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Welcome to Plaza Midwood!

This artwalk starts at the seating plaza at the corner of Thomas Avenue and Central Avenue.  Follow the walking directions for each of the 12 artworks on this walk.  Be careful crossing the streets, tag the artist in your photos, and stop to have a drink or bite to eat.  Tag us with your fun adventures!  For more information on the history of Plaza Midwood, see www.historysouth.org and the wonderful writings of community historian Tom Hanchett. 


PARKING:  Free parking at Thomas and Central lot or on surrounding streets

TRANSIT: Short walk from GOLD LINE

Google map of Plaza Midwood ArtWalks

Mural of a bouquet of pink and white flowers that seem to melt, dripping down the wall.

Cross Thomas to side of Pizza Peel

Location: 1600 Central Avenue

Artist: Niki Zarrabi

Date: 2019

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info: @nikizarrabi


Story: Atlanta-based Niki Zarrabi painted this mural for Talking Walls 2019. Zarrabi, an Iranian-American mixed-media artist, works in both a smaller studio scale and very large outdoor mural projects. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Green and reddish-pink hues work as complements
  • Organic shapes

Make the Connection:

Zarrabi explores a type of vanitas or imagery that suggests the fragile and fleeting quality of life. She is also interested in portraying power in typically feminine images. What details of the mural suggest the idea of the transience of life? How does the artist use feminine subject matter to suggest power?  

The painted body of a snake winds along a wall, some sections only showing the skeleton.

Walk toward The Plaza along Central Ave

Location:  1600 Central Ave on front wall of Pizza Peel

Artist: Darion Fleming

Date: 2018

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info: @daflemingo


Story: This mural is a part of the 2018 Talking Walls Festival, a week-long celebration of murals and street arts. During Talking Walls 2018, 17 artists live-painted murals across the city. Local business sponsors supported the effort and the artists with walls to paint. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Outline and contour lines in the skeleton
  • Limited palette – warm colors and the use of black and white

Make the Connection:

Darion Fleming is a young, talented artist who got his first start designing cans of beer for local breweries. He quickly moved to a much larger scale designing walls for Catawba Brewery and Divine Barrel.  Here he shows the viewer the body of the snake but allows his snake to escape out of the frame of his mural. Does this heighten the awareness of this slithering snake or merely seem like a design decision? Or both? 

A mosaic medallion made from collected pottery stands out from the surrounding brick.

Check out the medallions on HT

Location: 1704 Central Avenue

Artist: Tom Thoune

Date: 2013

Media: Mosaic tile

Artist Info: @tom_thoune


Story: This was the site of the original grocery store opened by W.T. Harris in 1936. This store was the first full-service supermarket, first air-conditioned store, and the first to stay open until 9 pm on a Friday. So many innovations! Harris merged with Teeter Food Market in 1960 to form Harris Teeter. Industrial art deco building design is featured as a connection to existing art deco buildings along the Central Avenue corridor. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Texture

Make the Connection:

Artist Tom Thoune gathered pottery pieces from community members to make his mosaic medallions along the sides of the building. Each of the seven medallions references a different part of the grocery store. Make sure you see the bike racks designed by Shaun Cassidy for a nice art deco touch!

A traffic signal box is wrapped in colorful collage artwork depicting local landmarks.

Walk to 1201 The Plaza

Location: 1201 The Plaza

Artist: Christine Dryden

Date: 2019

Media: Printed vinyl

Artist Info: @christinedryden.art 


Story: Through a Placemaking Grant from the City of Charlotte, the Plaza Midwood Neighborhood Association and project manager Laurie Smithwick sponsored eight artists to cover traffic signal boxes in the neighborhood. Like the Amplify Charlotte project directed in South End, the signal wrap project takes utilitarian boxes and turns them into art. Beauty meets function!


Key Formal Elements:

  • Polychromatic colors
  • Abstract

Make the Connection:

Artist Christine Dryden uses a project with her students at Chantilly Montessori School as inspiration for her art. The collage project created images of Charlotte landmarks in the style of Eric Carle, the illustrator of the famous children’s book, The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Can you find a favorite place for pizza in the neighborhood, Fuel Pizza? 

A mural of gray hands holding a cup of hot coffee against a colorful coffee bean background.

Look at side wall of Giddy Goat

Location: 1217 The Plaza

Artist: Darion Fleming

Date: 2020

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info:@daflemingo


Story: Giddy Goat Coffee Roasters couldn’t really have a fish mural on the outside of their new coffee business. So, they commissioned the artist who completed the former mural on this wall to create a new one. And boy are we glad. Artist Darion Fleming covers this massive wall with colorful, decorative coffee plant imagery but what really steals the show is the grey-scale close up of the hands holding the cup of coffee. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Visual texture of the skin, wrinkles, hair on the hands
  • Strong use of outline

Make the Connection:

How well do you know coffee? 


According to legend, coffee plants were discovered by a herder who noticed his goats became more active after they ate the plants. 


The US imports more coffee than any other nation. 


The coffee bean is not really a bean. It is a seed. It comes from the Arabica or Robusta plant and its fruit, as you see in the mural, is rounded and red in color. 


Over 400 million cups of coffee are consumed each day in the US. 

A memorial mural for a much-loved patron, a joyful portrait against a rainbow background.

At corner of Commonwealth and The Plaza turn right

Location: 2007 Commonwealth Avenue

Artist: Mike Wirth

Date: 2019

Media: Acrylic paint

Artists Info: @mikewirth, with @the_wizard_jeffries


Story: After the unexpected death of much-loved patron Jon-O, the Common Market asked artist Mike Wirth to paint a mural as a way to honor his memory and offer healing to his friends and community. Wirth reached out to a friend of Jon-Os and with the help of James, many who knew Jon-O were able to help with the mural.


Key Formal Elements:

  • Symmetrical balance
  • Grey scale of the figure

Make the Connection:

The life of Jon-O is celebrated in this full spectrum of color mural. From left to right, the colors create a rainbow of love. Unique aspects of the life of Jon-O from playing chess and cards to some of his frequent sayings floating in the paisley shapes, allow friends and family to remember his exuberant life. 

A plain brick wall peppered with small and colorful personified cans and bottle characters.

Continue down CM Alley

Title: Common Market Alley Murals

Location: 2007 Commonwealth Ave

Artists: Charlotte Street Art Collab

Date: 2022

Media: Spray paint

Artists Info: @cltartsfx.machina


Story: CLT Street Art Collab is a local non-profit seeking to encourage and assist current and next gen artists to make a living as an artist. Various artists from the CLT Street Art Collab painted individual pieces on the alley wall and the back wall during a neighborhood arts festival.  Make sure you walk the length of the wall to see all the various styles and the butterfly at the back entrance. 

 

Key Formal Elements:

  • Variety of all the bottles lining the wall
  • Heavy use of outline

Make the Connection:

Common Market opened over 20 years ago and is now a mainstay in the PM neighborhood. It started as a “bottle shop.” So what better way to celebrate that than the parade of different bottles down the wall. 

A graffiti wall highlighting nostalgic characters from the popular kids show, Rocky & Bullwinkle.

Continue through alley to Thomas Street

Title: Rocky & Bullwinkle Mural

Location: 1214 Thomas Avenue

Artists: Joey Obsoe, Rebus, This

Date: 2013

Media: Spray paint

Artist Info: @joeyobso


Story: Wow! Look at that date. This mural tells two stories. One of gentrification and one of nostaglia. The unique clothing store Boris & Natasha commissioned this mural on the side of their former shop. Once a stalwart of funky, weird, and uncommon, the shop was a main creative force in Plaza Midwood. In 2021, they moved their shop further out to The Plaza due to rising rents. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Outline, outline, outline in the characters and letters
  • Variety as organizing principle


Make the Connection:

With a connection to the name of the original shop, artist Joey Obsoe created a mural based on the 1960s Rocky and Bullwinkle show. The show features Rocky the flying squirrel (find him in the mural) and Bullwinkle the Moose. Rocky and Bullwinkle are forever being chased by Russian spies Boris & Natasha. The main characters pop up in the mural amidst graffiti lettering in a celebration of street art.   

Memorial mural for a beloved local artist, Deborah Triplett. Her portrait is surrounded by flowers.

Cross Commonwealth, next to Moxie

Title: Deborah Triplett Memorial Mural

Location: Commonwealth Avenue

Artist: Sharon Dowell 

Date: 2024

Media: Acrylic paint 

Artist Info: @sharon_dowell


Story: Artist Sharon Dowell led a team of assisting artists to plan and paint this mural dedicated to the work and life of local artist and activist Deborah Triplett. The assisting artist team consisted of Cher Cosper, Lucy Parker, Claire Santos, Tom Thoune, Rosalie Torres Weiner, and Mike Wirth. All of the artist team shared a connection to Triplett and each worked at certain times on the mural with Dowell. Plaza Midwood has so many early and original murals that it is cool to see that the artsy, funky neighborhood is getting fresh, new murals!


Key Formal Elements:

  • Organic shapes of the highly saturated colors
  • Strong positive shapes against limited negative space


Make the Connection:

Notice the portrait of Deborah Triplett featured on the two-story space on the side wall near Moxie. Triplett was an artist, photographer, community activist, and founder of the much beloved annual Yard Art Day arts event. She was also known for her love of gardening, all flowers and her signature red lips. Dowell’s trademark abstracted imagery with the bright colors creates such a active visual presence. It is absolutely art made for everyone to enjoy!

A mural of a woman sitting with legs crossed, her chakras lit. Graffiti script is written nearby.

Left on Commonwealth

Location:  1912 Commonwealth Avenue, side wall of Okra Charlotte yoga studio.

Artists: 

Date: 2018

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info: @dr.rickamortis, @you_are_jah


Story: The artists created a mural with the quote, “Before I die, I will live” on one side and a meditating seated figure on the other. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Symmetrical balance of the seated figure in the circle 
  • Line – traditional use of outline in wild-style letters along the side

Make the Connection:

The meditative figure is cleverly arranged around a pipe on the exterior on the building. The locations of the seven chakras of the body are depicted vertically down the pipe. Chakras are various points in the body used in ancient meditation practices. What other imagery connects this piece to the yoga studio and wellness center?

Adorable, playful monkeys are painted on the walls having fun with lots of tropical fruit.

Walk to Pecan, cross to side wall of Smooth Monkey

Location: 1801 Commonwealth Avenue

Artist: Ashley Graham

Date: 2018

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info: @grahamarts


Story: Playful, fun monkeys and luscious fruit flow around two sides of the Smooth Monkey smoothie shop.  Ashley Graham is a local art instructor and has murals in several other locations around the city.


Key Formal Elements:

  • Highlights present on the fruit
  • Warm colors of the bananas and the oranges contrasts with the cool colors of the blueberries and raspberries

Make the Connection:

Notice how the monkeys are rendered in a greyscale, or the use of only black and white. Think about how that choice by the artist impacts how you encounter the other parts of the composition. 

A strawberry, pineapple and lime with legs and shoes run across a bar table with drinks.

Walk to corner of CW & Thomas. Turn left and enter alley

Title: Petra’s Mural

Location: Alley behind 1919 Commonwealth Ave

Artist: Hnin Nie

Date: 2023 

Media: Acrylic paint

Artist Info:@hninstagram


Story: Petra’s Bar supports local artists with a lot of opportunities to showcase their art and Hnin Nie had her first solo exhibit there. Nie is a young and talented painter and mixed media artist with other murals in NoDa and Optimist Park. Her playful colors and fun imagery explore themes of identity, femininity, and invite you to delight in your everyday world. 


Key Formal Elements:

  • Sharp, flat areas of color
  • Organic shapes

Make the Connection:

Check out the friends hanging out at the bar but they are green, pink, and yellow. In her signature fun shapes with added human characteristics, Nie shares her experiences of dancing and having fun with her group of friends. Which friend are you?

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