Cities / Atlanta, GA / Little Five Points

Little Five Points

Little Five Points is Atlanta's counterculture hub, a five-road intersection east of downtown where vintage shops, independent music venues, and alternative businesses have clustered since the 1970s. The mural program here is the most psychedelic and politically charged in Atlanta — work that references the neighborhood's punk, hip-hop, and activist legacies simultaneously, with a density of street art along Euclid and Moreland Avenues that makes an afternoon walk feel like reading the neighborhood's own ongoing autobiography.

87
Murals
52
Verified
34
Artists
"Five Points"
RIME
Moreland Ave near Euclid Ave · Added May 12, 2021
"ATL Counterculture"
Shepard Fairey
Euclid Ave near N Highland Ave · Added Nov 7, 2019
"L5P Portrait"
Tatyana Fazlalizadeh
Euclid Ave near Colquitt Ave · Added Mar 28, 2022

Featured Artists

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RIME

Figurative muralist · New York

"Five Points" is RIME's panoramic portrait of the Little Five Points community — the musicians, the vendors, the longtime residents, the street performers who give the intersection its particular energy — rendered in RIME's photorealist style across an entire building face on Moreland Avenue, a work that has become the neighborhood's de facto outdoor portrait gallery.

Shepard Fairey

Street art iconographer · Los Angeles

"ATL Counterculture" documents Atlanta's punk, hip-hop, and social justice organizing legacies through Fairey's layered graphic portrait style — the Clash poster and Outkast album cover sharing visual space with the faces of Atlanta's civil rights and environmental activists in a composition that argues for the continuity of radical culture across decades.

Tatyana Fazlalizadeh

Portrait & social justice muralist · Brooklyn

"L5P Portrait" focuses specifically on the long-term women residents and workers of Little Five Points who have sustained the neighborhood's community character through successive waves of gentrification — a series of monochrome portraits that name their subjects and quote their words about what the neighborhood means and what they're fighting to preserve.