Showing posts with label brunswick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label brunswick. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Brunswick St signs for Sign2

 


The wall might once have carried a certain rough elegance — the stern face of Ned Kelly staring out from faded stickers like a ghost of rebellion lingering in the laneway. But around him the surface had become crowded with restless layers of tagging, torn posters, and spray-painted declarations, each fighting for space and attention.

Music flyers for nearby gigs curled at the edges in the damp air, pasted one over another until the bricks beneath could barely breathe. The wall no longer felt merely decorated; it had become a kind of urban bulletin board where art, commerce, boredom, and defiance collided without permission. In places it resembled vandalism, in others a strange form of civic unrest — the city talking loudly to itself in paper scraps, glue stains, and hurried signatures before the rain slowly washed them all toward oblivion.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G


There are two certainties in life: death and taxes. Labor’s budget proposals have combined the two.


Linking Sign2

Monday, May 18, 2026

Mural reflection at Sunshine Lane in Brunswick for Mural Monday

 


On Sunshine Lane in Brunswick, the mural spoke in a language of repetition — humble blue patterns marching across the wall like fragments of tiled memory. Beneath it sat an abandoned chair, painted in almost the exact shade of weary cobalt, as though it had quietly surrendered itself to the artwork behind it.

Rainwater had gathered in the uneven lane below, turning the gutter into a trembling mirror. The chair, the mural, the peeling textures of brick and paint all dissolved into the sloshy reflection, wavering with every ripple and passing breeze. What was ordinary by daylight became strangely cinematic — a forgotten corner of the city briefly transformed into an accidental study of colour, solitude, and symmetry.



Sony A7RV

FE 14mm f1.8 GM



Linking Mural Monday

Monday, April 6, 2026

Brunswick Mural Melb for Mural Monday

 



In Brunswick, a wall becomes a threshold between the seen and the felt.

Two figures rise from the concrete, their faces shaped in quiet greys, as if memory itself had learned to take form. The woman’s expression is gentle yet searching, her gaze drifting beyond the street; beside her, the man carries a stillness edged with thought, his eyes holding something unspoken. Together, they seem suspended in a moment that does not pass.

Around them, colour breaks loose—streaks and shards of brightness cutting through restraint, like emotion insisting on being heard. Above, a luminous geometry unfolds, almost celestial, a suggestion of order hovering over the restless energy below. It feels like a mind opening, or perhaps a universe briefly revealing its hidden pattern.

The mural bears the quiet signature of CTO—Peter Seaton—whose work often lingers in this space between precision and instinct, portrait and abstraction. Here, the wall does more than display; it breathes, it questions, it holds a tension between calm and chaos.

And as the city moves past—cars, footsteps, fleeting glances—the mural remains, watching without urgency, as though it has all the time in the world to be understood.


Sony A7RV

FE 20-70mm f4 G



Linking Mural Monday




Monday, February 13, 2023

Murals of two portraits in Brunswick, Melbourne

 


Love this pair of murals


Sunshine Lane, Brunswick


Sony A7RIV

FE 14mm f1.8 GM


Linking Mural Monday




Monday, October 10, 2022

Mural Art Reflection in puddle - Mural Monday and Reflection event


 Funny I am starting to take photos for the themes of weekday events. 

Brunswick, Melbourne.

It was an urban exploration that has allowed us to find more graffiti. 


Sony A7RIV

FE 14mm 1.8 GM


This is in participation of Monday Mural Event and Weekend Reflection Event













Sunday, September 22, 2013

Coffee time


A little twist to image. In Brunswick. Lucky I did not get robbed or kicked. Same casual people.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Brunswick Street



Looks rusty and retro. Brunswick street.