Food & Drink Food & Drink
ambitious Los Angeles Lead Editor Eater Los Angeles Matthew Kang Editor of Eater Mona Holmes Netflix Street Food

Brick & Dough Mural Update: Art, Change, and Restaurant Vision

Brick & Dough Mural Update: Art, Change, and Restaurant Vision

Brick & Dough updated its mural after 5 years, aiming to align the art with their food and customer experience. The decision sparks debate about subjective art and restaurant evolution. Restaurant vision, mural change.

” I had actually never been to Brick & Dough till I was employed to paint the mural. When I arrived, the wall had already been repainted over in light gray and I had not been associated with the choice to transform the previous artwork.”

Mural Change Sparks Debate

Others protected Flaum, with one claiming, “Huge downgrade but not the musicians fault she was hired to do HER art. it’s the proprietor of the restaurants fault for PAYING to have that masterpiece covered,” someone stated.

Desire for Change After 5 Years

“I assume that art is always subjective, yet individuals who seem to have actually enjoyed it, they’re not seeing it constantly, and we were,” he claimed. “So for nearly five years, we’re seeing it each day and I believe that after a little while, we just desired some adjustment.”

Restaurant’s Rationale for Mural Update

“We appointed the original mural over 5 years earlier and were pleased to show it,” Rosenthal told The Message of the initial art. “The recent upgrade was just about bringing our building in line with the food and experience we’ve put ourselves right into every day. There was no disrespect in the decision– just a wish to develop. We boast of both chapters and thankful to the area that continues to sustain us.”

1 art change
2 Brick & Dough
3 mural art
4 restaurant design
5 restaurant vision
6 subjective art