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Los Angeles ? To mark the beginning of Pride Month, Councilmember Nithya Raman celebrated the completion of the Odin Street underpass mural restoration in Hollywood, titled the ?Blue Moon Trilogy.? With funding from AIDS Project Los Angeles, artist Russell Carlton originally began the mural in 1987 to serve as a message of hope at the height of the AIDS crisis, which Carlton lost his life to the following year. After falling into disrepair since its last restoration in 1993, the mural was restored and completed through the collaborative efforts of community members, City departments, and restoration experts.
?In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic ? after two years of unprecedented loss and hardship ? the message that Russell Carlton shared in this mural is as timely and meaningful in this moment as ever,? said Councilmember Raman. ?I?m so grateful to the Department of Cultural Affairs, Fine Art Conservation Laboratories, and the Hollywood Hills West Neighborhood Council for leading the charge in reviving Russell?s message of self-empowerment, health, love and hope that can be shared by all Angelenos in a time when it is truly needed.?
In 2017, Russell Carlton?s parents signed an artist?s rights agreement in 2017 to support the restoration efforts. The Department of Cultural Affairs, Hollywood Hills West Neighborhood Council (HHWNC), Fine Art Conservation Laboratories, the former District 4 Office, Caltrans, and the Hollywood Bowl worked together to move forward with a partial restoration of the top two thirds of the mural as ?Phase I,? while still in need of funding to restore the bottom third.
?The restoration of this historical memorial public art mural was a wonderful project that blesses the community with positive energy, color and an educational benefit,? said Scott M. Haskins of Fine Art Conservation Laboratories. ?We were honored to be chosen to apply our skills and professional efforts for the restoration of this mural with such a dynamic social purpose and conscience.?
This year, Yami Duarte of the Department of Cultural Affairs helped to spearhead the completion of the mural, bringing back the Fine Art Conservation Lab, led by Scott Haskins, to carry out the restoration. With continued support from Caltrans, the Hollywood Bowl, and Council District 4, Russell Carlton?s mural was brought back to life in May of 2022.
?We were delighted to keep artist Russell Carlton's vibrant mural from being painted over and lost to LA's LGBTQ history. Conservator Scott Haskins has restored the mural so that it looks great after decades of being largely invisible,? said Orrin Feldman and Patty Dryden, former Vice President & former Board Member of Hollywood Hills West Neighborhood Council, respectively. ?Even in the face of what was then a deadly HIV/AID diagnosis in the 1980s, Russell's artwork still reminds us to remember that there is hope and beauty as we try to live through today's COVID pandemic. It's a lesson well-worth remembering.?
The original plaque from the mural?s original installation remains at the site. Its introduction reads:
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