Google Street View
View on Google Maps Street View
By its very nature, street art, and mural art is impermanent so my efforts in documenting it with immersive panoramic technology help to preserve the fact that a piece even existed.
Case in point: earlier this year I posted this panorama of the epic Foster the People “Supermodel” mural that was painted across the side of a historic building in Downtown L.A. Yesterday, August 5, 2014, the Los Angeles Times reported that it was removed despite efforts by Mayor Eric Garcetti to intervene.
View on Google Maps Street View
Recently I discovered this new website to showcase my panoramic images called Roundme. The image quality that Roundme offers is super sharp with an elegant user interface making the site highly effective for an immersive view. I really like what they have to offer and I hope you will too. I think this platform is so cool, I’ve gone and updated all of this year’s blog posts to feature the same images that I uploaded from another service to Roundme.
Located near Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles, this mural by Luis M was commissioned by the KC Salon in 2011. Check it out on Google Maps.
American Hotel – Los Angeles, California – View on Google Street View
Back in January, I captured this pano of the American Hotel’s free wall. It featured a piece by Cali Killa called ”Beware Hipsters” (above). Then last week, I took this pano of the same wall (below) which features among other works, a message from Fearless LA, a church group originally from Modesto that’s settled into the Los Angeles scene.
View on Google Street View
Way back in the day and way before the street address 118 Winston Street became the art gallery and a yoga studio it’s known for today, it was the meeting place of the secret society known as Catholic Knights of America (St. Joseph Branch # 397) according to Newmans’s Directory and Guide of Los Angeles and Vicinity: A Handbook for Strangers and Residents published in 1903. The guide indicates that meetings were held on the first Sunday of the month but alas, the guide does not reveal the secret password to get in!
After WWII, it became a mission for alcoholic GI veterans returning from the war. Here’s the kicker: it was managed by a nun by the name of Sister Sylvia Creswell operating under the dba of “Sister Sylvia’s Soul Patrol”. Good Lord, but that’s just so ghettofabkerouacalicious! It sounds like something Whoopi Goldberg starred in.
In the fifties it became a series of labor halls with men living on the top two floors in bunk beds and the ground floor being a kitchen and hiring hall.
Indian Alley as the Western Union set in “The Sting” |
By the seventies, scenes of the hit movie “The Sting” were shot on location here. Following its 15 minutes of fame, 118 Winston became the headquarters for the United American Indian Involvement for about two decades before it moved to its current location in Los Angeles.
Established in 1974, the UAII is a non-profit social services agency that has helped thousands of Native Americans on Skid Row battle alcohol and drug abuse. During their two decades at this location, all the counselors were Native American and their recovery program combined psychological methods and native spirituality beliefs to assist their clients brothers and sisters rebuild their self-esteem and cultural identity.
Today the alley way at Winston and Werdin Place has become a street-art gallery featuring an amazing constellation of artists. This virtual tour opens with the first pieces to be seen as you pass the gates and continues mid-way down the alley. I’ve outlined descriptions of the works below to help you identify each piece.
The alley in ye olde days. |
Panoramic #1:
- “Decolonize and Keep Calm” by Jaque Fragua (Honor The Treaties)
- “We Are Still Here” by Shepard Fairey, Aaron Huey, and Wild Life (Honor The Treaties)
- Wolf by Becca Midwood
- Indian head by Wild Life
- Ground level:
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- Indian head by Wild Life
- Hands by Wild Life & Stephen Zeigler
- Skate Buddha & Drones by Skechy
- Muslim Woman by Obey/Shepard Fairey
- Wolf by Becca Midwood
- “Diamond In The Lotus” by Free Humanity
Upper level:
- Feathers by Bandit
- Small wheat paste by Sheridan MacKnight
- Yah Tah Hey wheat paste by Stephen Zeigler
- Indian Land Crosses wheat pastes by Jaque Fragua
- Indian with rifle by Dylan Egon
- Boat (above on fire escape) and brick dumpster by Wild Life
- Chief Plenty Coups portrait by VOTAN
- “Sun Portal” by MYMO
- Hawk and flower by Random Act
- “Coyote Dance” by Robbie Robertson & The Red Road Ensemble
- To 118 Winston Gallery for access to the alley and making this tour possible.
There’s a new mural in Los Angeles — an ab-fab-collab by Fin DAC and Angelina Christina and let me tell you: it’s absolutely stunning! It’s entitled “Upon Reflection” and you can see it for yourself near the corner of Winston and Los Angeles in Downtown Los Angeles. Check it out on Google Street View here.
Jonas Never’s “Touch of Venice” mural on Windward Avenue pays homage to the opening sequence of the 1958 film noir classic “Touch of Evil” directed by Orson Wells. Visit on Google Maps Street View.
The famous scene was actually shot on location along Windward and Pacific avenues although the scene as it was written is supposed to be a Mexican border town instead of a sunny SoCal beach one.
The mural features Charlton Heston and Janet Leigh, shown in the mural’s foreground with Welles visible in the lower right side and a self-portrait of Never himself on the right side as well.
It measures 150′ x 50′ and is located on the east side of the Venice Beach Hotel, 21 Windward Avenue, Los Angeles, CA.
Artist Levi Ponce |
Levi Ponce‘s latest public art’s project entitled “Soliloquy” took about a week to complete and was finished over this past President’s Day weekend. The subject and title is a rift on Hamlet in which Ophelia contemplates her beloved’s skull. This piece is located on the side of Al’s Discount Furniture in the Noho Arts District and measures 100′ x 13’. Medium: acrylic. Check it out on Google Maps here.
The latest graffiti art in DTLA is a giant entitled “On the Road” by MTO and UTI Crew (Black Light King, PETAL, FEAR, NUKE, SWAN) that features imagery inspired by Jack Kerouac’s 1957 travelogue of the same name.
This mural is sponsored by “L.A. loves you”, organized and curated by Melissa “Zippy” Downing with the assistance of Roy CHO. Location: Al’s Bar yard (backside wall American Hotel), 303 South Hewitt Street in the DTLA Art District. Check it out on Google Maps here.