Best Drive-Thru Art Display
In 2016, Tempe resident Robert Moore was a member of the city’s municipal arts commission and on the lookout for new ways the commission could engage with the local cultural scene. He didn’t have to look very far. Moore recommended transforming an aging and largely vacant retail building owned by the city at the Danelle Plaza shopping center near his home into a platform for local artists. Two years (and many negotiating sessions with city officials) later, the Danelle Project was born. Coordinated by Moore and Tempe Art A Gogh-Gogh co-founder Evan Liggins, it’s a visual feast of works by more than 20 notable local artists. Three sides of the 16,500-square-foot building and other spaces around the plaza are adorned with art: Vacant storefronts are filled with displays and installation pieces, while large-scale murals adorn exterior walls. Some works are evocative, such as Clyde’s pandemic-inspired mural Dreams on Pause depicted in deep blues and grays. Others celebrate the eclectic history of Danelle Plaza (Nick Rascona’s skateboard mural is inspired by a late ’70s skate park on the property). Then there are the oddities, like Sarah Hurwitz and Daniel Funkhouser’s Futureland, Arizona, which reimagines our state as a post-apocalyptic and neon-drenched toxic wasteland. (Certain installations become illuminated after dark.) It’s also, conveniently, a drivable art experience — fitting for this car-friendly metropolis.