From left to right:
Woman with Hat observes the arc of history and the iconic women who transformed Gloucester over the last 150 years and inspires the viewers to consider their place and inspiration for the coming 150 years.
Judith Lomax, (1774 – 1828), was the first woman to publish a book of poetry in Virginia, The Notes of an American Lyre, printed by Samuel Pleasants.
The Suffragette represents the first women in Gloucester to vote.
Kacey Caneal, (1935 - 2022) Accomplished, self-taught, naive folk artist.
Jennie Booth Moton, (1879-1942), a Gloucester native, served as the Director of the Department of Women’s Industries at the Tuskegee Institute, was a lifelong educator, and was married to Robert Russa Moton.
Mary Shipko, (1949), an aviation pioneer is the first woman to become a commercial aviation pilot for Hughes Air.
Margaret Ann Tunner, (1917 - 2009), WASP during World War II who retired to a beautiful farm in Ware Neck, Virginia in 1960 with her husband Lt. General William Tunner. She also testified before Congress to request recognition of the WASPs as having performed militarily during WWII. Her request was successful and transformed history for the women she served alongside.
Irene Morgan, (1917 - 2007), a civil rights icon whose landmark case in 1944 - 1946, argued by Thurgood Marshall on behalf of Morgan and the NAACP, resulted in a US Supreme Court decision that set a legal precedent that bolstered the Freedom Rider movement largely credited to Rosa Parks. Morgan also worked during this time on the production line of the B-26.
We start on the far upper right with a Piscataway village under construction as it may have appeared before colonization. Below are the farmers who worked the land until he mid 20th century , the sign for The Wheaton Westfield Mall, an iconic mid-century design, moves you down the wall to Miriam and Willie Bobrow, the original owners of Elbe’s Beer and Wine (formerly grocery), the building on which the mural was painted.
On the end of the building we have a young man kicking a soccer ball, and a woman making pupusas. These figures represent the diversity of Today’s Wheaton, and the vibrancy of its culture and food scene. The smoke and steam from the pupusas drifts off the end of the wall and into the future.
518 Poplar st, Cambridge MD, 62x18, 2022.
From left to right we have Yogananda Pittman, assistant Chief and former acting chief of the US Capital Police, Gloria Richardson Dandridge, civil rights activist, Anna Ella Carroll, advisor to President Lincoln, Rear Admiral Sara Joyner, Harriet Tubman, Bea Arthur, and Annie Oakley. On the secon mural, clock wise from the left is Lyda Meredith, first female surgeon in Dorchester, Mayor Victoria Jackson-Stanley, Chief Donna Wolf Mother Abbot, Chief of the Nause-Waiwash, Dakota Flowers, six time muskrat Skinning champion, and Fronnie Jones, Long time employee and champion crab picker at J.M Clayton.
518 Poplar St, Cambridge MD, 18x62, 2022
Left side Detail
Center left Detail
Center detail
Right Side Detail
Chalk on Asphault, 2022
Corner View
12’x10’, 2022
12’x10’, 2022
8’x8’, 2022
8’x8’, 2022
8x8, 2022
8’x47’, far left detail, 2022
8’x47’, 2022
8’x47’, middle left detail, 2022
8’x47’, center left detail, 2022
8’x47’, center right detail, 2022
8’x47’, middle right detail, 2022
8’x47’ ,2022 Detail, far right
Acrylic Paint on Plywood, 78.5x112 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/centre-street-mural-project/ for full image description.
Acrylic Paint on plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ for full image description
Acrylic on plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic on Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For Full Image Descriptions
Acrylic on Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full Image Descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x157.5 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full Image Descriptions
Acrylic Paint, 15x30, 2021
Second of 3 Murals for Kirby Lane Park
Treehouse Cafe, 2021
Treehouse Cafe, 2021
Chalk on pavement, 6x6, 2021
Private
Mural painted for Kirby Lane park
1830 W Saratoga St, Baltimore
2020
Mural painted for Kirby Lane Park
1830 W Saratoga St, Baltimore
212-
70’x10’ (Side One) Bond st.
2 sided Mural for Baltimore’s H&S Bakery for their 75th Aniversary.
25x16, 2020
Chalk Mural for Baltimore Madonnari Festival, 2019
10x10
An image for every letter of the alphabet.
8x6 2017
Door Mural, 2018
4x2.5, 2019
Completed in Fall 2016 in partnership with Healthy Harbor Baltimore, this mural was painted on the corner of Collington and McEldery in East Baltimore
2014
Located on the corner of Lakewood and Fayette St, East Baltimore
Completed in Summer of 13, this mural is part of the Baltimore Billie Holiday Project
Located on the back of Fells Point Corner Theater, this mural is the second of the two Billie Holiday Murals I did on Durham Street in Upper Fells Point in 2015
This Mural was commissioned by the DiPasquale family of Baltimore as a tribute to their ancestor's contribution to Highlandtown Baltimore. This mural was painted on the building that had the original store front and features portraits of some of the family.
Detail of DiPasquale's mural showing family members
This Mural completed in Summer 2015 depicts Bee Balm, chicory, and buttercups in the foreground, and the neighborhood fox in the background. This mural is located on Conkling st near it's intersection with Orleans st.
2014
This Mural, completed in May of 2015, was damaged in the recent fire at Holy Frijoles. Stay tuned for the repaint!
Mural For Topanga Fire Station, 2011
This mural was painted for a child's bedroom in 2016
2015
Sadly, JoJoSouth has closed it's doors for good and this door is painted over.
2015
2015
Painted "Chalk" mural with trompe'loeil chalk
Hidden in a Secret park Near Mondawmin Mall, this mural is meant to encourage the neighborhood children to help maintain this outdoor space. Summer 2016
Highlandtown Elementary, 2015
Highlandtown Elm. 2015
2015
From left to right:
Woman with Hat observes the arc of history and the iconic women who transformed Gloucester over the last 150 years and inspires the viewers to consider their place and inspiration for the coming 150 years.
Judith Lomax, (1774 – 1828), was the first woman to publish a book of poetry in Virginia, The Notes of an American Lyre, printed by Samuel Pleasants.
The Suffragette represents the first women in Gloucester to vote.
Kacey Caneal, (1935 - 2022) Accomplished, self-taught, naive folk artist.
Jennie Booth Moton, (1879-1942), a Gloucester native, served as the Director of the Department of Women’s Industries at the Tuskegee Institute, was a lifelong educator, and was married to Robert Russa Moton.
Mary Shipko, (1949), an aviation pioneer is the first woman to become a commercial aviation pilot for Hughes Air.
Margaret Ann Tunner, (1917 - 2009), WASP during World War II who retired to a beautiful farm in Ware Neck, Virginia in 1960 with her husband Lt. General William Tunner. She also testified before Congress to request recognition of the WASPs as having performed militarily during WWII. Her request was successful and transformed history for the women she served alongside.
Irene Morgan, (1917 - 2007), a civil rights icon whose landmark case in 1944 - 1946, argued by Thurgood Marshall on behalf of Morgan and the NAACP, resulted in a US Supreme Court decision that set a legal precedent that bolstered the Freedom Rider movement largely credited to Rosa Parks. Morgan also worked during this time on the production line of the B-26.
We start on the far upper right with a Piscataway village under construction as it may have appeared before colonization. Below are the farmers who worked the land until he mid 20th century , the sign for The Wheaton Westfield Mall, an iconic mid-century design, moves you down the wall to Miriam and Willie Bobrow, the original owners of Elbe’s Beer and Wine (formerly grocery), the building on which the mural was painted.
On the end of the building we have a young man kicking a soccer ball, and a woman making pupusas. These figures represent the diversity of Today’s Wheaton, and the vibrancy of its culture and food scene. The smoke and steam from the pupusas drifts off the end of the wall and into the future.
518 Poplar st, Cambridge MD, 62x18, 2022.
From left to right we have Yogananda Pittman, assistant Chief and former acting chief of the US Capital Police, Gloria Richardson Dandridge, civil rights activist, Anna Ella Carroll, advisor to President Lincoln, Rear Admiral Sara Joyner, Harriet Tubman, Bea Arthur, and Annie Oakley. On the secon mural, clock wise from the left is Lyda Meredith, first female surgeon in Dorchester, Mayor Victoria Jackson-Stanley, Chief Donna Wolf Mother Abbot, Chief of the Nause-Waiwash, Dakota Flowers, six time muskrat Skinning champion, and Fronnie Jones, Long time employee and champion crab picker at J.M Clayton.
518 Poplar St, Cambridge MD, 18x62, 2022
Left side Detail
Center left Detail
Center detail
Right Side Detail
Chalk on Asphault, 2022
Corner View
12’x10’, 2022
12’x10’, 2022
8’x8’, 2022
8’x8’, 2022
8x8, 2022
8’x47’, far left detail, 2022
8’x47’, 2022
8’x47’, middle left detail, 2022
8’x47’, center left detail, 2022
8’x47’, center right detail, 2022
8’x47’, middle right detail, 2022
8’x47’ ,2022 Detail, far right
Acrylic Paint on Plywood, 78.5x112 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/centre-street-mural-project/ for full image description.
Acrylic Paint on plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ for full image description
Acrylic on plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x140 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic on Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full image descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For Full Image Descriptions
Acrylic on Plywood, 78.5x187 inches, 2022 Please Visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full Image Descriptions
Acrylic On Plywood, 78.5x157.5 inches, 2022 Please visit https://www.mdhistory.org/center-street-mural-project/ For full Image Descriptions
Acrylic Paint, 15x30, 2021
Second of 3 Murals for Kirby Lane Park
Treehouse Cafe, 2021
Treehouse Cafe, 2021
Chalk on pavement, 6x6, 2021
Private
Mural painted for Kirby Lane park
1830 W Saratoga St, Baltimore
2020
Mural painted for Kirby Lane Park
1830 W Saratoga St, Baltimore
212-
70’x10’ (Side One) Bond st.
2 sided Mural for Baltimore’s H&S Bakery for their 75th Aniversary.
25x16, 2020
Chalk Mural for Baltimore Madonnari Festival, 2019
10x10
An image for every letter of the alphabet.
8x6 2017
Door Mural, 2018
4x2.5, 2019
Completed in Fall 2016 in partnership with Healthy Harbor Baltimore, this mural was painted on the corner of Collington and McEldery in East Baltimore
2014
Located on the corner of Lakewood and Fayette St, East Baltimore
Completed in Summer of 13, this mural is part of the Baltimore Billie Holiday Project
Located on the back of Fells Point Corner Theater, this mural is the second of the two Billie Holiday Murals I did on Durham Street in Upper Fells Point in 2015
This Mural was commissioned by the DiPasquale family of Baltimore as a tribute to their ancestor's contribution to Highlandtown Baltimore. This mural was painted on the building that had the original store front and features portraits of some of the family.
Detail of DiPasquale's mural showing family members
This Mural completed in Summer 2015 depicts Bee Balm, chicory, and buttercups in the foreground, and the neighborhood fox in the background. This mural is located on Conkling st near it's intersection with Orleans st.
2014
This Mural, completed in May of 2015, was damaged in the recent fire at Holy Frijoles. Stay tuned for the repaint!
Mural For Topanga Fire Station, 2011
This mural was painted for a child's bedroom in 2016
2015
Sadly, JoJoSouth has closed it's doors for good and this door is painted over.
2015
2015
Painted "Chalk" mural with trompe'loeil chalk
Hidden in a Secret park Near Mondawmin Mall, this mural is meant to encourage the neighborhood children to help maintain this outdoor space. Summer 2016
Highlandtown Elementary, 2015
Highlandtown Elm. 2015
2015