South America has been less well-represented among the many murals posted. So I decided to do something about that! First, I'll repeat a photo I took last year in Ushuaia, Argentina, the southernmost city in the world:
This was the only mural I photographed during that trip, which was mainly dedicated to wildlife and other outdoor activities, not to cities. However, my birding friend Pam has been on a very long trip including both cities and wildlife in Chile, Argentina, the Faulkland Islands, Antarctica, and other destinations in South America. She photographed a number of murals, and kindly gave me permission to reproduce her photos here.
Pam's Photos of Murals in Valparaiso, Chile:
Pam's Photos of Murals in Buenos Aires, Argentina:
Along the route from the riverboat landing to the airport in Iquitos. Houses beside the road were vividly painted. |
Also near the road, there were long walls covered with murals. Hard to see from the moving limo. |
Decorating cities of all types with beautiful, interesting murals seems to be a worldwide trend at the moment. Historically, mural painting has some deep roots: for example, in Italy. A reproduction of some murals from ancient Pompeii appears in our local campus museum. Much later, Italian home owners often painted religious murals on their outside walls. The tradition continues: I once stayed in a hotel facing a building in Pisa, Italy, that had been painted by muralist Keith Haring (1958-1990).
In the early part of the 20th century, Diego Rivera (1886-1957) was famous for his murals -- a fine example of his work is in the central courtyard of the Detroit Institute of Arts. Regional American painter Thomas Hart Benton (1889-1975) produced some famous murals at about the same time. At present, the secret identity of the British muralist Bansky receives a lot of press. The more I think about this, the more I want to know.
8 comments:
I should post murals more often. In fact, I should post some Greg has done. This one is very handsome.
Murals always me stop and pause. I love the photo of the "House" murals with the plants.
A great mix of impressive murals
...murals are universal.
It was lovely to see a mural in Valparaiso. My husband was born in Valpo so the city is very nostalgic for him xx
Great variety of mural Mae, I love the colourful one in Valparaiso.
Thanks for contributing.
I never knew Italy was the source, great to know (we saw some stunning ones in Florence and elsewhere in Tuscany). My late Grandma was in Chile, thanks for the memories!
I LOVE street art like this! Thanks for sharing, this was a fun post.
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