downtown albuquerque public art & murals · 21. totem of the ancient ones. triptych mural by...

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G G G* G G Alvarado Transportation Center Alvarado Urban Farm Robinson Park 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 33 34 44 35 41 37 32 42 40 38 43 36 39 Murals 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Arts & Cultural District boundary Art inside public buildings (multiple pieces) Art outside public buildings Gallery location Multiple galleries (inside building) G G* Downtown Albuquerque public art & murals key

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Page 1: Downtown Albuquerque public art & murals · 21. Totem of the Ancient Ones. Triptych mural by Thomas Christopher Haag. 22. Rotating mural installations at Tinnin Park. More information

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Alvarado Transportation Center

Alvarado Urban Farm

Robinson Park

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Murals

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Arts & Cultural District boundary

Art inside public buildings(multiple pieces)

Art outsidepublic buildings

Gallery location

Multiple galleries (inside building)

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Downtown Albuquerque public art & murals

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Page 2: Downtown Albuquerque public art & murals · 21. Totem of the Ancient Ones. Triptych mural by Thomas Christopher Haag. 22. Rotating mural installations at Tinnin Park. More information

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18. Frutos de la Expresion. Mural by Working Classroom. Installed 2000.

19. Mother Road. Mural by Working Classroom. Installed 1995.

20. We Exist Somewhere Between Limbo and Purgatory, by Ernest Doty. Mural in aerosol and housepaint

21. Totem of the Ancient Ones. Triptych mural by Thomas Christopher Haag.

22. Rotating mural installations at Tinnin Park. More information forthcoming.

23. Working Classroom. Tile mural facade.

24. A Little Color Never Hurt. Mural by Working Classroom. Installed 2004.

25. A Stop on the Rio Grande, 2010. Sculpture by John Davis. COA Public Art Program. Steel, cement, ceramic tile, lighting components, installed 2010. Two large steel half-spheres that face one another with curving tenta-cle-like steel protrusions and mosaic tiled benches in front of the Greyhound bus station.

26. The Harvest. Mural by Gilberto Guzman. A stylistic mural depicts farmers involved in harvest time activities.

27. Multiple pieces, interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

28. Multiple pieces, interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

29. The Seven Cities of Cibola. Multiple murals by Carl Von Hassler inside KiMo Theatre. Represent the mythical ‘Seven Cities of Gold’ searched for by Francisco Coronado during the time of the conquistadors. The murals are actual depictions of existing pueblos and ruins that still exist in the Southwest. For many years Von Hassler had a studio on the third floor of the KiMo Theatre.

30-34. Information forthcoming.

35. Madonna of the Trail. Sculpture by August Leimbach. COA Public Art Program. Cast stone, installed 1998. Large scale stone sculpture atop a large base depicts a pioneer woman wearing a bonnet with her two children and memorializes the mothers who went West in covered wagons.

36. Information forthcoming.

37. El Senador Dennis Chavez Memorial. Sculpture by Cynthia Rowland. COA Public Art Program. Bronze, in-stalled 1999.

38. A Monument to Patriotism. Sculpture by Tara Jo McDonough (graduate of Amy Biehl High School.)

39. Information forthcoming.

40. Information forthcoming.

41. Information forthcoming.

42. Fractile. Mural by Johnathon Wolfe, Urban Enhancement Trust Fund.

43. Information forthcoming.

44. Information forthcoming.

1. Aaron Noble and Warehouse 508 Youth Artists. Mural in latex.

2. Multiple pieces, interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

3. Mutiple pieces. Interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

4. Centric Shear. Sculpture by Rico Eastman. City of Albuquerque (COA) Public Art Program. Steel, installed 2005

5. Mutiple pieces. Interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

6. Convention Center. Mural by Cassandra Reid & Youth Artists. COA Public Art Program. Ceramic tiles, finished 2013.

7. Braden Memorial. COA Art Program. Fabricator, Mott Ironworks. Molded zinc on a cast iron pedastal, 1998 Slightly smaller than life-size neo-classical figure of a woman pouring water out of a jar.

8. Cone 10. Sculpture by Tom Waldron. COA Public Art Program. Steel. Large abstract steel sculpture with rounded edge facing out of an exterior corner of Albuquerque’s downtown branch library.

9. Mutiple pieces. Interior of building. Visit culturenow.org for information on all pieces.

10. Sidewalk Society. Sculpture by Glenna Goodacre. Nine life-size bronze figures of people (including a busi-nessman and businesswoman, a skateboarder, a Native American woman and her child, and a cowboy) involved in a variety of activities on a sidewalk in downtown Albuquerque. COA Public Art Program

11. George Maloof, 1990. Sculpture by Paul Moore. Bronze, installed 1990, COA Public Art

12. Celebrating Nature/The Landscape Underground. Installation by Barbara Grothus and Steve Peters. COA Public Art Program, installed 2000.

13. To Create the Beloved Community, by Artist Jerome Meadows. COA Public Art Program. Bronze, marble, concrete, installed 1994

14. Conductor, by Chris Stain. Mural in aerosol and housepaint

15. Floating Man. Mural by Kevin Zuckerman. BigByte building, 123 Central Ave. SW on 2nd St., just north of Central in Downtown, west-facing wall.

16. Passing the Torch: Pasando la Antorcha. Mural by Working Classroom. Installed 1996.

17. Historic Railing Design. Sculpture by Jim Crane. Faux wrought iron - steel tubing. Historic replica of wrought iron railing with intricate details.