South facing fence of 504 E. Helen St., Tucson, AZ Artist is Carson DeYoung (@DEPSONE). Apparently, the artist is the subject of the mural. Other artists have contributed to the painting: @PERISHTNR (Guadalupe Vargas) and @SABAWEAR
Click on the photo for a larger image.
Update from Jerry Peek: Carson's Instagram page says “Currently in Tucson, AZ”… the previous two posts, during November 2023, are from Flint, Michigan and the from Roma Sur neighborhood of Mexico City. Carson gets around!
Last time, we showed My Little Angels (on Park Avenue) day care center. Today, a look at My Little Angels on St Marys Road. I don't know how long they've been open in this location, but the mural looks newer to me. I didn't spot the artist's name.
First, the front (north) side of the building and the wall on the west side of the parking lot:
Close-ups along the front of the building from left (east end) to right (west end):
And the wall from left, closest to the building (south end) to right, closest to St Marys (north end):
By the way, here's a geeky bit of Tucson knowledge. The road that runs west of I-10 is named St. Marys, not St. Mary’s. You'll see the name without an apostrophe on street signs, and in this fragment of a City of Tucson GIS MapTucson:
Once the new Maclovio Barraza Parkway is finished from Stone west to I-10 — maybe in 2025 or 2026? — I'm guessing the part of St Marys east of I-10 will get the new name — and, east of the Parkway, become 6th Street. Just a guess. 😁
It was March 9, 2008, when Randy Garsee — who founded this blog — posted Don't Pooh-Pooh Cartoon Murals. (His post titles always made me smile. He was part of the most popular TV news team in Tucson, and he kept viewers smiling.) He wrote: “Neil Amstutz submitted the pictures below and wrote: ‘At Park Avenue and 30th Street is a yellow building with Winnie the Pooh overlooking a dirt lot that may have been for a day care.’” The first photo in that post shows an empty sign at the top left corner of the first photo… In 2017, Google Maps said that the business was named (then, at least) Little Angels Daycare.
On May 14, 2023, I was driving along Park Avenue and remembered the murals. I stopped to take new photos. Now a sign (which was an empty box in our 2008 post) and the top of the building both had the name My Little Angels Daycare. Let's look around — first, the front of the building from the southeast:
Next, along the front of the building from the left (south) end of the previous photo to right (north) end:
Around the yard that's just north of the building, clockwise from the side of the building to the wall north of the dirt playground:
(As always, you can click on a photo for a larger view.)
The photo below is the artist's signature, taken from the bottom right of the photo above:
So the mural was painted in 2007, the year before it first appeared on this blog.
During 2023, I found a couple of Joe Pagac murals downtown, which had been there for years, with graffiti tags. They're two of my favorites by Joe. It used to be that taggers would respect murals… but I guess some people these days don't care if they selfishly trash something other people enjoy. I listed both mural’s location (shown at the end of this post) as the fake address “131 East Toole Avenue.” Actually, the murals are a bit northwest and southeast on either side of that point.
191 East Toole
On February 17, I saw Joe's unique mural showing homeless people he had recruited as models to swim underwater. Some of the paint was falling off the wall — probably a base coating Joe had painted on the wall before adding the mural. But the long tag was the most heartbreaking:
If you walk to the end of the little stub of 7th Avenue off of Toole Avenue, near Stone, Joe painted a mural on the side of Borderlands Brewing along the railroad tracks. There are lots of photos in Joe Pagac's Borderlands Brewing mural, posted April 10, 2015. Sometime not too long ago, someone decided to show how much he loved the IRA by ruining Joe's masterpiece. I'll start with one original closeup, then tagged versions of the same place and two other places:
Twenty years after Eleanor Kohloss painted a mural on a Tucson Water site — a water well, maybe? — she repainted it.
I found an old photo on Bing Maps Streetside View. (It looks like Google's Street View photo, from March 2022, was taken after Eleanor repainted the mural.)
I can't see how to embed the Bing photo within this web page, so here's a link:
If you come across a work of art for the first time, it's not always obvious whether the artist will keep adding or changing it. That's what happened with this mural on John Henry's Bar downtown on April 29, 2023. I saw the mural with a lift parked in front, so I guessed there was more to do. Here's what I saw:
April 29, 2023
No need to use your phone on that QR code… I've done it for you. It's a link to the Wikipedia page John Henry (folklore).
The Arizona Daily Star article New bar named for railroad folk hero set to open in downtown Tucson this fall — published Aug 2, 2019 and Updated Dec 22, 2023 — says that the owner wanted to hire Joe Pagac to paint the mural. But I've heard it's by Michael Schwartz; the way John Henry is painted does look to me like Michael's work. (If you know better, please leave a comment below — you can stay anonymous if you'd like — or use the contact form along the right column of this page.)
A month later, I came back.
May 29, 2023
When I compare the photos from both dates side by side, I can't see a difference. (If you can, please leave a comment or use the contact form.)
Happy New Year! Here's news for you about this blog. David Aber and I have been posting here twice a week — Tuesdays and Fridays. But we have so many murals on our to-do list that we'll start posting three times a week — Monday, Wednesday, and Friday — until we work down the backlog (??).
On December 12, 2023, in Volcano, David Aber posted a photo of Joe Pagac's volcano mural on the northeast corner of 6th Street and 6th Avenue. I had taken photos on May 12, 2023, while Joe was painting… but I forgot to update our to-do list of murals, so David didn't know about my photos. After I saw David's post, I decided to stop by again and take a few close-up photos. So this is another post about the same mural.
May 12, 2013
Here's Joe painting. He told me that scaffolding is so expensive to rent that he decided to buy his own. His car — I believe that's a shark — is parked next to the scaffolding. In the vertical photo below, check out the poster he hangs at the top of the scaffolding.
December 16, 2023
A few days after David posted his photo of the mural, I was downtown in the middle of a day of mural-hunting. (I was trying to shorten our long list of murals to photograph.) As I drove by the corner of 6th and 6th, I decided to take photos here with my point-and-shoot camera that has a 40x optical zoom lens; it let me get detailed shots from the fence along 6th Avenue, quite a distance from the mural. I could even zoom in on Joe's signature at the bottom right corner.
I'm glad to tell you that last year's Rock the Spot mural painting celebration downtown wasn't the last. November 30 to December 3, artists from around the country repainted most of the murals around this parking lot.
The parking lot stretches between Congress Street on the south end to Pennington Street on the north end. There's also a narrow space that runs between the middle of the east side of the parking lot to Scott Avenue. (If you'd like to see a map, look for 61 E Congress St Parking on this Google Map.) I started photographing at the southwest corner, close to Congress. Then I walked clockwise, including a narrow “notch” between the parking lot to Scott Avenue and back. That is:
Along the west wall
Walked along Pennington (the north side)… there are no murals here
Halfway along the east side
Clockwise around the “notch” between the parking lot to Scott Avenue and back
Along the rest of the east wall to Congress Street.
I also took close-ups of some murals. I include the close-ups after the overall photo. A few murals were here before this year's (2023) Rock the Spot; I've labeled them.
I haven't edited these photos to straighten, crop to only the mural, etc. There are just too many!
Update (December 2, 2024): There are two new murals by now. I took another walk around on November 24. The photos are here: Rock the Spot 2023: All around again.
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(Jerry is a volunteer who loves to show you murals, and your kindness will help him go on.) Thanks for reading!