Arizona Artists Asked To “Lighten” Faces Of Children In Mural

Posted by | June 4, 2010 19:54 | Filed under: Top Stories


A group of Arizona artists have been asked to lighten the faces of children in a mural at a school in Prescott, AZ.

The project’s leader says he was ordered to lighten the skin tone after complaints about the children’s ethnicity. But the school’s principal says the request was only to fix shading and had nothing to do with political pressure.

The “Go on Green” mural, which covers two walls outside Miller Valley Elementary School, was designed to advertise a campaign for environmentally friendly transportation. It features portraits of four children, with a Hispanic boy as the dominant figure.

R. E. Wall,, the director of the project (pictured with artist Pamela J. Smith), says he and other artists had slurs directed at them as they worked on the mural at a busy intersection.

“We consistently, for two months, had people shouting racial slander from their cars,” Wall said. “We had children painting with us, and here come these yells of (epithet for Blacks) and (epithet for Hispanics).”

Wall said school Principal Jeff Lane pressed him to make the children’s faces appear happier and brighter.

“It is being lightened because of the controversy,” Wall said, adding that “they want it to look like the children are coming into light.”

Lane says he as asking to lighten faces only “from an artistic point of view.”

City Councilman Steve Blair spearheaded a public campaign on his talk show at Prescott radio station KYCA-AM (1490) to remove the mural.

In a broadcast last month, according to the Daily Courier in Prescott, Blair mistakenly complained that the most prominent child in the painting is African-American, saying: “To depict the biggest picture on the building as a Black person, I would have to ask the question: Why?”

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Copyright 2010 Liberaland
By: Alan

Alan Colmes is the publisher of Liberaland.

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