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The mural at Kyrene de la Sierra, which was soon to be adorned by leaves as students display good deeds, was painted on a hallway south of the school’s library by Sierra parent and artist Sandy Marshall.
The mural at Kyrene de la Sierra, which was soon to be adorned by leaves as students display good deeds, was painted on a hallway south of the school’s library by Sierra parent and artist Sandy Marshall.
R.E. Wall and Margaret Dewar of Mural Mice paint details onto the walls of the second-hand store Eclectic Monkey Emporium, transforming it into a melting Victorian in the middle of Mesa’s Main Street. [Michelle Peirano/Special to Tribune]
R.E. Wall and Margaret Dewar of Mural Mice paint details onto the walls of the second-hand store Eclectic Monkey Emporium, transforming it into a melting Victorian in the middle of Mesa’s Main Street. [Michelle Peirano/Special to Tribune]
September 28, 2004
Despite dark clouds overhead, the sun shone down on several hundred people gathered Saturday at Aztec Elementary School in north Scottsdale.
Debra Jones can hardly get her work done for all her exuberance.
Excited fifth- and sixth-graders in the Finley Farms Elementary School Service Club gathered around the colorful, ceramic tile mural they painted and pointed out the Gilbert landmarks.
GIVERS: Students in the Finley Farms Service Club present Mercy Gilbert Medical Center president and CEO Laurie Eberst with a mural consisting of 30 tiles painted by the students. The tiles show different Gilbert landmarks and will be displayed in the m
Some of Mesa’s cultural jewels are hidden in plain view. They come in the form of surfing poultry, talking teapots and air-born bovine. They are Mesa’s murals, passed every day without a second glance.
Navajo artist Elmer Yazzie works on a mural in the cafeteria of Laguna Elementary School in Scottsdale.
Leah Perrino was initially skeptical when she and her classmates at Scottsdale’s Mission Montessori School were asked to create a mural as a class project — she was afraid people would laugh at it.
Artists Carol Hildebrandt, left, and Joan Bourque, not pictured, helped students from Mission Montessori School in Scottsdale build and paint a mural as a class project.
In the cool cover of night, R.E. Wall and Margaret Dewar stand on scaffolding, brushing paint on the side of a store on Mesa Main Street. When the sun comes up, they put their paints away and crawl into their own one bedroom — the back of an old work truck parked out back — and sleep through the heat of the day.
A mural 25 feet tall and 25 feet wide will soon appear on the side of a parking garage that overlooks the Downtown Tempe Urban Garden.
A graveyard adorned with American flags and headstones, overlaid with the phrase "We gave some. Some gave All," are the images captured in a mural unveiled Tuesday at the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in downtown Mesa.
HONOR: Mesa VFW Post 1760 commander Jack Sepulveda, left, along with members John Jones and Bill "Doc" Brumme, stand in front of a mural painted by 15-year-old Boy Scout David Tobler of Troop 552.
ARTFUL ADDITION: Artist Steve Voita puts the finishing touches on “Salvation’s Family” at St. Timothy’s Catholic Community in Mesa. St. Timothy's Catholic Community
The clock is ticking for the colorful but fading and cracking mural hanging on the north face of the Tucson Museum of Art building.
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
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