See every side of every news story
Published loading...Updated

A Mural Depicting "Mr. Giants" Shigeo Nagashima During His Active Years in Gaienmae Has Been Repainted to Depict His Appearance in Later Years as "Mr. Professional baseball." Mr. Shigeo Nagashima Grows Older Within the Mural | Omotesando & Harajuku Media

Summary by omoharareal.com
Along the Gaienmae intersection, the mural art company OVER ALLs, which paints art murals as news, has created a mural of the late Shigeo Nagashima from his active days at TOKYO Mural Square, which has repainted him as his later appearance as "Mister Professional Baseball". The exhibition is scheduled to run until the end of July 2025. OVER ALLs was founded by concept designer Takehito Akazawa and painter Yuki Yamamoto with the aim of "transform…
DisclaimerThis story is only covered by news sources that have yet to be evaluated by the independent media monitoring agencies we use to assess the quality and reliability of news outlets on our platform. Learn more here.

1 Articles

All
Left
Center
Right

Along the Gaienmae intersection, the mural art company OVER ALLs, which paints art murals as news, has created a mural of the late Shigeo Nagashima from his active days at TOKYO Mural Square, which has repainted him as his later appearance as "Mister Professional Baseball". The exhibition is scheduled to run until the end of July 2025. OVER ALLs was founded by concept designer Takehito Akazawa and painter Yuki Yamamoto with the aim of "transform…

Read Full Article
Think freely.Subscribe and get full access to Ground NewsSubscriptions start at $9.99/yearSubscribe

Bias Distribution

  • There is no tracked Bias information for the sources covering this story.
Factuality

To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

Ownership

To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage

omoharareal.com broke the news in on Tuesday, July 8, 2025.
Sources are mostly out of (0)

You have read 1 out of your 5 free daily articles.

Join millions of well-informed readers who use Ground to compare coverage, check their news blindspots, and challenge their worldview.