In Fitzroy, where brick walls wear their history like layered skin, the lower half of the building is restless—tagged, crossed, rewritten in the hurried dialect of passing hands. Names bloom and decay overnight, a palimpsest of intent and erasure.
But above that fevered ground, the mural remains—untouched, as if protected by some unspoken truce. It floats there, aloof from the scrawl below, a suspended dream in cobalt and electric blue. The forms dissolve into one another: figures that are not quite human, not quite myth, drifting through a sky that feels chemically altered, as though the painter had stepped briefly outside the gravity of ordinary sight.
It has the quality of a vision—something glimpsed rather than constructed. Lines bend where they should hold, colours hum with an unnatural clarity, and the whole composition leans toward delirium without ever collapsing into chaos. One could believe the artist painted it in a state of ecstatic distortion, chasing a private constellation only they could see.
And yet it endures. While the street below mutates daily, this upper world remains intact—a blue fantasy hovering just out of reach, like a thought too vivid to be forgotten, yet too strange to be fully understood.
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Linking Mural Monday

That is a fine looking mural, but the graffiti painters have tagged the street level where they can reach with their incoherent scribbling. I suspect the mural used to cover the whole building, but that art is now gone. There is a profound sadness in your photo.
ReplyDeleteSad for sure. One might observe the declining standard in our society
DeleteThat is a busy, dizzy mural. Someone - probably many people - had great fun with that.
ReplyDeleteThese people probably had too much free time collecting doles
Delete...a free wall?
ReplyDeleteI think the vendor paid an artist to paint the building but taggers destroyed it
DeleteDe no haber sido por "esos artistas tan respetuosos con las obras ajenas" estoy seguro que luciría un mural de una belleza sorprendente.
ReplyDeleteSaludos.
I would love the untainted version
DeleteUn buen mural no respetado por los vándalos.
ReplyDeleteVandalism is protected in this country
DeleteHow interesting: underground and upperclass :-)
ReplyDeleteAlmost like it was painted in a fever dream. The very top one looks like an alien being born. Or maybe a space walker tethered to his spaceship.
ReplyDeleteTrue! I couldnt really get it still
DeleteToda una esquina llena de grafitis sin dejar adivinar ni un solo detalle de ese edificio. Es una maravilla de ver. Buena fotografía.
ReplyDeleteAbrazo
Certainly is an amazing mural.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
When was the mural painted? I ask because I haven't been in that part of the world since the first Covid lockdown .
ReplyDeleteI suspect after 2021. It is still there.
DeleteAt least part of the mural is too high for taggers to reach. I quite like the work.
ReplyDeleteIt stands out
DeleteWow--- Amazing energy, but it takes up too much visual space-- The artists say, here it is, and I don't care whether you like it or not-- live with it!
ReplyDeleteCertainly looks a different type of mural.
ReplyDeleteYou say it and it is true: this work absolutely has quality. Still, I find it a shame about the frayed remnants
ReplyDeleteThe top part looks great, what a pity about the tagging. Thanks for participating in Monday Murals.
ReplyDeletewow amazing murals, Great click.
ReplyDeleteThat is quite a juxtaposition.
ReplyDeleteIt is a shame the tags ruined the lower half of the mural.
ReplyDeleteTake care, have a great day! Have a wonderful week ahead.
Sortosament els que van fer pintades, no portaven escales...
ReplyDeleteSalutacions!
The contrast between the busy street level and that serene blue mural really captures the unique spirit of the neighborhood. It is fascinating how some art seems to command a special kind of respect that keeps it preserved high above the daily changes of the city.
ReplyDeleteThe taggers never stop.
ReplyDeleteIt looks great and love the sky :-D
ReplyDeleteIt's too bad the taggers ruined the bottom section. i like the top and the colours.
ReplyDeleteI guess taggers in Melbourne don't abide by the "unspoken law" among graffiti artists that murals are NOT to be tagged out of respect for other street artists?
ReplyDelete