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Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
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Image credit: all photos by the artist
Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic
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Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural | Street Murals by Dan Terry | Roppolo’s Pizzeria in Austin. Item composed of synthetic

Created and Sold by Dan Terry

Dan Terry

Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural - Street Murals

Featured In Roppolo’s Pizzeria, Austin, TX

$ On Inquiry

This work in Davinci's Pub behind Roppolos Pizza is on the second floor of what used to be a mere nasty alley attached to a historic building with a fascinating story that took 72'x8' to showcase. This work was done entirely in the computer with Photoshop as highly detailed multicolored line drawings all done in the style of Leonardo DaVinci who's drawings were among the first to use linear pencil strokes that follow and 'create' the form based on the anatomical structures beneath the skin. The high resolution files were then output to exterior grade, heat applied vinyl for installation at the site. Almost six months went into the creation of the entire work.

Item Historic 316 E. Sixth Street Building mural
Created by Dan Terry
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Dan Terry
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2019
After a lifetime of study & work as an artist, in recent years I've come to accept there's some truth in how others have long defined me as a "contemporary Renaissance master."

Michaelangelo's amazing Pieta and Davinci's inventive drawings warped me into becoming an artist at an early age. From my teens, my art provided steady work in print shops and newspapers. Theater companies hired me to design and create sets. Freelance clients came wanting posters, catalogs, typography services, technical and patent drawings, magazine ads and covers and banners. The San Antonio Museum Association, operating the SA Museum of Art, the Witte Museum of Natural History and the SA Museum of Transportation, brought me in as designer and soon was learning how to transform vast empty spaces into interactive exhibitions. Before long, I was invited to teach at the University where I earned a degree while working for San Antonio and for about 20 years I taught while continuing my education and serving corporate freelance clients, like River City Productions, Apple Computer, Microsoft, Thermon International, and others. Theater connections led to film opportunities as Production Designer, and or Director of Photography/Producer. Recently those mix of experiences led to mural commissions in which spaces are transformed with paint, light, sculptural and architectural elements into environments that set a mood and atmosphere for restaurants, corporate offices, hotels, and homes. There are nearly 50 murals scattered widely across the state of Texas created within the last 5 years since specializing in that type work and commissioned collector artworks. I live and work in beautiful Austin, TX.