A crucified Jesus appears on what seems to be a fuse box outside a check cashing establishment in East Austin. To the right of the pay phone, the Virgin of Guadalupe is highlighted with mirror shards. A mirrored Gandhi is glued to the wall around to the left. Photo by BF Newhall
By Barbara Falconer Newhall
Austin has the reputation of being not your typical Texas town — it’s more liberal and more secular than the rest of this Bible Belt state. And it’s got the annual SXSW festival. Perceptions notwithstanding, there’s plenty of religion going on in Austin. You can see it from the street.
Catholics, Hindus, Buddhists, Mormons, Evangelicals — Austin has them all.Here’s what I spotted with my trusty point and shoot, sometimes without having to even get out of the car:
Whoever loved Guadalupe and Jesus enough to piece together their images on the front of this building seems to have a thing for Mahatma Gandhi as well. Notice the roses, a symbol of Mary. Photo by BF NewhallOutside the Hindu temple at Radha Madhav Dham, the Godhead expresses itself in the form of Radha Krishna. Devotees say Krishna, left, and Radha, right, are one and the same deity, but appear in two forms in order to pass on bliss through their playful interaction. Photo by BF NewhallGuadalupe at the Kleen Wash laundromat. The parking lot mural includes an airplane crashing into the Twin Towers on 9/11. And, yes, that’s my trusty point and shoot in the side mirror. Photo by BF NewhallThe Kleen Wash Virgin’s tearful gaze . . .. . . falls on this 9/11 scene. Photo by BF NewhallA sun-faded Guadalupe stands next to a front yard cross and a plaque honoring a soldier who died in the Korean War. Photo by BF NewhallAnother front yard Virgin Mary. One of many in East Austin. Photo by BF NewhallThis vast unadorned sanctuary is the main worship space at the new campus of the First Evangelical Free Church of Austin. Plenty of audio-visual equipment for praise music is scattered about. But the room itself doesn’t go in for architectural detail, imagery, art or even color. Some people like their religion this austere. As for me, I prefer the Kleen Wash parking lot . . . Photo by BF Newhall. . . or contemplating the feet of Radha Krishna. Photo by BF Newhall
Readers — Check out Ben’s blog and see what became of the Our Lady of Guadalupe mural I wrote about a couple of years ago. It once graced the wall of a laundromat in Austin; now the laundromat is a restaurant called the Laundromat.
Please feel free to share links to my posts with one and all and to quote briefly from them in your own writing, remembering, of course, to attribute the quote to me and to provide a link back to this site.
Please feel free to share links to my posts with one and all and to quote briefly from them in your own writing, remembering, of course, to attribute the quote to me and to provide a link back to this site.
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Thanks for these images! I used your photos of the KLEEN Laundry mural for my blogpost comparing the original to the new version at the Launderette restaurant.
http://www.heimsath.com/sacred-space-holy-place/our-lady-of-launderette-in-east-austin
Readers — Check out Ben’s blog and see what became of the Our Lady of Guadalupe mural I wrote about a couple of years ago. It once graced the wall of a laundromat in Austin; now the laundromat is a restaurant called the Laundromat.