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Showing results for "Grass Surface"

A weathered brick wall in Portland's Concordia neighborhood transforms into an impromptu gallery of street art and wheat-paste installations. The eclectic collection features a skeletal figure holding a skull, a contemplative portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. in prayer, and various stickers and paste-ups creating a layered urban palimpsest. Muted daylight illuminates the textured brick surface while the quiet residential street stretches into the background, capturing the authentic spirit of Northeast Portland's artistic community.
Street art adorns a brick wall along Northeast Killingsworth Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood, showcasing the area's vibrant grassroots artistic expression.
Urban Canvas: Concordia Street Art Gallery
B
A vibrant street mural dominates the left wall of a narrow alleyway in Portland's Division Street district, featuring a striking portrait of a woman surrounded by explosive botanical motifs in deep purples, fiery oranges, and electric greens. The composition creates a dramatic contrast between the colorful street art and the sun-bleached concrete surfaces, with string lights overhead adding an intimate atmosphere to this urban arts corridor. Afternoon light casts sharp shadows across the walkway, while the alley opens to reveal glimpses of the neighborhood's characteristic residential architecture beyond.
Street art transforms a Division Street alleyway in Portland's Richmond neighborhood into an outdoor gallery space.
Urban Mural Art in Portland Alleyway
C
A verdant pathway winds between walls transformed into an explosion of street art in Portland's Concordia neighborhood. Lush ivy cascades down weathered brick while a kaleidoscope of stickers, murals, and graffiti creates a living gallery along Northeast Killingsworth Street. The overcast Pacific Northwest sky filters soft light through leafy branches, casting the intimate alley in contemplative shadows that highlight the raw creativity adorning every available surface.
Street art transforms a moss-covered alley into an outdoor gallery in Portland's Concordia district.
Urban Canvas in Portland's Concordia Alleyway
B
A weathered utility box on Northeast Alberta Street becomes an anarchic gallery of layered street art, where purple-toned portraits clash with geometric abstractions and political messaging. The chaotic paste-up collage contrasts sharply with the clean geometric mural on an adjacent wooden fence, creating a visual dialogue between controlled and spontaneous urban expression. Overhanging foliage from mature trees filters the daylight, casting dappled shadows across this Portland street art tableau.
Layered street art transforms a utility box into urban canvas along Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood.
Urban Canvas: Alberta Street Sticker Collision
B
Tomás Valladares of the Portland Street Art Alliance gestures toward vibrant blue graffiti adorning a dumpster while leading an engaged group of young adults through Portland's Central Eastside. The afternoon scene captures the intersection of grassroots cultural education and urban expression, as participants listen attentively against a backdrop of industrial buildings and power lines. Sunlight illuminates the weathered asphalt and eclectic mix of street art that transforms utilitarian infrastructure into canvases of creative rebellion.
Street art guide Tomás Valladares explains graffiti techniques to tour participants beside a heavily tagged blue dumpster in Portland's Central Eastside district.
Urban Art Guide Central Eastside Portland
C
A provocative wheat paste poster adhered to a weathered concrete wall in Portland's Central Eastside features a black and white portrait of a smiling man in a suit and tie, adorned with occult symbols including a pentagram and inverted cross. The text "Worship Stan" appears beneath the portrait in bold white letters against a black banner. Adjacent torn paper fragments create textural contrast against the gritty urban surface, capturing the raw aesthetic of guerrilla street art in the Grand Avenue Historic District.
Subversive wheat paste art transforms a concrete wall into commentary in Portland's Central Eastside industrial neighborhood.
Worship Stan Wheat Paste Street Art
C
A narrow snow-dusted alleyway in Portland's Alberta Arts District transforms into an impromptu gallery where countless stickers and tags blanket electrical utility meters and concrete walls. The densely layered street art creates a vibrant patchwork of color against weathered gray surfaces, while fresh snow accumulates along the walkway edges. The perspective draws the eye down the corridor between buildings, where utility infrastructure becomes the canvas for an ever-evolving display of urban expression.
Street art stickers and graffiti cover utility meters in a snow-touched alley on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood.
Alberta Street Alley Sticker Art Gallery
B
A provocative stencil graffiti piece adorns weathered plywood covering a boarded storefront on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The artwork depicts Donald Trump wearing Mickey Mouse ears with the bold declaration "you are fired" and "vote nov 3rd" beneath, rendered in stark black against the warm coral-toned wood grain. Natural light illuminates the urban commentary, highlighting both the texture of the protective boarding and the anonymous artist's political statement during what appears to be election season.
Political street art combines Disney iconography with electoral messaging on a boarded business in Portland's Richmond district.
Fired Donald Trump Mickey Mouse Graffiti
B
A dense collage of street art stickers, posters, and small artworks blankets a weathered brick wall in Portland's Alberta Arts District. Hundreds of pieces overlap in chaotic layers—from hand-drawn skulls and cartoon characters to political statements and artist tags—creating a living gallery of underground expression. The warm amber light of golden hour bathes the installation, while wild vegetation creeps up from below, suggesting the organic growth of this impromptu public art space.
A vibrant wall of layered street art stickers and posters creates an impromptu gallery in Portland's Alberta Arts District.
Urban Street Art Collage on Portland Wall
C
A weathered electrical utility meter on Northeast Alberta Street becomes an impromptu gallery, its dark green surface completely obscured by dozens of street art stickers creating a dense urban collage. The eclectic mix includes hand-drawn characters, band names, political messages, and underground art collective tags layered in organic chaos. Two circular meter faces peek through the accumulated adhesive artwork, while the surrounding cream-colored wall and storefront window frame this testament to Portland's grassroots creative culture in the Concordia neighborhood.
Street art stickers transform a utility meter into vibrant urban collage on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia district.
Sticker Collage Transforms Alberta Street Utility Box
B
A weathered utility pole on Southeast Division Street serves as an urban canvas, its surface layered with the ghostly remnants of countless promotional posters. The textured bark of accumulated paper and adhesive creates an archaeological record of neighborhood commerce, while a public transit bus and red brick buildings frame this intersection of transient advertising and permanent infrastructure. Sharp afternoon shadows cast dramatic lines across the concrete sidewalk, emphasizing the temporal nature of street-level marketing in Portland's Richmond district.
Layers of promotional poster remnants transform a Division Street utility pole into an inadvertent archive of neighborhood advertising history.
Palimpsest of Portland Street Promotions
C
Four photocopied flyers create a makeshift gallery on weathered olive-green wood in Portland's Concordia neighborhood. The black and white prints capture pandemic zeitgeist through humor and hope: a smiling teacher from a Polaroid labeled "LA TEACHER," silhouettes maintaining distance under "STAYING APART ALWAYS TOGETHER," a cartoon astronaut proclaiming "DON'T PANIC," and "EL POST MAN" featuring a postal worker and truck. The grassroots display transforms ordinary street surface into community commentary during COVID-19 lockdown.
Community-created pandemic street art adorns a green wall in Portland's Concordia neighborhood, blending humor and solidarity during COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
Pandemic Street Art in Portland's Concordia
B
A densely layered brick wall transforms into an urban canvas along Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Vernon neighborhood. Hundreds of stickers, wheat paste art, and small-scale street art pieces create a chaotic yet harmonious collage, featuring skulls, portraits, text fragments, and counterculture imagery. Golden afternoon light filters through tree branches, casting dappled shadows across the weathered surface while illuminating the vibrant pinks, blues, and earth tones of this organic gallery. The composition captures the raw authenticity of Portland's grassroots creative culture.
A sticker-bombed wall on Northeast Alberta Street showcases Portland's vibrant street art culture in the Vernon neighborhood.
Street Art Tapestry on Alberta Avenue
C
A weathered green corner building in Portland's Concordia neighborhood bears the layered markings of pandemic expression, where spray-painted messages and stickers create a dense palimpsest of social commentary. White and colored graffiti tags intermingle with philosophical fragments like "every thing reminds me of you" and "GOD ISNT REAL," while stickers and paste-ups punctuate the textured surfaces. Dappled sunlight filters through overhanging trees, casting gentle shadows across the urban canvas that speaks to isolation, connection, and the democratic nature of street art during lockdown.
Graffiti and street art accumulated on a corner building in Portland's Concordia district during the COVID-19 pandemic, creating layers of anonymous social expression.
Pandemic Graffiti Transforms Portland Corner Building
B
Travis Fields, known as Campographic, crouches beside a concrete wall at Clay Creative Building in southeast Portland's Hosford-Abernethy neighborhood, spray can in hand as he works on a bold mural. The artist, wearing a light gray hoodie, gazes upward at his evolving creation of flowing magenta, orange, and crimson forms against weathered concrete. Dormant winter grasses frame the intimate creative moment, capturing the meditative focus of urban artistry in progress.
Street artist Travis Fields (Campographic) adds vibrant details to his mural at Portland's Clay Creative Building.
Street Artist Creates Vibrant Mural in Portland
B
Under the warm glow of fluorescent ceiling lights, patrons gather at the worn formica counter of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Portland's Saint Johns neighborhood. A bearded man in a black cap and vest leans forward in animated conversation with a woman in a bright yellow jacket, her long gray hair catching the light as she gestures expressively. The intimate counter scene captures the timeless ritual of neighborhood dining, where scattered newspapers, coffee cups, and the cluttered backdrop of a working kitchen create an authentic portrait of blue-collar community life.
Regular customers share morning conversation at the counter of Pattie's Home Plate Café in Saint Johns, Portland.
Morning Conversations at Saint Johns Diner Counter
A
At the Taylor Electric Blocks in Portland's Hosford-Abernethy neighborhood, two artists crouch beside a vibrant mural in progress, spray cans in hand as they add fresh layers of green, blue, and pink aerosol paint to the collaborative canvas. The scene captures the intimate, concentrated energy of live street art creation, with onlookers gathered in the background beneath the industrial brick facade of the surrounding buildings. The demonstration unfolds on concrete, where the temporary wooden panel serves as both easel and public art platform.
Galen Malcolm and fellow artist collaborate on a live spray painting demonstration during a Portland Street Art Alliance tour in the Hosford-Abernethy district.
Street Artists Create Collaborative Mural in Portland
C
A weathered dumpster on Northeast Alberta Street serves as an anarchic canvas for layered street art, dominated by a striking composition of fake hundred-dollar bills and a green skull wearing glasses above a purple-sketched torso. The winter scene captures Portland's Concordia neighborhood in its raw urban poetry, where the mundane infrastructure transforms into underground galleries. Snow dusts the pavement while pedestrians navigate past this collision of anti-capitalist imagery and guerrilla creativity.
Street artists transform a dumpster into social commentary with dollar bill collages and skull imagery on Northeast Alberta Street in Portland's Concordia neighborhood.
Money Dreams and Street Art Alberta
A
Two costumed cyclists pause beneath the glowing chain-link boundary of Colonel Summers Community Garden during Portland's Drop Out Prom Ride, part of the city's celebrated Pedalpalooza festival. The man on the right sports a checkered blazer and illuminated shutter shades while holding what appears to be a beer, embodying the event's playful anti-establishment spirit. Neon lighting from decorated bicycles casts an electric blue-green glow across the nighttime scene, creating an atmosphere where formal wear meets cycling counterculture.
Participants in Portland's Drop Out Prom Ride gather at Colonel Summers Community Garden during Pedalpalooza 2019, blending formal attire with bicycle culture in a glowing nighttime celebration.
Drop Out Prom Ride Portland Pedalpalooza
C
A custom-built wooden takeout station reveals the adaptive spirit of Portland's Eliot neighborhood during COVID-19. Two service windows frame 'ORDER' and 'PICK-UP' signage against a backdrop of eclectic street art featuring skulls, cartoon characters, and vibrant murals. Hand-lettered menus and community notices paper the interior surfaces, while winter trees glimpse through the glass, capturing the intimate resilience of local restaurant culture during unprecedented times.
Lottie and Zula's converted takeout counter showcases Portland's restaurant adaptation during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Eliot neighborhood.
Pandemic Pivot at Lottie and Zula's
B

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