Mural Season Is Upon Us!
I have no idea if there is actually such a thing, and if so when it would be, but compared to half a year ago when I complained that there were no new wall paintings in my area, now they're just popping up everywhere! Time to honor them, by continuing my Mexican Mural series. Also, since many of them get painted over, this way I'll make sure they're preserved in the blockchain for all eternity.
A Corner of Infantilism
There a three cool murals on the corner of Avenida Michoacán and Diagonal Patriotismo in the Colonia Condesa that I would like to highlight today. All three of them seem to have been painted by different artists, but there is one thing they all have in common: child-related themes. The only unfortunate thing is, that the sidewalk is so narrow, while the adjacent street so wide. So the viewer has to stand either too close or too far from the images, to really appreciate them.
Jungle Boogie Mexican Style
The picture on the right side is painted with bright colors of mostly pink and purple on black background, showing images of ferns, flowers, and leaves of exotic vegetation. This suggests the depths of a dark forest. There is even a jaguar, pink and purple, like everything else in this weird light, and with heart shaped spots and nose. On the left side of the painting a pre-columbian looking character is playing a type of flute. There is certainly music in the air, as one would expect in the deepest crevices of a jungle. The only tag the artist left behind is @ PlantaMusica, but a quick search on it didn't lead me anywhere.
Did You Eat All The Hash-Brownies, Timmy?
The mural right around the corner is a bit more disturbing. It looks very childlike too, but in a strange and uncomfortable way. The little chess-player standing behind the piece of the dark knight has these exaggeratedly large eyes and overly cute look. But behind him, above the windows (plumbed as if they were sinks) we have a teddy bear with flaming eyes, and a green-faced alien carrying a long-eared rabbit-lady in his arms.
On the left side, there is another rabbit girl sitting in an old clunker of a car. We're not sure if it's actually going anywhere on its three wheels, or if the weeds that are growing all around are keeping a firm grip on it. On top of the car some weird little critter is melting away, while a fish floating in the air is blowing some plants out of its mouth.
This image looks eerily drug-related. If the artist didn't paint this in a drug-induced state, it certainly look like the spectator might enjoy observing this pic while tripping on some good hallucinogens. The tag @ ebethrp revealed the artist to be Ebeth Rolden.
Appropriate for Children
Directly adjacent to the left is yet one more mural I wanted to include in this post. Even though the style is completely different from the previous two, it also addresses childhood, but in a way that looks more like something we'd consider appropriate for a kindergarten. I don't know about kids though. I remember when I was a child, I used to love looking at trippy pictures, which the adults in my life did not consider appropriate for me.
Comparatively, this image of Quetzalcoatl, probably the most popular popular of old Mexican deities, looks fairly harmless and innocent. It is a painting of beautiful idealism, showing realistic-looking children riding a benevolent-looking mythological snake (no drug reference this time). The body of the Feathered Serpent changes colors to symbolize earth, forest, water, even fire, if that's what the red part is supposed to be.
There is also a bowl with a face and a rainbow pouring into it. The tail of the snake turns into a checkered pattern, and the children are sitting on it without a worry of falling of, as the serpent carries them through the far reaches of space.
If you liked this, check out my developing series on Mexican murals:
- Painted Garage Doors
- New Stairs-Art in my Neighborhood
- Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in the Alameda Central
- La Familia Burrón in the Center
- Playing With Bugs on the Rooftop
- A Journey Through Rock and Roll
- Elite Warriors in the Parque México
- Laboratory Work on the Cocoa
- High Above the City
- Feminist Mural on a Blue-Collar Business
- Not Much New in Almost a Year
- Commercial Murals for Small Businesses
- A Mural for a Movie
- Get to Know Your Local Cacti
- New Images Covering Old Ones
- A Warrior Princess in Mazunte
- A Cartoon with a Public Health Message
- Murals Under Periferico
- Murals of the Barrio in Aguascalientes
- Respected and Less Respected Paintings
- Under Metro Line 4
- ChaliaKiller's – Murals, Chilaquiles, and Lots More
- A Familiar Face
- Political Expression: the Painting is on the Wall
- Different Types of Wall Paintings
- The Beauty of Death and the Struggle of Life
- Winston Churchill and the Bike Movement
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#ecotrain | What is EcoTrain | Discord Community
#tribesteemup |The 8 Pillars of @TribeSteemUp
#cyclefeed | Introducing CycleFeed | Discord Community
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Great pieces, great colours always lifting for those who walk past 💯🐒
LOVE the feathered serpent!! And all the myths, colour and LIFE!! Gorgeous post again.
I'm wondering if there is a connection to the time of year. Here in Thailand everyone paints at the end of the rains, just before Loy Krathong and the water goddess festival. I think it's practically to over rust and mold LOL but the whole city comes alive in the last week of October with NEW MURALS and painted fences and doors. Possible that there is something similar going on??
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Don't know if there actually is a mural season! If so, it's still not the end of the rains. We still have at least 1-2 full rainy months ahead of us, though admittedly, this year's rains have been kinda dry. In fact, we've had dry seasons with more rain before. As for the murals, I've been seeing them appear at various times in different places. The one on the stairs (Mexican vertigraph) was painted right at the beginning of the rainy season. Still I don't want to exclude the possibility. Let me ask around... After being gone almost all year in 2018 I was hoping to see many new pictures when I came back. It wasn't the case, making me a bit disappointed. Now all of a sudden, there are a number of things appearing again.
Do you have cool murals in Thai streets? (I'm sure, you must have!)
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