Wednesday, April 05, 2017

Cavett close-up

Another of the mural-rich TUSD (Tucson Unified School District) schools is Cavett Elementary. We've had several entries with murals inside (and a few outside) this particular school.

One of the murals you can see (with permission from the school office!) is just along the hall from the office. It's one of the many school murals that Tucsonan muralist David Tineo made with help from students. We saw that mural — along with other murals — on our January 20, 2017 entry Cavett Elementary (you can click there to see it). Here's the last photo from that blog entry, showing the Tineo mural from the left end:


Without much of my usual editing to fix tilted edges, here are some parts of the mural that grabbed my eye as I wanted from left to right. The black stripe at top has quotes and the names of student artists.


David Aber and I met there — cameras ready to go! — on September 20, 2016.

Monday, April 03, 2017

TEP Substation

Joe Pagac recently completed a mural at the TEP substation near E. Prince Rd. and N. Mountain Ave. Photos taken on Mar. 5, 2017.  Click on any photo for larger and sharper images.
North Wall
First Panel on the East Wall
Second Panel on the East Wall
Third Panel on the East Wall

Friday, March 31, 2017

"Plants for the Southwest", a nursery

The nursery is located at 50 E. Blacklidge Dr.  However, the mural is on a separate, but attached, bldg. at 2936 N. Stone Ave.  Artistry by Rock "CYFI" Martinez and his assistant, Fernando Leon.
Front of bldg. attached to the West side of "Plants for the Southwest"

South side of 2936 N. Stone Ave.
Click on either photo for larger and sharper images.  Photos taken on Mar. 5, 2017.

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Santa Rita High School

Santa Rita High School.  Home of the Eagles.
Photo taken on March 5, 2017.  Click on the photo for a larger and sharper image.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

South Tucson tilework on the True Tucson blog

I just discovered the blog True Tucson. The story The art of tile, South Tucson style has a series of photos of the tile work next to streets in the city of South Tucson.

The Tucson Murals Project blog has some of those murals and others too. (To see them, use the search box at the right edge of the TucsonArt.info murals page and search for: South Tucson. Or zoom into South Tucson and scroll around its murals on the map:



You can see a bigger version of the mural map by clicking there.

Monday, March 27, 2017

Smitty's North Wall

This is the third and last wall around Smitty's Car Wash.



Photographed on Feb. 14, 2017.  Click on any photo for a slide show of larger and sharper images.

Friday, March 24, 2017

Smitty's West Wall

This is the second of the three walls around Smitty's Car Wash.



Photographed on Feb. 14, 2017.  Click on any photo for a slide show of larger and sharper images.

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Smitty's South Wall

Several photos have been posted to this blog of murals found at Smitty's Car Wash.  There is also a wall around three sides of the car wash and this, the South wall, is the first of the three.



Photographed on Feb. 14, 2017.  Click on any photo for a slide show of larger and sharper images.

Monday, March 20, 2017

Music murals around the house

This home has murals of musicians. It's at 1121 West Fresno Street; Google wouldn't let me search for the location.

By the front door is a guitar made of iron. I grabbed this fragment from one of the photos you'll see below: the man holding what looks like a slice of bread (a sandwich?) with a bite out of the top. The bread has the caption "Yours truly Jack Smith" that's mentioned below.
Mark Fleming has contributed a number of photos to this blog. He sent these on March 5th (which is the same day his camera data says he took them). He wrote:

On West Fresno Street between Grande and Westmoreland, [this is a] private home, [we got] owner's permission. The murals can be seen from the street.

We asked permission to post on [this blog]; he said yes, we offered our names he did not reciprocate. One of the murals reads "Yours truly Jack Smith."

He's an oil painter and only does murals on his own home.

Let's see that mural and the other four:

Thanks a lot, Mark, and welcome back to the blog!

Friday, March 17, 2017

Morrow Residence, a (very!) 3-D “mural”

This blog normally shows “flat” art, but we make exceptions every once in a while. These walls are nowhere near flat!

"Armed with Styrofoam, rebar, aluminum foil, stucco, chicken wire, railroad spikes, cactus skeletons and his imagination, Gary Morrow began creating his version of a desert scene, one that is gradually encircling their house and yard."  "It'll be done when I'm done being alive.", he said.
Source: Arizona Real Estate News
West Wall on N. Park Ave.
South Wall on E. Gifford St.
Entry Gate on West Wall
West Wall - looking thru a rebar fence at two aliens descending from a spaceship
South Wall Detail
Cliff dwellings with tiny ladders and saguaros.  
Behind the wall is the alien space ship with a Pterodactyl on top.
More South Wall Detail
Photographed on Feb. 8, 2017.
Click on any photo for larger and sharper images.

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Monday, March 13, 2017

Santa Theresa Tile Works re-revisited


Santa Theresa Tile Works has made a lot of public art in Tucson! Some of it is on this blog. More is on the public art page of their website. I'll post more here as time goes on.

I'm often around their building (at the corner of 6th & 6th), going to contemporary galleries in the area, so I see their tile work a lot. I missed this mural, but David Aber didn't. It's on the south side of the building.

He took the photo December 11, 2015.

Like much of their work, this mosaic has a lot of detail. You can click on the image for a much larger view. Unfortunately, Blogger's image viewer seems to squash tall photos to fit your window and doesn't let you scroll up and down to see detail much better. So I've added a version rotated to the left to help you click and see more detail:

Our previous entry Santa Theresa Tile Works revisited, has more…, as well as links to previous blog entries. The entry Wheat Scharf Associates shows a work nearby the one that David photographed (above).

P.S. Please let me know if you like this “sideways” trick by leaving a comment below. (You can remain anonymous.) If it's popular, I'll do more as time goes on.) Thanks.