Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Native Americans - Coeur d’Alene, ID
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member beagle39z
N 47° 40.432 W 116° 47.053
11T E 516197 N 5280075
Motivated by a desire to beautify the city of Coeur d’Alene and to promote a higher quality of public art, muralist Robert McNeill transformed the outside west wall of the Mosgrove Gallery at 211 E. Coeur d’Alene Ave. into an impressive piece of art.
Waymark Code: WMP9AG
Location: Idaho, United States
Date Posted: 07/23/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Outspoken1
Views: 5

The mural depicts a scene that references the city without being too literal. Native Americans and animals sacred to the Coeur d’Alene Tribe – horses, ravens, wolves, salmon and cranes – flow across the 100-foot by 15-foot canvas. His daily work on his creation begins at 6 a.m., and he quits around noon, when the heat and glare make it difficult to paint. It’s a labor of love for McNeill.

Tim Mosgrove, the owner of Mosgrove Gallery and the building, is reimbursing him for materials. McNeill attended a pottery class of Mosgrove’s in November of 2003, and it was Mosgrove who suggested the possibility of painting a mural on his building. After tossing around several ideas, the two men agreed that the mural should be decorative, exhibit fine craftsmanship and be of sound design. They also wanted to avoid anything that might be considered distasteful, hateful or profane.

Indeed, McNeill’s talent shines through in the detail in the musculature of the running horses and the jumping salmon. Columns that are integrated into the structure of the building have been painted to resemble totem poles. A figure of a sleeping Native American woman is painted on the far north end of the mural, suggesting that the mural is a dream scene.

A fan of the art deco style of the 1930s and of the Italian Renaissance, McNeill has been an artist all of his life. A graduate of University of California Berkeley in architecture, McNeill worked as an architect for many years. “Architecture just wasn’t fun anymore,” he said. “Too much bureaucracy.”

He has illustrated 18 fantasy books and was an illustrator for DC comics, the folks that brought us Batman. He has also done animation for private companies for television commercials, primarily in Carmel, Calif.

McNeill and his wife, Julie, are originally from San Francisco and moved to Coeur d’Alene five years ago to help out his mom, who was dying from cancer. They liked the area and decided to stay. McNeill has owned Blue Rose Tattoo, where he is a tattoo artist, at 510 N. Fourth St. for two and a half years.

McNeill has also been involved in the community by volunteering for Art on the Edge, a nonprofit program of St. Vincent DePaul that works with at-risk kids under the premise that art is a good tool for learning skills and establishing a positive sense of self. He helped the kids paint the mural on the north wall of St. Vincent’s thrift shop.
City: Coeur d’Alene

Location Name: Building

Artist: Robert McNeill

Date: 9/04/2005

Media: House paint on plaster

Relevant Web Site: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Please give the date and description of your visit. One original photo of the mural must also be submitted. GPSr photo NOT required.
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azzie_wilson visited Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Native Americans - Coeur d’Alene, ID 08/06/2018 azzie_wilson visited it