Monday, November 10, 2025

Art for Everybody

Tucson’s Murals and the Art of Inclusion

Murals have always been part of human expression, carved in caves, painted on city walls, and evolving from sacred ancient symbols to public declarations. These works shape global art scenes and urban landscapes, telling stories in color and carrying memories across time. (The Collector, 2023)
In Tucson, Arizona, the walls speak through spirited pigments and polychromatic lines. They tell stories of desert people who thrive in the sunsets of ember and indigo and find a path in surrendering to the cathedrals of sand and dust. Saguaros 🌵stand as sentinels of this telling, silently welcoming the city. Their presence, marked by spines and blooms, holds many old tales as well as new ones, watching over the people and the light.
Tucson sits in the Sonoran Desert, where art leaves galleries for streets, neighborhoods, and landscapes. Murals—large-scale paintings on outdoor surfaces—define the city’s cultural identity. These murals do more than adorn Tucson—they speak, they invite, they challenge, they belong to everyone who passes. They democratize art, making creativity visible and meaningful in everyday life.
The democratization of art is this: art no longer waits in marble halls or extends exclusive invitations. It is part of us with pride, resistance, community, and play. It waits for no one’s permission. It belongs to all.

Epic Rides by Joe Pagac



At Sixth and Stone, a mural by Joe Pagac shows two cyclists rolling through a desert scene, joined by javelina and jackalope 😉. The bold colors and playful figures celebrate Tucson’s community and open spaces, inviting passersby to join the ride. The mural captures the city’s spirit of movement, togetherness, and inclusion. In this vision, the bicycle becomes an alternative to the rodeo’s spectacle, offering wheels instead of reins, and a path where desert creatures ride beside us, not beneath us.

Black Lives Matter Mural by Robbie Lee Harris




Near the Rialto Theatre, Robbie Lee Harris’s 2020 mural uses contrast to honor Black Lives and call for justice. The artwork stands as a clear, powerful message of solidarity and the transformative potential of public art. There is a remarkable interplay of light and dark—intense, vivid, and full of pigment against monochromatic backgrounds—embracing the tension between injustice and hope. High-value contrasts sharpen the figures and words, creating an impossible-to-ignore call that is heard when you walk by.


Untitled Mural at The Loft Cinema by Jessica Gonzales




On The Loft Cinema wall, Jessica Gonzales’s 2020 mural displays an immensely vivid, diverse female figure radiating confidence and love for life. It serves as a space for visibility and celebrates women’s resilience in Tucson’s community. Reds, blues, yellows, and purples—create a vibrant palette that mirrors the emotional spectrum of a full-color film, like a montage of cinematic moments. Evoking the emotional highs and lows of storytelling. Layered shapes suggest motion and depth.


Tanque Verde Ranch Water Tank Mural by Joe Pagac




East of Tucson, Joe Pagac transforms a water tank into a panorama of Sonoran life. Its monumental scale and intricate details blend seamlessly with the desert landscape, echoing the region's rhythms. This mural is a vivid example of how functional infrastructure becomes communal art—an invitation to belong, to witness, to be one with the scene. It is art from nature next to art from humankind. A vessel of water, but also a vessel of color and language.


From whimsical desert scenes to influential social commentaries, each mural offers a visual narrative. As noted by the Tucson Murals Project website, these artworks serve as “dynamic canvases” that showcase traditions, emotions, and community spirit. Also, The Arts Foundation for Tucson and Southern Arizona emphasizes that public art is designed to “enrich our sense of place,” engaging residents in the creative process and fostering inclusion.


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3 comments:

  1. I think murals about inclusions are very important in our society especially now some people may really benefit from seeing an uplifting work of art in the public and sometimes make me feel alot more accepted in a space I'm not comfortable in. When I first saw your works, the first thing that popped to my head was the amount of color used that really makes it stand out to its surroundings and my favorite one would definitely have to be Epic Rides By Joe Pagac because of the bright colors he used. I think an art element that wasn't included was the texture of the mural on the water tank. I believe the ribbed water tank made the overall picture stand out.

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  2. Hello! The theme you used in this blog post had me so invested in the meanings of each of the works and really had me thinking about the way that they impact people around them. It was really interesting to see how diverse the individual murals were and how each one could convey a different message within the artwork. I think my favorite mural was the one of the women on the Loft Cinema wall. I love how the layers of all of the different colors come together to form such a moving image and impose such powerful feelings on the viewer. I love that you used this post for such a meaningful topic. Thank you for sharing!

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  3. Hello. I really liked how you focused on one community for your theme. Arizona, although I have never been, seems like an amazing state, far different from Alaska! The first piece you shared by Joe Pagac might be my favorite, and it does seem to speak of what the community aims to be: inviting and fun. The color and movement are really something in this work, and seem to represent the desert life really well. I love how the woman's hair and dress transform into the landscape and night sky of the accompanying panel of the mural. For me, this says that humans and nature are one. The second piece you shared, "Black Lives Matter Mural" by Robbie Lee Harris, carries an important message. I looked up the Rialto Theatre to get a better idea of why this location might be meaningful for this mural. The theatre is located in the heart of downtown and is on the National Register of Historic Places. I think amplifying a message in such an urban and visited place allows for the message to be viewed readily, which is appropriate for such a message. I also really enjoyed the last piece you showed of the water holding tank. I think without the mural, this necessary structure would look a little like an eyesore. The mural, though, lends itself to the land and blends with the structure to the scenery. Overall, you chose wonderful pieces to highlight in Tucson. I wonder, have you ever lived in Tucson? Does this hold particular importance to you?

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