
Little Moment is a mural by Noségo (https://www.nosego.com/)in San Jose’s Japantown. There is info about it here: https://www.nbstore.com/nosego-mural


Traveling around in #SanJose and #NearbyToSanJose at 825 mph on our spinning planet.
Downtown San Jose
Little Moment is a mural by Noségo (https://www.nosego.com/)in San Jose’s Japantown. There is info about it here: https://www.nbstore.com/nosego-mural
Along the tracks in Japantown, San Jose.
Jacquelin de Leon mural in progress (https://www.jacquelindeleon.com/).
This mural is by Jacquelin de Leon (https://www.jacquelindeleon.com/). It is under Park Ave. on the Guadalupe River Trail and is really comforting to me.
Maybe this is why I am including so many photos and can not settle on fewer; I appreciate this comfort right now.
The artist said that this is inspired from being a kid in the bath with all of her sea animal toys and imagining herself in the sea with them all around her and then recently going to the ocean and wanting to sit in there with all of the sea animals (https://www.instagram.com/p/CdeHF4IPWbu/). That makes me smile.
This is the Humble Beginnings Mural, created by six artists of the Humble Beginning Art Collective who each did a section that blended together on the Guadalupe River Trail.
It is finished and it is beautiful! This mural is downtown between 1st and 2nd street, just north of Julian on the railroad tracks. Lacey Bryant did a wonderful thing with this. You can read some more at: https://www.metrosiliconvalley.com/lacey-bryant-presents-her-new-9450-square-foot-mural/
I hope you will enjoy some of this detail and creativity.
The wall is actually flat. I stitched these photos together to give an idea of the flow of the mural that is said to be 9,450 square feet.
Here are a few pics I took of the flower section from earlier.
This site has been closed a long time. You can still see some of the art on the walls.
Sometimes exploring feels a little like a recent form of archaeology. “Receology”? That could be a new word. Exploring, thinking, imagining what was. Then, projecting to imagine what will be left of many things we value now in the long years ahead. What will they imagine and presume about us and our time. All this can be done from some paintings on a wall done not that long ago. You don’t have to live next to the Ohlone petroglyphs to get some philosophical imaginings going. Though, Ohlone petroglyphs can certainly inspire a lot of thoughts.
Bleed Teal mural in San Jose by Austrian artist NYCHOS (https://rabbiteyemovement.at/).
RGB mural by artist Chuba Oyolu (https://chubaoyolu.org/).