A great hidden gem in Pisa. Tuttomondo is a large mural made by Keith Haring in 1989 on the outer wall of the rectory of the church of Sant'Antonio Abate in Pisa. The wall surface measures about 180 square meters (10 meters high by 18 meters wide); it is the last public work of the American artist before his death, as well as the only one designed to be permanent.
The painting portrays 30 dynamic and highly vital figures, concatenated and intertwed to symbolize the peace and harmony of the world. At the center of the mural is the "cross of Pisa", represented with four human figures united at the height of the waist. Higher up, a man holds a dolphin on his shoulders, on the left appear a dog, a monkey and a bird: man's bond with nature is indispensable for the harmony of the world. At the top right a pair of scissors, to symbolize the good, represented as the union of two human figures, cut a snake in two, to symbolize the evil. A woman with a child in her arms and a man with a TV instead of her head represent the contrast between the naturalness of life and the technology that upsets its rhythms. You can see at the top left a yellow person, like a matriosk, symbolizing that even a person with excess pounds of weight, in the rights and duties from within him, is the same as all the others. Two Siamese twins in the center, joined in the trunk, and two more on the right joined at shoulder height, are probably a condemnation of nuclear disasters. At the bottom, at street level, a yellow figure walking was depicted: it represents the public, a passer-by or a tourist, who dedicates a moment of reflection to the work, before continuing in the direction of theTower of Pisa. read more