Pink Floyd's The Wall Mural
Entire Bedroom Wall
(Composite of 4 Pictures)
Specifications
Acrylic paints, latex white background, 8 ft x 11 ft.
Story
The Wall - Inside Album Jacket
What kind of kid paints semi-disturbing cartoon characters directly on
their bedroom wall? What kids of parents allow this to happen? The answers
are left up to you, but the fact is that what you see above is what one
wall of my room looked like when I was in High School. It is a scaled up
reproduction of the inside album jacket artwork found on Pink Floyd's "The
Wall" album. On the right you can see the orginal inside jacket (was a
double album and it folded out). Remember, this was still the world of
vinyl records.
The final result had all the elements form the right-hand side of the
jacket artwork, but I also planned on doing the left-hand side of the
jacket which is "The Judge", depicted as a big rear-end. Though having a
big rear-end painted on my wall was a big disconcerting, the main reason I
abandoned this was my fear of not being able to adequately recreate the
flesh tones properly at the sclae I would need. The location of The Judge
would have been where the
Yellow
Submarine Mural eventually wound up going. I has also planned to build
up a layer of spakle on top of the sheetrock to be able to carve out the
edges of the bricks to give it more of areal 3D brick feel, but that wound
up being abit too ambitious.
I happened to have been lucky enough to have been at one of the
original Pink Floyd Wall concerts. They only did a handfull of shows in
Los Angelese and a handful in the Nassau Coliseum on Long Island where I
lived at the time. That also happened to be the first concert I ever went
to, so maybe it retrospectively makes sense why I was so keen on creating
such a mural. From start to finish was probably about a year elapsed time.
I wound up doing a bunch of other murals (see
here,
here and
here), though I cannot recall if they
all were done after this was complete, or I was interleaving some of them.
I have this stack of pictures and drawings that I've been carrying
along with me all these years, and they contained some surprising remnants
of the past projects: such as the orginal concept design for the mural and
some practice templates and sketches.
Here's an interesting, albeit disturbing, thought I just now remembered
as I was typing these notes. When my daughter was first born, we lived
with my parent for the first year, and we lived in this room, mural and
all. So this is effectively the nursery room art. I wonder what kind of
psychological effect that might have?
Below are the only 4 pictures that remain of the mural. The
composite picture at the top of the page was constructed by stretching,
resizing and adjusting the brightness and contrast until I had areasonably
coherent reconstruction of the entire mural.
An Almost Followup Project
When I was in high school, there was a period where denim jackets with
painted designs on the back were big. A guy in my high school had asked me
if I do a jacket of The Wall (having heard of or seen my mural). I said
sure I could, and I think I told him I would charge him $50. I drew up a
preliminary design, but he he lost interest at some point.
The Sorry End
These murals were painted directly on the sheetrock, which meant it
eventually was painted over and the house sold. If I knew as much about
sheetrock as I do today, I would have certainly tried to preserve it.