»ARCHIVED TALK
10 murals in 3 days

Posted July 24, 2008

It may sound like an impossible task, but it will indeed happen: This week, along Nicollet Avenue in the Kingfield neighborhood, ten murals will be painted on the outside of various buildings in three days.

» Categories: art | Author: msparber


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50 Comments:


Way to go Walldogs! An active community organization is so nice to see.

Now if only the Nicollet + Lake intersection could be gentrified......
»» Submitted by »»» vlado4 at 6:13 AM on July 24



It is also in the Lyndale neighborhood, not just Kingfield. The murals are all very cool and very classy. They all sort of have historical themes. My neighborhood does some cool things.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 6:52 AM on July 24



Lyndale represent!!!

(uhh except for the nasty area around Lake/Nicollet where my gf is constantly harassed by men)
»» Submitted by »»» vlado4 at 7:37 AM on July 24



Well, I live in that nasty area around Lake/Nicollet and it really isn't horrible.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 7:51 AM on July 24



He really didn't say it was horrible. He said it was nasty with a lot of skeezy men.
»» Submitted by »»» Rat at 8:03 AM on July 24



I think uptown has a lot more skeezy men then Lake and Nicollet.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 8:14 AM on July 24



I hate to say it, but they'll probably suck.

I mean, you know, when you rush a job ...
»» Submitted by »»» wayne at 8:15 AM on July 24



Debbie Downer is back.

They already completed one earlier this year. It was super nice and done very quickly. But the building burnt down. I've seen the work on some of them already, and they look nice.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 8:17 AM on July 24



I have to agree with vlad about the skeezy men on Nicollet. I don't know about the corner of Lake, but when I lived in Whittier, I was often hesitant to walk the 2 blocks to SpyHouse due to a regular group of them on 24th and Nic. Never threatening or anything, but it sucks that you can't walk somewhere without getting catcalled.
»» Submitted by »»» aliecat at 8:21 AM on July 24



They're murals on the side of a wall. It's not the Sistine Chapel.

They should be able to slap them up in a couple days.
»» Submitted by »»» Rat at 8:22 AM on July 24



I've seen skeezy men downtown say to complete strangers "Good morning, 'maam, you a looking nice today."

But greetings have, over the years, come to mean something else in many cases.
»» Submitted by »»» Rat at 8:25 AM on July 24



I hate murals. Their like woodchips. For a while they look okay, but eventually they end up looking like ass.
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 8:27 AM on July 24



Considering how bland and boring most building in the city are (especially industrial), I welcome the murals.
»» Submitted by »»» vlado4 at 8:30 AM on July 24



I find quite a bit of beauty in dilapidated industrial buildings, actually.
Not that we need a city full of that, but they certainly have their place.
»» Submitted by »»» wayne at 8:32 AM on July 24



kc, I like to be proven wrong in a pleasant way!
»» Submitted by »»» wayne at 8:33 AM on July 24



Dipshit me commented on these murals on the wrong post (duh!).
What I meant to say was: To me, these mural designs look like giant beer labels. Anyone else see this?
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 8:55 AM on July 24



I think it's a wonderful project and it's nice to see the whole neighborhood(s) rally around it.
»» Submitted by »»» ericam at 8:56 AM on July 24



actually yeah, they do look like olde tymey brew bottles
»» Submitted by »»» wayne at 9:01 AM on July 24



that's my hood, yo! i think it's a pretty awesome project and can't wait to see the results.
»» Submitted by »»» honeybun at 9:12 AM on July 24



kc, I like to be proven wrong in a pleasant way!

Is that a pick-up line?
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 9:17 AM on July 24



The murals are very nice. Kudos to anyone who takes the time to spiff up the place. They beat the crap out of the mouth-breather tagging they probably replaced.

I wonder, though, if anyone meandering the sidewalks in that 'hood these days gives a shit about who Joseph Nicollet was or that once there was a fine ballpark there.
»» Submitted by »»» octane at 9:55 AM on July 24



I wonder, though, if anyone meandering the sidewalks in that 'hood these days gives a shit about who Joseph Nicollet was or that once there was a fine ballpark there.

I do, and I do. Although I agree with the others that the designs look a little corporate/beer-bottleish for my liking. And I agree with you that it's better than the "mouth-breather" contributions.
»» Submitted by »»» leigha at 10:14 AM on July 24



I care too. Of course, I was a history major.

There is a great plaque outside of Wells Fargo on Nicollet that talks about the ballpark.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 10:22 AM on July 24



I like the idea of the murals, but it seems they could have put a little more time into vetting the design. Maybe, that way, they'd look a bit less like corporate advertising. After all, we have plenty of billboards to look at in the cities.
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 11:13 AM on July 24



well on the upside, anytime I'm in that neighbourhood I'll feel like having a cold one.

then again, being in that neighbourhood already makes me want to drink.
»» Submitted by »»» wayne at 11:14 AM on July 24



I wonder, though, if anyone meandering the sidewalks in that 'hood these days gives a shit about who Joseph Nicollet was or that once there was a fine ballpark there.

It's public art. It's better than graffiti tags. It's a project that's got a significant amount of community support. It's a project that's actually going to be paid for and completed.

What's the problem?
»» Submitted by »»» ericam at 11:39 AM on July 24



I like the idea of the murals, but it seems they could have put a little more time into vetting the design.

Do you know how much work went into the designs? Do you understand how the designs were chosen? Just because YOU don't like them, it doesn't mean they didn't take a lot of work and collaboration.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 12:11 PM on July 24



It seems a lot of people don't really care for the designs. You're right, though, that I made a big assumption when I suggested they didn't spend enough time on choosing them. It could just be that the process was flawed.
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 1:10 PM on July 24



Has anybody noticed the "murals" on the side of the Lyndale Bulldog (not NE) and the laundromat at Lyndale and 27th? At first glance, they appear to be artist murals, but upon closer examination, they're vaguely viral ads for PBR.

This raises several questions in my mind, like the value of art for commercial purposes, etc. The big one, though, is whether or not this is a mural (which apparently can go anywhere?) or a billboard, which is strictly limited by the city of Minneapolis in terms of size, number, and location.

Anybody have any insight about this?
»» Submitted by »»» MunsingW at 1:32 PM on July 24



Good questions. And this is all complicated even further when communities design murals that look like adversiting billboards...
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 1:34 PM on July 24



So, a little searching turns this up in Philadelphia. The mural pictured isn't the same one that's on Lyndale -- that one actually is for PBR.

I also believe that the one on 27th and Lyndale replaced a previous mural-ad for Mt. Dew.
»» Submitted by »»» MunsingW at 1:36 PM on July 24



It seems a lot of people don't really care for the designs.

Aside from you and Leigh, who here, or anywhere else, expressed dislike of the murals?

And the signs were all a collaboration between the artists and the building owners. Where did the process go wrong? Was it that you didn't get a say? I live in the neighborhood and will have to look at them daily. I really like them and think they represent the neighborhood and the businesses well.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 1:48 PM on July 24



I also like the way they look. They look less like beer ads to me than 1920s tourism ads, which doesn't seem like a bad aesthetic decision.
»» Submitted by »»» msparber at 1:51 PM on July 24



I like old-timey ad art, and I'm quite certain it's something that's highly collectible (i.e. Hamm's beer stuff, old Lysol ads, 1920's P&G stuff, catalouge art). Never underestimate the draw of nostalgia.
»» Submitted by »»» aliecat at 1:55 PM on July 24



Here's a shot of the Mt. Dew ad.
»» Submitted by »»» MunsingW at 2:09 PM on July 24



Where did the process go wrong? Was it that you didn't get a say?

No, heck no. I don't care that I wasn't involved in the process. I'm just personally not a fan of random visual pollution...
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 3:10 PM on July 24



I don't know why 10 planned murals could be thought of as random. If you think they're ugly, fine, but it seems like you're looking for something that isn't there.
»» Submitted by »»» aliecat at 3:13 PM on July 24



All I'm saying is I think they're ugly--visual pollution. They look like advertisements. Just stating an opinion for the sake of conversation. I'm glad some other people like them.
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 3:16 PM on July 24



I'd rather see advertisements! At least they would serve a purpose and get changed every once in a while.
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 3:25 PM on July 24



kevin, you realize these serve a purpose, right? They are specifically intented to reduce grafitti. They also make a cooridor that isn't always so pretty look a little nicer.
»» Submitted by »»» kc! at 3:31 PM on July 24



Well, they're certainly no Cherry Spoon or some Yalie's abortion art, but considering the alternative, they're quite fetching.
»» Submitted by »»» aliecat at 3:38 PM on July 24



My point above is that if they're ads, they're illegal. You're not allowed to have signage advertising something off premises, except for in very specific locations detailed by the city. PBR is skirting the law, but apparently hasn't been called on it yet.
»» Submitted by »»» MunsingW at 3:38 PM on July 24



I'd take artwork, even art work I didn't care too much for over advertisements. We're assaulted enough with advertisements everywhere else.
»» Submitted by »»» mnblrmkr at 3:39 PM on July 24



or some Yalie's abortion art...

Yowch!
Issues?
»» Submitted by »»» arthappy at 3:41 PM on July 24



at least it's not another Che or virgin mary....
»» Submitted by »»» baker at 3:45 PM on July 24



I don't feel that advertisements are assaulting. Perhaps though I should RTFA so I know what the deuce this is all about.
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 3:54 PM on July 24



Yeah doesn't seem like that big of a deal. Let them pop their mural boner or whatever floats their boat.
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 3:58 PM on July 24



Well, when Bill Engvill walks into the middle of a scene of the show you're watching to plug HIS show, and you can't even take a piss without being confronted with ads, I'd say we're being assaulted.
»» Submitted by »»» mnblrmkr at 4:02 PM on July 24



I did look up while I was pi**ing at Fern's the other night to see Joe Soucheray staring at me from an ad above the urinal. Now that I think about it, that was kind of assaulting. The mayor, watching me pee.
»» Submitted by »»» kwatt at 4:05 PM on July 24



i saw that soucheray ad @ Gabe's by the Park last thursday as I was relieving myself. to my amusement, someone had scribbled a D over the first letter in his last name.
»» Submitted by »»» g rote at 4:06 PM on July 24



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