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


