A mural of late rapper Prodigy after it was defaced in Queensbridge Friday night. Artists spent hours restoring the work, only to have it vandalized again on Sunday night or Monday morning. View Full Caption Eli Lazare

LONG ISLAND CITY — A mural of late Mobb Deep rapper Prodigy that went up last week in Queensbridge was vandalized twice over the weekend — once on Friday night and then again after the artists spent hours restoring it Sunday.

Jeff Henriquez and Eli "Eli-Eos" Lazare painted the mural of the hip-hop legend — born Albert Johnson, who died last month at the age of 42 — on the side of nonprofit Urban Upbound's building at 13th Street and 40th Avenue across the street from the Queensbridge Houses, which featured prominently in Mobb Deep's music.

But Friday night, just a day after the mural was completed, someone covered it in white paint, according to Lazare. The artists then spent about 15 hours fixing the piece Sunday, restoring it back to its original look.

"We tried to turn a negative situation into a positive one for the community," Lazare told DNAinfo New York in an email at the time.

But by Monday morning, the mural had been defaced again — this time splattered with red paint, according to the artist and a representative for Urban Upbound.

The piece has since been painted over in solid black, a spokeswoman for the nonprofit said.

Lazare said he has no plans to repaint the mural.

Dam......again 😡#RIPPRODIGY #prodigymural A post shared by Ray Pearson (@itsraypearson) on Jul 10, 2017 at 6:05am PDT

The head of Urban Upbound, which operates a number of anti-poverty services, called the vandalism "a tragedy."

"It's unfortunate that a tribute has become a tragedy in our neighborhood," Bishop Mitchell Taylor, Urban Upbound's founder, said in a statement.

An NYPD spokeswoman did not immediately have information on either incident.

Lazare said he doesn't know who was behind the vandalism.

"This is just something that we did out of love," the artist said, noting the mural was intended "for the community, and for fans globally, to commemorate Prodigy, his legacy, his contributions."

Lazare said he hopes the vandalism doesn't escalate into a bigger problem.

"There's nothing you can do. Things happen," he said. "It's not worth it."