Public Murals

6 curated works in this category.

A wet pressure-glass canal underpass photographed at night, with layered blue and rust shell-script graffiti across a stained wall.

Legal Wall at Glass Current Underpass

New Atlantis municipal mural program · Reef Street Art Corridor

Tide glyphs, antenna arcs, and shell-script forms claim the pressure-glass underpass as public visual culture.

A black shrimp-folk protest mural on a weathered concrete underpass wall, with a figure throwing reef flowers and shed shell fragments in an arcing spray.

Molting Riot

New Atlantis post-stencil protest muralists · Reef Street Art Corridor

Flowers, shed shell, and civic refusal arc from a diagonal protest figure on a weathered underpass wall.

A dusk photograph of a long canal-side memorial wall covered with repeated shell-script name glyphs, pearl dots, and tide lines.

Names in the Current

Central Reef memorial wall painters · Reef Street Art Corridor

Repeated shell-script names become a civic current of remembrance along the canal edge.

An adult shrimp-folk figure crouches beside a child on a seawall mural, guiding clean shears through a black net that traps a red buoy above the words No Gods No Trawlers.

No Gods No Trawlers

New Atlantis stencil protest workshops · Reef Street Art Corridor

An intergenerational seawall stencil makes anti-extraction politics intimate, teaching resistance through the shared act of cutting a net.

A bright street-pop mural of four faceless shrimp-folk figures and a small reef runner companion circling a radiant pearl-current symbol on a turquoise wall.

Radiant Current Assembly

Keith Haring and 1980s street-pop mural language · Reef Street Art Corridor

A kinetic civic mural where dance, antenna rhythm, shell anatomy, and a reef runner companion turn public assembly into a shared current.

A small shrimp-folk child in black stencil reaches toward a red buoy carried away by sweeping current lines on a tide-stained canal wall.

There Is Always Current

New Atlantis canal-wall stencil workshops · Reef Street Art Corridor

A red buoy rides the current beyond a child's raised claw, holding hope and loss inside one canal-wall stencil.