stealing things — taking anything they can find that my mom wasn’t able to take with her.

It aches my heart to hear that the home we grew up in — the house my mother has loved and cherished for over 17 years is finally in her rear view mirror (sort of speak).

If you wish to update your blog — Please feel free to use this email and the poem below that I wrote in honor of my mother and her house. :)
(oh and the collage picture attached that show both of them in their ‘glory days’.)

Much thanks to your initial curiosity
And passion for the arts
Your communications and posts have been the silver linings in all of this. :)
-Crystal

Periwinkle (by Crystal J. Wells)

Her periwinkle walkway to her periwinkle door of her periwinkle (and white) house that soon will be no more.

My mother is so friendly and taught me all I know
My mother is so generous,
Even when she has no dough.

Her house may be her legacy
that she's forced to say goodbye
but her cheery disposition has never left her side.

She dreams big everyday
Does her best to solider on
But my mommy will always be...
beautiful, talented and strong!

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Compass to the Southwest


David Tineo painted this mural in 1989, on the south wall of the former University of Arizona Press building (now the Esquire Apartments), at 1230 N. Park (the corner of Helen Street).

Three close-ups:

Mark Fleming took the photos. Thanks, as always, Mark!

Friday, March 22, 2013

Mama's Hawaiian Bar-b-cue

Rock Martinez has another new mural. (Here's Rock's Facebook page. Thanks, Melo.) Actually, it's several new murals, spread around the Mama's Hawaiian Bar-b-cue location at 850 East Speedway (there are two). They told me Rock finished the murals in the past week or so.


Mark Fleming sent these. Kudos, Mark, for spotting these and taking the time to send them in! If you spot a new mural — and there seem to be a lot of them these days! — please either snap a photo and send it (see the blog header above) or email me and let me know where it is.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Skate Country

Here's the south wall of this roller-skating rink on April 8th:

Update (September 7, 2018): This whole side of the building has been repainted.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Maybe a mural, part 43: El Sur Restaurant

This occasional “maybe a mural” series shows things that you might or might not say is a “mural.” The two saguaros with sombreros on the front of El Sur Mexican restaurant, 5602 E. 22nd, look almost like stencils to me. We generally don't show cookie-cutter designs here on the blog, but this one could well be hand-painted... so, here it is for you to decide!

I took the photo on April 8, 2012.

Friday, March 15, 2013

New header and "about this blog" page

Since Randy's death earlier this week, I've added a new page titled About this blog with history and background of this (almost) seven-year-young story of Tucson murals. You can read it there or by clicking its name in the new “Pages” area at the right side of the blog. (The new “Home” link there is a handy way to see this blog's front page, the latest posts.)

I've also updated the header to remove Randy’s name, and change his email address to mine. (Here's the old header...


...). I gave this change a lot of thought. Of course, you shouldn’t email photos to Randy anymore. I decided to remove his name from the header, as well — and to put his name and his story in the new “About” page (as well as remembering Randy with my post two days ago titled Farewell, Randy...).

We’re almost at post #800. I'm looking forward to the 1,000th! Let’s go!

Jerry

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Farewell, Randy...

I'm so sad to tell you of Randy Garsee's untimely death. He passed away in his sleep this weekend at his home near Washington DC. He became one of two evening news anchors at KOLD in 1997; he and Kris Pickel took their nightly newscasts to the top of the ratings. He was popular for his outspoken, honest style as well as his friendliness and humor.

Randy was a visionary who loved Tucson's art and wanted to share it. He founded this blog on July 12, 2006. (Here are the entries he wrote in 2006.) Not long after — at the start of October, 2006 — he left KOLD.

I joined the blog in May, 2007. Actually, he added me as co-author and then wrote to tell me that he had. I'd just sent in my first mural photo. Somehow Randy knew that I'd love doing this. Though he'd hoped to stay in Tucson, he may have known by then that he'd be moving on to another TV job. He next worked at KTEN in North Texas - Southern Oklahoma. Later he worked in Iraq as a journalist (and wrote two posts from there: No Murals in Iraq and While in Baghdad...). At the time of his death, Randy was communications and public affairs adviser for the Center for Naval Analyses and Institute for Public Research.

If you'd like to read more of and about Randy, here are links to some web pages. As Kris Pickel (his long-time co-anchor at KOLD 13) told me today, “I would include links with the caveat that there is more to every story.” Amen.
(Some of those links — like Randy's Facebook and LinkedIn pages — may eventually disappear. I'll leave them here in case they help someone track down the information some day.)

Jerry

Update (November 8, 2020): Today I noticed an Arizona Daily Star interview with Randy that was published May 1, 2008: Former anchor's site documents city murals.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

SF Bay Area street art sites

Here in the San Francisco Bay Area (I'm traveling this week), I heard of a couple of local groups I thought you might want to know about.

The work above is one of the weekly chalk drawings by Chalkupy, a project of the Fresh Juice Party. Each week, a group of artists go to Oakland's streets (or other locations; you might have seen TV coverage of their Chalk Walk in L.A. — to mock the Art Walk). This particular chalk came from a satellite view of an Occupy encampment in Oakland that later appeared in a Google Map. The encampment was cleared away, so Chalkupy recreated it on a sidewalk. (These “chalks” don’t last long, I heard... Oakland city officials quickly wash them away.)

Chalkupy has produced a guide on how to chalk. It has a lot of valuable techniques for planning a chalk — including how non-artists can join in on the work. Here's a link to the PDF file: Chalkupy HOW TO.

A fabulous Bay Area site for street art is Endless Canvas – Bay Area Graffiti and Street Art.