TCSON, Ariz. (KGUN) — Broadway Boulevard is a major entryway into Tucson’s downtown.
For more than 20 years, that entrance has been flanked by murals comprised of historic photos.
“It represents who we are,” said Steve Farley as he described the Broadway Tile Murals. “I think that’s why it was embraced by so many people.”
In 1998, while working on an historic preservation project, Farley discovered a series of remarkable photos from the middle of last century. They were taken in downtown Tucson.
He used those photos to win a nearly $200,000 arts project for the Broadway Murals.
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“Windows to the past, gateway to the future,” Farley said describing his concept.
There are four murals.
One is of a bus from 1969, driving through the old underpass.
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Another depicts George Roskruge, the early surveyor of Tucson.
There’s also the 1916 view of downtown Tucson.
They all lead to the wonderful mural depicting a series of people walking in downtown.
“That’s sort of people coming into downtown and how they got to downtown,” Farley said pointing to the three murals on the east side of the underpass. “This is them when they’re there. Really celebrating each other and celebrating this place that brings people together.”
The photos were actually taken between 1937 and 1963 by Frank Lauerman.
Steve Farley
“He had it at belt-level,” explained Farley. “It’d shoot one frame at a time. He walked down the street and that’s why the people look so heroic. They’re shot from a low angle.”
Lauerman would hand people a card and tell them to stop at Jones Drug the next day to view the negatives. People would then by prints.
“But it ended up capturing downtown, the real downtown and real people, in a way that otherwise you wouldn’t get,” said Farley.
Farley then put out the call for Tucsonans to share those photos with him for the mural. He only had room for 18.
“I knew this was going to be the toughest part of this whole job,” remembered Farley. “First I didn’t know that people would keep these things, so I didn’t know how many I would get. Then I got 217. Then I had a bigger problem, how do I choose.”
He spent a weekend at Hotel Congress choosing the 18 photos and deciding the order to place them.
Farely also figured out a process to transfer those photos onto tiles. The installation took about 4 months.
Steve Farley
“They’re all individual tiles,” Farley said. “So they’ve got to be individually hand-glazed and fired. And there’s 16,000 individual tiles between those four murals.”
With all of those photos come background stories. Like 19-year-old Eleanore Morris.
According to her daughter, Eleanore moved to Tucson in 1938 …….
Source: https://www.kgun9.com/absolutely-az/broadway-murals-offer-unique-window-to-the-past