Cities / Wisconsin / Green Bay, WI

Green Bay, WI

Green Bay's mural scene has grown alongside the city's efforts to build a creative economy alongside its identity as an NFL city, with the Broadway District hosting the most concentrated outdoor art experience and the Titletown development providing a new context for public art adjacent to Lambeau Field. The city's Hmong and Latino communities have enriched the mural scene with visual traditions that have traveled from distant places to make Green Bay home.

140
Murals
33
Verified
3
Neighborhoods
25
Artists
All Murals Newest Top Verified Broadway District Titletown
"Packer Pride"
Tommy Sullivan
Titletown, Lombardi Ave · Added Sep 7, 2017
"Broadway District"
Claire Xiong
Broadway District, N. Broadway · Added Apr 19, 2019
"Bay City"
David Hernandez
Broadway District, Walnut St · Added Feb 6, 2021

Featured Artists

All artists →
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Tommy Sullivan

Sports heritage muralist · Green Bay

Sullivan has spent his career creating murals that engage with Green Bay's football identity in ways that transcend sports fandom, examining what it means for a working-class city's identity to be so thoroughly invested in a single institution. His Titletown work is simultaneously celebratory and reflective, honoring the Packers while also asking what Green Bay is when it isn't game day.

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Claire Xiong

Hmong heritage muralist · Green Bay

Xiong is a Hmong-American artist who creates murals that honor the Hmong community that has made Green Bay home since the late 1970s, using visual languages drawn from Hmong textile traditions—paj ntaub needlework, story cloth narrative composition—to create work that is both culturally specific and visually extraordinary to any audience. Her Broadway District murals are the most culturally distinctive public art in Wisconsin.

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David Hernandez

Community life muralist · Green Bay

Hernandez has built his practice documenting the everyday life of Green Bay's Mexican and Central American communities, creating murals that honor the labor and cultural vitality of communities that make a larger contribution to the city than their visibility in the mainstream cultural narrative would suggest. His Broadway District work celebrates the food, family, faith, and community institutions that define Latino Green Bay.