Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Wall of Death is a permanently sited public art installation [3] located under the University Bridge in Seattle, alongside the Burke-Gilman Trail and NE 40th Street in the University District. It was designed and built by Mowry Baden and his son, Colin, in 1993.
The Horiuchi Mural is installed at Seattle Center. West Seattle has 11 outdoor murals that were created in the early 1990s and restored in 2018. [5] [6] Black Lives Matter street murals were painted in Capitol Hill and outside Seattle City Hall in 2020 and 2021, respectively. The People's Wall is located in the city
Horiuchi Mural, also known as Seattle Mural, [1] is a mural by Paul Horiuchi in Seattle Center, in Seattle, Washington. It was commissioned for the Century 21 Exposition (1962) and was billed as the largest artwork in the Pacific Northwest. The mural measures 60 feet by 17 feet. [2] [3]
The building was torn down very shortly thereafter, but as of 2023 the retaining wall and mural remain. The mural was retouched in 2008 by Seattle artist Eddie Walker. [2] The wall is dedicated to nine fallen Panthers: Sydney Miller, Welton Butch Armstead, Albert Postel, Larry War, Lewis Jackson, Maud Allen, Carolyn Downs, Jim Graves and Henry ...
The Gum Wall is a brick wall situated beneath Pike Place Market in Downtown Seattle, Washington (State), United States. Located on Post Alley near Pike Street , south of the market's main entrance off 1st Avenue, the wall is covered with used chewing gum .
The wall of death is a carnival or fairground sideshow. Wall of death may also refer to: Wall of death (moshing) Wall of Death; The Wall of Death, a public art installation in Seattle, Washington, US; The Wall of Death (Scotland Yard), short film
Wife of prominent trans writer hacked father to death with ice axe after Trump’s Election Night victory: cops. ... bit and hacked her 67-year-old father in the $800,000 Seattle home they shared ...
The 10-ton slab of granite used in Seattle's memorial was shipped to Seattle via the Panama Canal from Georgia's Stone Mountain by the United Daughters of the Confederacy in 1926. The President of the UDC Robert E. Lee Chapter #885 and Washington Division at the time, Mrs. May Avery Wilkins, who was originally from Georgia, is credited with ...