More Denver street art from this past summer.
below: A blue astronaut



















More Denver street art from this past summer.
below: A blue astronaut



















The Allentown area of Buffalo is now home to some interesting murals. If you walk around the neighbourhood of Allen Street and College Street, this is what you might see:
below: ‘Voyage’ by Chuck Tingley, 2014. Commissioned by MyBuffaloPride and Loop Magazine and dedicated to Buffalo’s LGBT community and its allies. “In a world of scrutiny, we have the power to embrace our differences and use our inner light to guide us through the darkest of times.”

below: The corner of Allen Street and Wadsworth Street.

below: Nietzsche (German composer and philosopher) with the quote “Without music life would be a mistake”. When I googled to make sure that that was an actual quote, I found a quote from a letter that he wrote in 1888: “Music … frees me from myself, it sobers me up from myself, as though I survey the scene from a great distance … It is very strange. It is as though I had bathed in some natural element. Life without music is simply an error, exhausting, an exile.” The picture is on the side of a Nietzsche Bar.

below: It’s About Time, with three red fists on the upper part of the Allen Street Hardware Cafe. One is holding a yellow paint roller and one is holding a yellow spray paint can. The third fist is in the background and is holding either tools or paint brushes or markers? Painted by the Allen Street Street Art Collective (ASSA).

below: ‘Tribute to Spain Rodriguez’ by Ian DeBeer. Rodriguez was a comic artist who was born in Buffalo and the piece is largely about a fight that he got into in the bar across the street (once the Jamestown, now the Nietzsche).


below: When this mural was first completed, the grey parts were black. The large picture of the man that stands between the windows on the left and those in the middle, was quite distinct. Now, you might have missed him when you first looked at the picture.

below: The pink stripes in the background of the finger-like portions of this mural have also faded considerably since the mural was painted in 2013. “The work we do is not for the faint of heart”.


below: The last ASSA mural features an iron fireman. It’s a long horizontal mural with the words Iron and Fireman written in large letters over shapes that resemble flames.

below: Between the two words is a painting of a black ‘iron fireman’, a robot-like creature shovelling coal to feed the fire. This was the logo for the Iron Fireman, a coal stoker first developed in the 1920’s by Thomas Harry Banfield and Cyrus Jury Parker. A coal stoker mechanically feeds coal into a furnace or boiler – the Iron Fireman was a commercial success in the days when coal was a commonly used fuel.


below: One of the other interesting things about Buffalo is how the architecture is different here, or at least different from what I am used to in Toronto. The building with the green details on the front is the Puritan Building, built in 1893. It has recently been renovated with the Billy Club restaurant on the ground level and three storeys of apartments above. And yes, that is a purple house on the right. Many of the houses in the area are painted in bright and cheerful colours.

below: She’s almost disappeared.

below: But he’s as vibrant as ever.



Graffiti and street art seen on Princelet Street, another small street in Shoreditch.
A wall covered by street art and graffiti of all kinds – paint, stencils and pasteups – by many different artists. The children pointing their guns at the jester (pied piper?) is a painting by Otto Schade. The Muslim woman and white man at Stik people by street artist Stik. Three black and white posters, top middle, have slogans and pictures of people…. “Greed for oil causes war” features George W. Bush and Osama bin Laden. “Consumerism causes child labour” features an Asian child and a Barbie like doll. The third poster talks about debt dependence being addictive and shows a picture of the man from the Monopoly game.

below: Three portraits. Two women by voxx flank a gilded framed picture of Karl Lagerfeld by endless. Mr. Lagerfeld is holding a white cat as well as some Chanel perfume bottles. For some reason there is a small naked man in the picture too.

below: Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil paste-up by buenocaos aka Luis Bueno.

below: A red head by C3 sits on the ground beside a woman by iljin.

below: A ballerina by neoh



below: Coming apart on the wall.

below: Savant says to Collapse the Certainties

below: Some very sharp claws… chasing the worm?

below: And last, a small red figure high on a wall.
It seems to be trying to get something off of its head

As you can see, Bacon Street is E1 London. It’s another street that runs east from Brick Lane, this time just north of the overground tracks.

below: Two owls, mirror images of each other; “You know the day divides the night and night divides the day. Try 2 run, Try 2 hide, Break on through to the other side”

below: A portrait, a tribute to Charlie Burns 1915-2012. Charlie, The King of Bacon Street, was the oldest man on the street. He used to sit in the backseat of his daughter’s car and watch the world go past on nearby Brick Lane. The car was parked in front the family business, C.E. Burns & Sons, a second hand furniture store.

below: A pig on Bacon Street! How apt. It seems to have an admirer too!

below: A collection of paste ups on a wall including a life sized young woman with long flowing orange hair by Saki & B where B is for bitches. This piece is tamer than some of their other art as seen on instagram. The greenish woman’s portrait is by georgie, another London based artist.

below: A cat on the phone by d7606.

below: In the bottom corner, a small ‘Rebel’ Phoebe New York

below: Did you know that a serving size is 2010 skulls? A poster left behind by Arrex when he visited London from Portland Oregon.

below: I am not sure who painted the long necked white birds, but the portraits on the door are by Paul (Don) Smith and they were featured in a previous blog post.


Photos taken September 2016
On a wall in Sligo Ireland, written large, is a poem by William Butler Yeats. It is called “When You are Old” and it goes like this:

When you are old and grey and full of sleep,
And nodding by the fire, take down this book,
And slowly read, and dream of the soft look
Your eyes had once, and of their shadows deep;
How many loved your moments of glad grace,
And loved your beauty with love false or true,
But one man loved the pilgrim soul in you,
And loved the sorrows of your changing face;
And bending down beside the glowing bars,
Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled
And paced upon the mountains overhead
And hid his face amid a crowd of stars.
below: A mural that is a portrait of the poet, William Butler Yeats on the side of house undergoing renovations.

Some murals found in Fitzroy

below: By Plea and Dem 189, a mural

below: A mural dedicated to Adriano by Seth (Julien Mallard), Sirum, Dem 189, Plea, and Mike Maka on Rochester street.

below: Mural of a woman by Cam Scale.

below: portrait of Raimond Graita, Australian philosopher and writer.

below: Mural on the side of the Napier Hotel, rhinos by Putos.


below: Living the dream

below: Concentric blue patterns on the corner of George and Moor.

below: The belle and the bull-headed ranger, sizzling true story, real to life marionettes.

below: Leaving the brick untouched, blue wall mural by Deams


below: large tribute mural painted by DMA (Da Mad Art) crew: Kidparis, Peril and New2


Brunswick station is on the Metro rail line, about a twenty minute ride north of Melbourne station. This post represents some of the street art that I saw when I walked around the vicinity of the station. The Upfield bike path runs parallel to the train tracks in this area.



Along the wall of the Railway Hotel.
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Upfield letter loops says the toucan.
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baby guerilla
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Jesus in profile on the side of the Later Rain Chapel.
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