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Glendora Community Art
Item 11 of 15

This art piece consists of five Cuerda Seca tiles designed by Michael Hillman, the artist who designed the artwork for the Glendora Gold Line Station. The tiles adorn a wall on the south west corner of Glendora Ave and E. Ada Ave., outside the Glendora Station Townhome community near downtown Glendora.


Wall, Mural, Brick, Brickwork

Wall, Mural, Visual arts, Brick

This collection of murals was intended to pay homage to the previous transit stations that once existed at this location, and was commissioned as a part of the Glendora Station Townhome development. Due to it's location across the street from the Glendora Post Office, the artist chose to make tiles that looked like vintage post cards.

According to the artist:

The imagery for the Cuerda Seca (dry-line) tiles celebrates the idea of travel and specifically this site in Glendora. The Welcome to California pays homage to the abundance of fruits and vegetable that were grown in California, and specifically the golden poppy which is the state flower.  The Greeting from Glendora invites viewers to reminisce of travel to and around Glendora with fields of orange groves and the foothills being prominent in the design. The 3 middle panels reference the 3 train stations that were on this site, each with the spray of bougainvillea noting the Bennett, Ca Historical monument: the Victorian style station from the turn of the 19th century, the art deco station from the 1920s and the most contemporary from the 1940s, notably with the Red Car prominently featured.  

Several students from the Citrus Community College art department assisted the artist with this project.

Information provided by the artist to Glendora Public Library