On the corner of Chapel and Johnston in Fitzroy there was once a tiger mural painted by Lauren YS (seen in December 2018). It was a tiger with sharp teeth and a long red tongue. Its tail curled around two tattooed faceless women dressed in red.



On the corner of Chapel and Johnston in Fitzroy there was once a tiger mural painted by Lauren YS (seen in December 2018). It was a tiger with sharp teeth and a long red tongue. Its tail curled around two tattooed faceless women dressed in red.



Two of the walls that enclose the grounds of Terra Sancta College in Amman are covered with street art. Most of it was painted as part of Baladk 2016 (art festival). One of the walls features the red and white “name tags”, you know the ones that say “Hello, my name is….”. The first one though has “city” instead of “name” because the general theme of Baladk 2016 was ‘Our City – The influence of the City upon yourself as an artist’.
below: Hello my city is Aman by aster.93


below: Black letters on the left by Kels aka Ali Amir and the red text (and DHAP Fam) are the mark of Deyaa Rambo


below: Yo! My name is Yaratun aka Yara Hindawi

below: A name tag painted by DeevGraf aka Abdelrahman Hasan


Our friendship is magic – Wedad and Eslam
below: Bully Bully Bully (more of theirs below) Mike V. Derderian

below: A long necked bird (duck? goose?)

below: A small green stenciled duck


below: The City is so Empty is the work of Hamza Al Salhi

below: The octopus was painted by Ibrahim Tonnerieux

below: A portrait of a young woman by Suhaib Attar, 2019

below: “Our City” graffiti by Ammar Sinan (siner) and Wize One aka Wesam Shadid

below: On the left, the pink design is by Yazan Hija, aka arthudz. On the right, piano keys over her head, Metallica Load in her ear, and leaves for hair, by Suha Sultan

below: …With an addition by Joanna Anwar Madanat


When the silence gets old, make your own noise.


below: another Wize One contribution


below: He’s thinking… or just resting his head? Street art by Miramar Al Nayyar

below: His hand and wrist obscure older street art.

below: On the left, an Arabic verse by Dina Fawakhiri

below: by Hind Al Far

More information on Baladk 2016
***
As an aside, I saw one other Bully mural elsewhere in the city. This knight in armor seemed to be on its own.


There is a path that runs along the shore of the Atlantic Ocean, leading to the new Hassan 2 mosque. Beside the path is a wall that has been painted with street art. When I walked here in October 2019, these are the murals that I saw. I have only been able to identify some of the artists.

below: “Oxymoron” by iramo aka Iramo Samir

below: Like all the murals on this wall, this one is looking out to sea


below: A man in a purple camo hat, by Majid aka Majid El Bahar

below: Casablanca plus text (artist’s tag) by TRUST

below: By Moka 187


below: Would you kiss a shark? Even one that claims to love his mom?

below: Close up of a man’s eyes and nose, signed as Senzoclouds aka Senzo or Mr. Clouds.



The pictures on this page are all of paste-ups from artist SOBR‘s project, “It’s Time to Dance”. They feature life size images of people dancing, alone, in couples, or in groups along with a lot of glitter. There pictures were taken in August 2018 at which point the paper had been on the wall for a few months.
below: They share the wall space with a lot of other pasteups such as this chicken – dancing with the chicken? Or maybe not because this chicken seems to have lost her head.

below: Party time!


below: The young girl in pink and purple is a paste up by TONA

below: Even the little green guy is dancing but I doubt that it’s because of happiness. His pockets are empty and he’s precariously balanced on a Euro.

On West 16th in Pilsen, there is a bridge where S. Blue Island Avenue goes under the railway tracks. On the west is a mural featuring five women that was painted in 2016 by Sam Kirk and Sandra Antongiorgi to balance the “Galeria del Barrio” across the street. “Galeria del Barrio” consists of a long row of different coloured men’s faces that portray different emotions. This is the oldest mural in the area and was originally created by Aurelio Diaz with the help of 20 children from St. Procopius Church in 1976. It was restored in 2016 by Sam Kirk. The men’s heads at the west end are 10 feet tall.
On the west side:


On the east side:




More information about the mural
While walking around the city of Plovdiv I found a lot of great street art.

below: A floating candle in the night sky,

below: Behind the Drama Theatre in Plovdiv, on one of its bright red walls, is a large mural by Bozko. Is this older man in a jester outfit a political statement?

below: These red walls were also painted with a large horizontal mural (next three photos). A woman sleeps among purple flowers. Is she dreaming of skulls and hands? Is it a nightmare?

below: As much of the mural as I could get in one photo.

below: Another woman sleeps but with books as her pillow. Transported into dreamland by the words she’s read.

below: Bloody Romance by Ernaste Nasimo

below: Another painting by Nasimo called “The Chain Rockers”. It looks like he has just broken the chain with his teeth. Behind the head is an open book with words written on the pages. On the left is “raja-vidya raja-guhyam pavitram idam uttamam pratyaksavagamam dharmyam su-sukham kartum avyayam”. On the right is the partial translation of this Krishna text into English: “This knowledge is the king of education, the most secret of all secrets. It is the purest knowledge, and because it gives direct”

below: Watermelon seeds make the eyes and nose of the watermelon face… but then he eats the watermelon? Two paintings by Viktoria Georgieva and Nikolay Bozhinov, aka Mouse and Nikkawhy

below: A boy with a large black bird painted on a box.

below: Four eyes, one of which is the handle for the box.

below: Cupid in browns pointing his arrow at an unsuspecting victim.

below: Bare toes, blue jeans, and a striped sweater. A comb in one pocket and a little critter in the other.

below: Some whimsical, cartoon-like characters on a blue cloud.

below: She’s wearing flowers in her hair – is that hair being held up with chopsticks?

below: A very long tongue from a happy frog wraps itself around a dragonfly.

below: My Bulgarian is non-existent so I’m not sure what this says. Covered in tattoos and puffing on red smoke as he takes a rest on his bike.

below: And last, a quiet cup of tea by the mail box in the shadow of little triangular flags hanging across the street.

Chopper Lane is a small dead end alley that runs off Perry Street in Collingwood. This bright blue mural is at the end of the lane.
below: I can’t read the signature at the bottom right, any ideas?

Text in the mural:
“I meet love and I lose it,
I sense it, I reject it,
I pursue it,
I find it in small things
Like
When I stop to look at the sky
And I wonder
About You”

below: The signature at the bottom right of this one is utama.co and lingerid. Unfortunately, I cut off the signature on the left (partially visible here).


below: One Mob

below: Mural of a sugar glider, a small nocturnal possum.

I’m not sure if it’s still Chopper Lane after it crosses Perry Street, but you can continue walking north.
below: Looking across Perry Street from north to south.

below: On the paper it is written: “Sometimes a deal with the devil is better than no deal at all.” Even if it’s the devil from the TV show “Futurama”



below: A knight in no armour but a helmet spearing open a spray paint can.



below: I’m not sure it’s “street art” but it was too cute not to include here.

below: A closer look.


below: Two pasteups on a pole


below: Oh! It looks like I was spotted!


If you walk to the end of the lanes, you’ll find yourself on Bedford Street where there is another mural by Lingerid.

A large mural by Cyrielle (aka Cyrielle Tremblay) & Poni (aka Hilda Palafox) can be seen in a small parking lot on Park Ave in Montreal. It was painted as part of this year’s MuralFest.

below: Two women tending a garden, watering, and planting trees under the night sky while it snows on the mountain top.

below: A television family. The rabbit ears are quaint.

below: Crying eyes


below: Throwing each other away. Are any of us really disposable?

below: A more positive message – butterflies and love

below: I suspect that it’s a protest that is political in nature but because of my lack of Greek I’m not sure.

below: I think that this is the face that is stenciled the most. Che Guevara may have died in 1967 but his face lives on.

Athens has lots of concrete pillars on its streets and many have graffiti on them. The next few photos are some of those pillars.


