The lane narrows and breathes in blue, brick sweating history through layers of paint and intention. One wall holds a figure half-remembered, chalked in pale blues and bruised whites, a body leaning forward as if listening to the city through the masonry. It is not heroic, not monumental. It is tentative, almost apologetic, as though the mural knows it will be overwritten, flaked away, revised by another hand tomorrow. Graffiti cuts across its flank like a muttered aside, the city interrupting itself.
Across the lane, an eye watches. Large, unblinking, impossibly blue. It floats inside a rough black field, surrounded by drips, tags, stickers, and half-erased names. The eye does not judge; it simply observes. It has seen tourists pause, cameras lifted, and locals pass without looking up. It has seen rain turn pigment into rivulets and sun harden fresh paint into permanence that never truly lasts. Someone has scrawled over its face, someone else has added color at the edges, and still the eye remains, alert and calm amid the noise.
Hosier Lane is never finished. These murals speak to each other across the narrow stone corridor: the fragile human form and the enduring gaze, the body that fades and the eye that remembers. Strange, yes, but honest. They accept interruption. They accept decay. They accept that meaning here is provisional, layered, and communal.
Sony A7RV
FE 20-70mm f4 G
Linking Mural Monday


A metaphor for life in blues and words, Roentare!
ReplyDeleteHappy Festive seasons!
DeleteImpresionantes murales. Un ojo que vigila todo lo que sucede a su alrededor y en el otro mural, un joven parece asomarse desde lo alto para contemplar lo que pasa a sus pies. El color es increíble.
ReplyDeleteAbrazo
Big brother is watching
DeleteEl blau sempre perdura, tot i ser efímer.
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
True that with blue colour
DeleteA good cross between graffiti and a mural. I enjoy seeing the images.
ReplyDeleteIt is mostly graffiti in that lane these days
DeleteIt looks the eye sees e-v-e-r-y-t-h-i-n-g
ReplyDeleteThe second is rather scary, and very open to interpretation.
ReplyDeleteStrange, yes, but at least the blue is rich and attractive.
ReplyDeleteThe first one is different. Like them both.
ReplyDeleteKeeping an eye on the photographer.
ReplyDeleteAmazing mural works
ReplyDeleteYou really know how to say it wonderfully. I didn't find the mural immediately very beautiful, but through your words, it becomes something.
ReplyDeleteI like the second mural, it looks beautiful.
ReplyDeleteTake care, enjoy your day! Wishing you a happy Christmas week!
Hosier Lane is always changing :) Great murals. Thanks for participating in Monday Murals and have a wonderful Christmas and New Year.
ReplyDeleteCreo es un color que le va fantástico a estos murales y si es como nos dices es el color predominante en la calle.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
The blue eye sees all.
ReplyDelete