Boston, MA
Boston's mural scene sprawls across neighborhoods that could not be more different — from the gallery-adjacent walls of the South End to the student-energy of Allston and the historic squares of Cambridgeport. The Rose Kennedy Greenway, Jamaica Plain, and the Seaport's innovation corridor all carry their own distinct visual voices. Boston is older than the nation, and its walls know it.
Featured Artists
All artists →Cedric Douglas
Boston native and Roxbury artist whose work reframes American history from a Black perspective. His South End piece "Freedom Trail Reimagined" overlays the actual path of the Freedom Trail with portraits of Boston's Black abolitionists, community leaders, and civil rights figures — turning a tourist route into a counter-history inscribed on the city's own walls.
Briana Fox
Allston lifer whose punk-inflected visual style has defined the neighborhood's self-image for over a decade. Fox's murals reference the music venues, dive bars, and shifting rental population that have always made Allston what it is. "Allston Rock City" — spray paint, wheat paste, and house paint on a Brighton Avenue exterior — is the de facto welcome sign for the neighborhood.
Ana Flores-Reyes
Puerto Rican-American muralist based in Cambridgeport whose work explores the overlap of Latin American diasporic communities and New England academic culture. Her Mass Ave mural draws on the aesthetic tradition of Puerto Rican bomba and plena imagery filtered through the lens of a community that has called Cambridge home for three generations.