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40000 Years Mural
Photograph: Daniel Boud

Your guide to the best street art in Sydney

Get exploring and you'll soon realise some to the coolest canvases in our city are are on the side of a building

Stephen A Russell
Written by
Time Out editors
&
Stephen A Russell
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Now that we can properly explore our city once more, it's a great time to newly discover of reaquaint yourself with some of these quirky street art heroes dotted around Sydney. The streets are chock full of incredible examples you can admire for free while soaking up the sun.

Home to a super-cool community of artists ready to bring a splash of colour and a touch of provocation to any available wall, these works also make for the perfect Instagram selfie snap. And just like every block of real estate in Sydney, these urban canvases are hotly contested spaces. Getting there before they disappear is part of the thrill.

Here’s our pick of the must-dos you need to see to believe while they're still here. 

Also check out Sydney's best public art

Sydney's best street art

  • Art
  • Art

Street art legend Scottie Marsh is no stranger to political satire. Many of his most talked-about murals lampoon the likes of Scott Morrison, Tony Abbot, Gladys Berejiklian and disgraced religious leader Cardinal George Pell. His latest artistic hit job, which you can currently find down a laneway by 28 Pitt Street in Redfern, takes aim at NSW’s latest premier, whom Marsh has dubbed 'Domicron Perrottet' – and rather appropriately, the image has gone viral.

Find out more here.

 

  • Things to do
  • City Life

The city's collection of street art got a stellar new addition when a two-storey portrait of AFL legend Adam Goodes, of Adnyamathanha and Narungga heritage, appeared on the corner of Crown Street and Foveaux Street in Surry Hills. Created by Apparition Media, it took four artists using a cherry-picker just eight hours to create the incredibly detailed rendering of the former Sydney Swans player. Its appearance less than a week after the huge Black Lives Matter demonstrations that took place in cities and towns across Australia in 2020 added a powerful extra dimension to its creation.   

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I Have a Dream mural
Photograph: Cassandra Hannagan

I Have a Dream mural

Back in August 1991, artists Juilee Pryor and Andrew Aiken took to King Street in the dark of night with spraycans, ladders and a cherrypicker, creating Newtown’s most loved mural: a tribute to Martin Luther King and his eternal words. The pair had been denied approval to create the artwork twice, as the council wanted to reserve the site for advertising billboards. But police who were called to the site turned a blind eye and allowed the painting to continue. Since then, it’s been restored, was the subject of a documentary (which you can watch on YouTube), and was the star of a Coldplay music video (sorry, Chris Martin). Despite starting its life as an illegal work, it’s now heritage listed.

See the exact location here.

Renegades of Funk
Photograph: Anthony Geernaert

Renegades of Funk

A self-described outsider, Joel Veness’ new mural Renegades of Funk explores the idea of isolation as an artist and as human beings more broadly. Located behind the Sarah Cottier Gallery in Paddington, on the corner of Cecil lane and Sutherland Avenu, the 70-foot mural takes its title from the track by American rock band Rage Against the Machine. The figures depicted draw on Easter Island’s intriguing giant sculptures. Their remoteness is a metaphor for this work. All looking the same way except one, it’s this face, the ‘renegade’ that bucks against the crowd.

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Bondi Beach graffiti wall
Photograph: Ben Neutze

Bondi Beach graffiti wall

The long concrete wall that runs along the back of the south end of Sydney’s most famous beach has been a canvas for street artists since the 1970s. But things have changed a lot since then: it’s now regulated with the council approving a rotating roster of leading artists (mostly local but a handful of famous international stars) who get to take over their allocated segment of four or eight metres for a limited period. teh spot courted controversy recnetly when ELK's Border Force mural, depicting heavily armed police, was defaced. 

See the exact location here.

  • Art
  • Art

Ever on the pulse with his politically charged, properly beautiful murals, Future Shaper Scottie Marsh is ever-ready to use his portraiture power for good, and during lockdown in 2021 he teamed up with his Marrickville neighbours, Hawke’s Brewing Co, to create a likeness of our most famously boozy prime minister, Bob Hawke. The artwork is topped off with the slogan: “Every jab gets us closer to the pub”. As NSW raced closer to vaccination targets, Hawkey's schooner glass was filled up, until at a full glass, we were allowed back to the pub once more. 

 

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Portrait of Jenny Munro
Photograph: Ken Leanfore

Portrait of Jenny Munro

Melbourne artist Matt Adnate painted this portrait of Aboriginal rights activist and Wiradjuri elder Jenny Munro in June 2016 onto the eastern side of Novotel Darling Square as part of a commission by ANZ. Munro founded the Aboriginal Tent Embassy in Redfern in 2014, in protest against the commercial redevelopment of the Block, and was part of the group that eventually secured a deal for affordable housing for Indigenous families. The six-storey high portrait took five days to complete. If you look closely, you can see a mountain landscape painted in Munro’s eyes.

See the exact location here.

Housing Bubble
Photograph: Daniel Boud

Housing Bubble

What does Sydney’s much discussed and debated housing bubble actually look like? It’s probably a bit uglier than this whimsical painting by Sydney artist Fintan Magee, which can be dound on the side of the Urban Hotel on Enmore Road, Newtown. Fake news or not, we’re still big fans of this work.

See the exact location here.

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40,000 Years Mural
Photograph: Daniel Boud

40,000 Years Mural

This mural, showing scenes of Aboriginal life from the last 40,000 years, has greeted visitors to Redfern as they arrive at the station and exit onto Lawson Street since 1983. It was originally painted by a group of artists led by Carol Ruff – including Colin Nugent, Tracey Moffatt, Joe Geia, Avril Quill, Kristina Nehm and Charlie Aarons – and  was restored to its original glory by the Redfern Station Community Group in 2018. Stretching from ancient times, up to colonisation and beyond, there are portraits of community members such as Aunty Mona Donnelly, and one panel showing the 1979 Redfern All Blacks rugby league team.

See the exact location here.

Scott Marsh's bin chicken mural
Photograph: Daniel Boud | Scott Marsh's bin chicken mural

Scott Marsh's bin chicken mural

Scott Marsh has been one of Sydney’s most controversial street artists in recent years, thanks to his fiercely political works, including one showing former NSW premier Mike Baird in the hands of the gambling industry, one of former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull doing a shady deal with mining giant Adani, and another featuring former prime minister Tony Abbott and cardinal George Pell in a particularly provocative pose. But it was his painting of George Michael as a saint that became the subject of great scandal when it was vandalised during the marriage equality plebiscite in 2017.

The Chippendale mural we’ve picked – appropriately located in Teggs Lane, an alley full of rubbish bins – isn’t one of his more politically charged works, but it is an unlikely tribute to a true Sydney icon: the bin chicken aka ibis.

See the exact location here.

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May Lane, St Peters
Photograph: Ben Neutze

May Lane, St Peters

This art project has been running since it was launched by Tugi Balog in 2000, bringing a range of graffiti artists to a formerly nondescript back alley near St Peters station. Yes, it’s a great Instagram backdrop, but it also has some serious artistic kudos – works developed by artists in May Lane have toured extensively to galleries around the country.

See the exact location here.

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