Flagstaff, Arizona Public Art
Ranked #1,121 in Travel & Places, #45,989 overall
Flagstaff Is A Small City With A Big Appreciation For Public Art
My husband, Steve, and I always enjoy a good art gallery, and we rarely miss a Flagstaff First Friday Art Walk, when local galleries and other businesses that display artwork stay open late. But we thought we'd focus for a change on art we often walk or drive right by -- the outdoor, public art around town. So we decided one Sunday morning to go for a long walk, taking pictures of the art we'd find along the way.
And we found a lot! Some works we knew were there, while others were unexpected discoveries as we'd round a corner and say, "Hey, there's one!" Like an alleyway mural in the Southside neighborhood and an abstract metal sculpture tucked away in a courtyard on the Northern Arizona University campus. And I know there are pieces we've yet to find, which I'll add when we do.
So if you'd like to take a virtual tour of the open-air artwork around the city of Flagstaff -- some by world-renowned artists, others by those who are just locally-known, some by volunteers and some by anonymous artists, come along with me here.
And put your artistic thinking caps on while you're at it, because I'll want your input on several pieces along the way....
Flagstaff's Public Murals
The Lyle Motley Mural At Absolute Bikes
Voted "Best Public Art" by Flagstaff Live in theEditor's Choice Awards
It took Lyle two months to complete the Flagstaff mural. We love the details, like the bandaids on the biker's knee and elbow. A closer look along the mural will reveal additional fun details.
A Time Lapse Video
The mural's creation
Joe Sorren Murals
One of his best-known public art pieces is the 40-foot by 30-foot mural at Heritage Square in Flagstaff, which was completed in September, 2000, after nine months of work. Painted on the curved wall of a parking garage, the mural serves as a backdrop for the Pesto Brothers Restaurant patio.
Titled, "The Veridic Gardens of Effie Leroux," the mural depicts a magical, surreal pond and picnic scene. Effie Leroux "was an early 20th century philanthropist, who created veridic gardens - peaceful places for people to experience with all five senses the possibility of a fuller life." (Quote from SeekingCenter.com)
Several other Joe Sorren murals enliven building walls around downtown Flagstaff, including the Noah's ark painting on the Midgely Building and Flagstaff scenes on the Old Town Shoppes (shown below).
To see more of Joe Sorren's work, visit his website at JoeSorren.com

Joe Sorren's Mural in Heritage Square, titled, "The Veridic Gardens of Effie Leroux"

Sorren's painting of Noah and his ark on the Midgely Building
Joe Sorren painted this (fading) series of murals above the Old Town Shoppes, formerly JC Penney.
The Centennial Walk Mural at the Flagstaff Visitor Center
Read an article about the Centennial Walk Mural and the artist from the Arizona Daily Sun.
A close-up of the Flagstaff Centennial Walk Mural
Louis Buchetto Mural On McNabb Jewelers
Fun, colorful and optimistic
Artist Louis Buchetto at one time had his father-daughter gallery and studio a few doors away from this mural, which was donated by the artist and his friends. When completed in 2004, a public party was held and people from all over painted more than 150 flowers along the bottom of the wall.To find out more about this artist and his daughter, Tirza, with whom Louis collaborates, visit the Loving Home Gallery website.
"When You See Only The Dark Know The Light Will Soon Return"
Southside Murals
Bold colors abound
Southside is home to Northern Arizona University, the popular and long-standing Macy's European Coffeehouse, numerous excellent restaurants like La Bella Via, Beaver Street Brewery, Dara Thai and Cafe Ole, Vertical Relief climbing gym, an eclectic array of shops and clubs, and a community garden.
Not to mention some vibrant public artwork, including these colorful murals:

An eye-catching "graffiti mural" on the side of a tattoo parlor. Honestly, I have no idea what it says. But it's pretty!

Part of a series of murals by the Native Movements Artist Collective, 2008

Bzzzzzzzzzzzzz!!

A surreal mural in a Southside neighborhood alleyway (Love the added touch of the old couch someone dumped in front of it.)

A cowgirl dreams of a faraway fantasy land in this framed mural on San Francisco Street.

A mural on a restaurant which used to be Peruvian but is now Greek. The mural goes with the former. Wonder if they'll change it.
A mural on Phoenix Ave. in the Southside area of Flagstaff
Murals At Flagstaff's Sawmill County Park
The current art wall mural combines two local organizations, the Americorps Youth In Action project, led by Supervisor Liz Archuleta, on the left panel and Literacy Volunteers of Coconino County on the middle and right panels.
The backside of the curved art wall is covered by a three-part, permanent mosaic by Geoffrey Gross.
For more information on Sawmill County Park, adjacent to the Willow Bend Environmental Education Center, see Coconino.az.gov.
A mural on behalf of Literacy Volunteers -- "Reading is the road to freedom, adventure, success, happy endings."
"Legacy," a mosaic by Geoffrey Gross, 2003 --"For each man kills the thing he loves." (Oscar Wilde)
More Flagstaff Murals
And the mural below, designed and directed by local artist, David Grandon, was painted in the summer of 2002 by six women from Germany, exploring the country with International Adventure Tours in Utah. They were part of a larger group, doing various volunteer projects as they traveled.

A mural in memory of a famous local photographer on the side of the Peace Surpluss building on Route 66
I noticed this mural in October, 2010, downtown. I'm not sure how long it had been there.
Another downtown mural I found in October, 2010
Flagstaff's Public Sculptures
Downtown Bronzes
The sculpture you see here is called "The Gandy Dancer," by Clyde "Ross" Morgan, installed October 21, 2000. The plaque states:"Section crews were the laborers who built the railroads in the beginning and have continued throughout the years to maintain them. These crews were most efficient in moving heavy sections of rails when they all worked in unison. To accomplish this, they sometimes used songs or some other method of keeping a beat. The tools used were manufactured by the Gandy Tool Company, hence the term 'Gandy Dancer.' The tools shown here are the spike maul, rail gauge, wrench, claw bar and rail tongs."
There are several other bronze sculptures around downtown as shown here:

One of several bronze sculptures by Lou Bader, this one part of the "Frontier Adventure" multi-piece display

Another piece from "Frontier Adventure," donated by artist Lou Bader and his wife, Emma Jean

The smallest piece of "Frontier Adventure" at the base of a tree
Another Lou Bader work at the Church of the Nativity
Sculpture At Northern Arizona University
And we sure found a lot of outdoor public art during our walk. I'll bet we probably missed some, too, so if and when we find more, I'll add it here.
In this photo (above-right), it's not a very tall man you're seeing, standing in front of the NAU J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome. This is Louie the Lumberjack, the school's mascot. There's a similar, cedar Louie, standing 10 feet tall and weighing in at 990-pounds, standing outside of Granny's Closet (formerly The Lumberjack), one of Flagstaff's oldest restaurants, located on South Milton/Route 66.
And here's the rest of the art we found on the grounds of NAU:

World-renowned artist R.C. Gorman created this bust of a Navajo Codetalker, 1995.
The bronze that caused a bit of a stir when it was first erected, due to this clean-cut lumberjack's bare chest
An untitled bronze and limestone sculpture by Peter Parkany, 1996, located outside NAU's Cline Library
My husband, an NAU alum, calls this sculpture "French Fries," but I'm told the real title is "Standing Waves."
The American Legion & Department of Arizona's Boys State 50th Anniversary sculpture by Thomas H. Oliver, dedicated June 6, 1996
Hmm ... what is this one about?
Analyze It
What's your interpretation?
There was no plaque to go along with this sculpture, and I'm not very good at figuring out what a piece of art means or even coming up with my own interpretation. So what about you? Any suggestions for possible titles for this one? Add yours below, along with a description if you want.

Bronze entitled, "Through the Roof," by Randy Kuehn, 1999

A mushroom sculpture, with little metal disks below the "cap" that jingle in the breeze

The heart and vein sculpture outside the NAU Rec Center

It's a ... uh ... what is it?

"Seeing the New Dawn" by Jason Lanecan, commissioned for the NAU Centennial in 1997

An untitled abstract sculpture we almost didn't see. It's hidden by part of the building.

A tree stump someone fashioned into an owl

An assemblage near the NAU's tozan kilns
Work By Don Bendel
A master ceramicist
Near the kiln, you can see these large, ceramic-tiled walls designed by Don Bendel in 1996 for the Tozan kilns' 10th anniversary and dedicated to the memory of ceramics student, Aaron M. Macy. The tiles were made by laying the clay out in a big sheet and having people walk on it, creating the texture that you see. Then he clay was cut into squares, fired and assembled on the walls.

Don Bendel's walls of ceramics at the site of the NAU tozan kilns
Sculpture At Coconino Community College
While most of the art at CCC is inside the building, there are three sculptures located within the courtyard walls out front. And those walls themselves have artistic significance. Notice how they look much the same as the walls you just saw.During a Wood-fired Ceramic Mural Project Workshop in July, 2008 with Don Bendel, participants walked barefoot through a 60-foot clay path, then carved the walkway into square tiles and fired them in the Noborogama Tozan Kiln on the NAU campus. The tiles were mounted in a 4-foot by 60-foot bronze, brown and copper-textured strip along the cinder block wall art patio.
To read more about the project, read Ooze Into CCC History At The July 8 Clay Stomp
And within those walls, these are the sculptures we discovered on our self-guided Sunday public art walking tour:
A bronze and steel sculpture in the CCC courtyard
I don't know how to interpret this piece, also in the CCC courtyard.
Sculpture At Sawmill County Park
This photo (right) is a piece called "Don Quixote" by Geoffrey H. Gross, the artist who made the tile mosaic on the back of the art wall. It's a bronze, steel and granite sculpture.
The artist's statement:
"In the end we are the sum of parts. These parts being composed of the stories of our past, our ambition for the future, and the contact with the ideas and stories that press in close around us. It seems to me that we, ourselves, are not a gleaming whole, but rather, an assemblage of experiences and emotion. Yet, this patchwork surges forward as a unit in its quest for wholeness. Don Quixote was searching for the stories about himself that he felt would make him whole, but then again aren't we all?" (From: Coconino County Parks & Recreation's Sawmill County Park's Sculpture Walk)
Below is another sculpture we saw at the park, again by Geoffrey Gross. What do you think it means?

I'm sure this sculpture is making a statement.
But What Is It?
Anyone? Anyone?
Have any ideas about what this sculpture (above) means? If so, please share.
Want to find out what the artist had in mind? Enter your own take on it in the list below, then visit the Sawmill County Park's Sculpture Walk page and scroll down to read creator Geoffrey Gross's statement.
(Note: The two other sculptures currently shown on the Sawmill Park's Sculpture Walk Page were not there when we went to take photos.)
Other Flagstaff Public Art
One of many PAWS sculptures around town from the Coconino Coalition for Children & Youth
Is It Sculpture?
Well, no matter. Art it is.
And below is an entryway we thought we'd include, made by Schaafsma Design:

An artistic archway at the entrance to the Flagstaff Xeriscape Garden
Is It Art?
The metal archway above ...what do you think? We see it as art.
An Op-Ed About Flagstaff Public Art
and the loss of a long-standing sculpture along Route 66
Public Art Installations Still Have Place in Flag
from the Arizona Daily Sun editorial department
What Is Public Art?
The Flagstaff Beautification And Public Art Commission
This program involves the selection and installation of public art and funding for cultural arts within the community.
Find out more about their programs and upcoming projects, including calls to artists, on the
City Of Flagstaff Official website
More Of My Flagstaff And Northern Arizona Articles
What To See And Do In Flagstaff, Arizona
I first visited Flagstaff in 1994, on my way to a river trip through the Grand Canyon. A year and a half later, in the middle of winter, I was back again....
Heritage Square: Flagstaff's Outdoor Living Room
Whenever I feel like going for a walk, I often find myself headed downtown, where I usually end up at Heritage Square. There's always something to see or...
Fun Winter Activities In Flagstaff, Arizona
When some folks hear "Arizona," they think sunshine, desert, and year-round heat. Well, yes on the first two points but a definite no on the third....
Wildlife of the Coconino National Forest
If you're ever in my neck of the woods here in Northern Arizona, I encourage you to explore the many wonders of the Coconino National Forest. At 1.8 million...

Route 66 Through Flagstaff, Arizona
Here, let me drive. We'll begin on the west side of town and take Route 66 east through Flagstaff until it departs towards Winona, where it disappears once again...
Do You Enjoy Public Art?
Do you wish there were murals on buildings all over? And more sculpture around town?
Share your comments below.
You don't have to be a member of Squidoo.com to leave a message. And thank you for stopping by!
-
Reply
-
Close2Art
Oct 31, 2011 @ 11:02 pm | delete
- That's some great public art, I call it graffiti, blessed, great lens...:)rob
-
-
Reply
-
andreaberrios
Oct 24, 2011 @ 10:29 am | delete
- Wow what a beautiful place!! I love all the art.
-
-
Reply
-
daria369
Oct 23, 2011 @ 8:28 pm | delete
- What a beautiful town you live in. I especially like the Southside murals, so lively an colorful. Placed in that part of the city, they are even more precious. You are So blessed! :)
-
-
Reply
-
fanfreluche
Oct 21, 2011 @ 11:36 am | delete
- Flagstaff looks like a really colorful and artsy town. I love the lumberjack sculpture!
-
-
Reply
-
OhMe
Oct 21, 2011 @ 10:02 am | delete
- Wow, Pendleton SC doesn't have anything like this. Impressive
-
- Load More
This module only appears with actual data when viewed on a live lens. The favorite and lensroll options will appear on a live lens if the viewer is a member of Squidoo and logged in.
by Ramkitten
Flagstaff Art & Galleries
******
I'm glad you've stopped by! So what's with the Ramkitten thing, you ask? Well, that's my trail name in the long-distance...
more »
- 189 featured lenses
- Winner of 19 trophies!
- Top lens » Becoming a Search and Rescue Volunteer
Explore related pages
- What To See And Do In Flagstaff, Arizona What To See And Do In Flagstaff, Arizona
- Flagstaff First Friday ArtWalk Flagstaff First Friday ArtWalk
- Social Dancing in Flagstaff, Arizona Social Dancing in Flagstaff, Arizona
- Flagstaff, Arizona Restaurants Flagstaff, Arizona Restaurants
- Route 66 Through Flagstaff, Arizona Route 66 Through Flagstaff, Arizona
- Lowell Observatory And Life On Mars (Hill) Lowell Observatory And Life On Mars (Hill)

