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Showing results for "Winter Pavement"

Painter and muralist Wetiko stands confidently before his completed dog portrait mural at the Clay Creative Building in Portland's Hosford-Abernethy neighborhood. The artist, wearing a golden mustard beanie and black puffer jacket, poses against the striking backdrop of his hyperrealistic canine artwork painted on pink-washed concrete walls. Winter's remnants are visible in patches of snow scattered across the wet pavement, while bare tree branches frame the scene under overcast Pacific Northwest skies.
Muralist Wetiko poses with his completed dog portrait mural at Clay Creative Building in Southeast Portland.
Muralist Wetiko With Dog Portrait Mural
B
Hundreds of identical Santa Claus figures wearing black face masks stretch across a wet pavement in Portland's Sellwood-Moreland neighborhood, their red suits glowing under amber streetlight. The surreal installation creates mesmerizing rows of pandemic-era holiday figures reflected on the glossy asphalt. Through large windows above, warm interior lighting and string lights twinkle like distant stars, contrasting the solemn uniformity of the masked Christmas army below.
Chris Willis' "Santa Clones" installation features hundreds of masked Santa figures arranged in formation on Southeast Bybee Boulevard in Portland, Oregon, creating a haunting commentary on Christmas during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Masked Santa Army in Portland Winter
B
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
A mint green community refrigerator stands prominently on the sidewalk along Northeast 17th Avenue in Portland's Alberta Arts District, adorned with colorful murals and a bright blue informational panel. The weathered brick storefronts create a textured backdrop while bare winter trees cast intricate shadows across the damp pavement. This grassroots mutual aid station serves as a beacon of community solidarity, offering free food and supplies to neighbors in need.
The PDX Free Fridge provides community access to free food and supplies along Alberta Street in Northeast Portland's vibrant arts district.
Community Free Fridge Brightens Alberta Street
C
Naomi Likayi stands confidently beside her colorful community mural painted on the boarded Portland World Trade Center, commissioned by the Portland Street Art Alliance. The artist wears a plaid coat and locs, positioned against the whimsical artwork featuring abstract figures in blues, purples, and greens that transform the urban wall into a canvas of hope. Her direct gaze and relaxed stance create an intimate portrait that captures both the artist and her public art contribution to Portland's cultural landscape.
Artist Naomi Likayi poses beside her commissioned mural at the boarded Portland World Trade Center, part of the Portland Street Art Alliance's community beautification initiative.
Artist Before Her Vibrant Community Mural
B
In the dusky twilight of Portland's Northwest District, passengers wait at a TriMet bus stop as the Route 20 Burnside/Stark line approaches. The amber glow of street lights mingles with the bus's bright headlights, casting warm pools of illumination across the wet asphalt of West Burnside Street. Two silhouetted figures in winter clothing stand patiently on the sidewalk, embodying the quiet rhythm of urban evening commutes against the backdrop of Portland's characteristic mixed-use architecture and forested hills.
Commuters await the Route 20 TriMet bus during evening hours on West Burnside Street in Portland's Northwest District.
Evening Transit on West Burnside Street
A
A striking multi-story building in Portland's Buckman neighborhood showcases an explosive psychedelic mural that transforms its entire facade into a swirling kaleidoscope of color. The organic, flowing patterns in vibrant blues, reds, yellows, and pastels cascade across the white surface, punctuated by geometric black squares that serve as windows. The overcast Pacific Northwest sky provides a muted backdrop to this urban art installation, while contemporary apartment buildings and wet asphalt streets frame the scene in typical Portland fashion.
A psychedelic mural envelops a multi-story building in Portland's Buckman district, creating a vibrant street art landmark against the city's characteristic overcast sky.
Psychedelic Mural Transforms Portland Street Corner
B
A custom-built takeout station integrates seamlessly into the main entrance of Lottie and Zula's restaurant in Portland's Eliot neighborhood, flanked by bright yellow Oregonian newspaper boxes. The purposefully constructed wooden counter, adorned with vibrant street art featuring skulls and psychedelic patterns, bears witness to the restaurant industry's adaptive spirit during COVID-19. Behind rain-streaked windows, the darkened interior hints at a business transformed, while menu boards and pickup instructions create an improvised commerce hub on the sidewalk.
A custom-built outdoor pickup counter integrated into Lottie and Zula's restaurant entrance showcases the food service industry's pandemic adaptations.
Custom Pickup Counter at Lottie and Zula's
B

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