Found at Cassler Accounting Service PLLC.
Artist Not Known |
Found at Cassler Accounting Service PLLC.
Artist Not Known |
The "Day of the Dead" is an opportunity to remember and celebrate the lives of departed loved ones. It is often celebrated on Nov. 1 to remember children who are deceased and Nov. 2 to honor the adults who have passed.
The artists are Monty Ses Esposito, Retro, Sketch 71/Rickey A Bush and Sal Sawaki; all working with Wagon Burner Arts.
Found at the SW intersection of N. Martin Ave. and E. Grant Rd., Tucson, AZ |
La Calavera Catrina (the "Elegant Skull"). Also known as Mexico's Lady of the Dead. |
Mariachis (a street band in Mexico) |
La Calavera Catrinas Note the dog and cat. |
Update: KGUN9 TV interviewed muralist Monty Ses Esposito, one of four artists who painted the mural.
Update: The Sugar Skulls panel — the right side of the second photo in this post — was replaced in Jan. of 2022. The “sugar skulls” were “chuckleheads” — the four artists who painted the mural. Left to right, they were: Ses, Sketch 71, Retro and Sal. Below is what replaced the panel:
Alfombrismo (flower art carpet) is a collective cultural expression of ephemeral art originating in the community of Huamantla, Tlaxcala, Mexico. This art expression arises from the pre-Hispanic worldview of offering to nature and the close relationship with the Matlalcuéyetl mountain from whom the community obtains resources to survive. After the process of miscegenation, veneration and gratitude are directed to the Christian divinity that they identify with the benefits of the Matlalcuéyetl as The Virgin Mary who assumes the generosity of nature and mercy for those who need it most, for which she is named Virgin of Charity.
Alfombristas Mexicanos (Mexican Carpet Makers) is a civil and collective group based on the carpets of Huamantla. This group develops cultural projects, to develop collective spaces as possibilities of coexistence, exchange, appreciation, and imagination.
Alfombristas Mexicanos develops carpeting projects as an inclusive cultural expression in which diverse individuals can contribute and be integrated from the creative process to the artistic culmination of the work. This artistic expression is a current dynamic in a constant transformation and innovation that adapts the form and resources from a local community which is giving time, materials and contributes to a visible purpose to a transcendental expression.
Mural by Monty Ses Esposito, Sketch 71/Rickey A Bush, Sal Sawaki with Wagon Burner Arts |
In May of 2018 I took photos of two murals on an L-shaped wall at the rear of an assisted living facility named St. Luke's Home. I recently discovered that these photos never made it to The Tucson Murals Project. I drove by St. Luke's on Aug. 18, 2021 to confirm that the mural still exists. While the street address is 615 E. Adams St., the murals can only be seen from E. Lee St.
Here are the two photos (better late than never):