Cities / South Carolina / Greenville, SC

Greenville, SC

Greenville's rapid transformation from post-industrial city to acclaimed arts destination is written on its walls, with the West End arts district and Falls Park corridor showcasing commissioned and grassroots mural work that reflects a city embracing creative reinvention. The Village of West Greenville has emerged as the most authentic expression of the city's mural culture, where local artists have claimed exterior walls as their own.

200
Murals
47
Verified
4
Neighborhoods
35
Artists
All Murals Newest Top Verified West End Falls Park Village of West Greenville
"Reedy River"
Cooper Hayes
West End, Main St · Added Jun 22, 2018
"Falls Vision"
Naomi Blake
Falls Park, River St · Added Nov 11, 2020
"Village Life"
Dante Moreno
Village of West Greenville, Augusta Rd · Added Apr 3, 2022

Featured Artists

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Cooper Hayes

Nature and landscape muralist · Greenville

Hayes has made the Reedy River corridor his primary artistic subject, creating murals that document and celebrate the river that defines Greenville's civic identity. His West End work uses the visual vocabulary of both the natural world and urban infrastructure, creating compositions that explore the relationship between city and watershed with a combination of scientific precision and lyrical beauty.

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Naomi Blake

Community portraiture muralist · Greenville

Blake creates portrait-based murals that put the faces of ordinary Greenville residents at architectural scale, transforming the Falls Park corridor into a gallery of community recognition. Her open casting process—prioritizing longtime residents and underrepresented communities—produces murals that feel genuinely representative of who lives in Greenville rather than who markets the city to tourists.

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Dante Moreno

Latinx community muralist · Greenville

Moreno's murals in the Village of West Greenville honor the Latino community that has made Augusta Road one of the city's most culturally vibrant corridors. His large-format work draws on Mexican mural traditions while speaking directly to the particular experience of Greenville's Latin American immigrant community, creating pieces that are both culturally specific and universally humanizing.