Life Through Art (37 Photos)
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These artworks make walls, streets, trees, and old wood feel alive.
From a hidden spring in Spain to a carved Tree of Life in Ghana, these 37 works find movement, memory, and nature in ordinary places.

💧 Hidden Spring — By Juandres Vera and TARDOR in Riola, Spain 🇪🇸
Street Art Cities documents RIOLA as a 3D intervention by Juandres Vera and TARDOR at Carrer Sant Cristòfol in Riola, created to bring pieces of nature back into the heart of the town. A woman kneels beside a turquoise spring, pouring water from a clay jug, and the street suddenly looks as if water has been hiding beneath the paving stones.
💡 Nerd Fact: Riola’s water theme lands in a real river landscape: the town sits by the Júcar/Xúquer, and Britannica notes that this river irrigates much of La Ribera’s orange-grove and rice-field plain.
More: A Hidden Spring Beneath the Street in Riola, Spain
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🌳 Tree of Life — In Aburi Botanical Gardens, Ghana 🇬🇭
At Aburi Botanical Gardens, a dead tree becomes a crowd of carved bodies, animals, and faces. The figures press upward through the trunk, one on top of another: old wood, many hands, and almost no empty space.
💡 Nerd Fact: The garden around this carved trunk is historic on its own: Encyclopaedia Africana describes Aburi Botanical Gardens as Ghana’s oldest and largest botanical garden, established in 1890 as an experimental farm for tropical crops.
More: Tree of Life from Aburi Botanical Gardens in Ghana

🌿 “The Tender Gardener” — By Megan Oldhues in Graniti, Italy 🇮🇹
Graniti Murales describes The Tender Gardener as a garden scene inspired by photos taken in Graniti, where cultivation means both plant care and the work of becoming softer. Street Art Cities places it at Viale Mazzullo 8; Oldhues turns pots, cloth, stone, and soft light into a patient wall.
💡 Village Fact: Graniti’s painted-wall identity is recent by village standards: Graniti Murales says artists have been creating murals there since 2017 to spark cultural exchange and give new life to the Alcantara Valley town.
More: The Tender Gardener by Megan Oldhues in Graniti, Italy
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🌱 “Radici (ROOTS)” — By Giulio “Rosk” Gebbia in Mangone, Italy 🇮🇹
The documented title is Radici — roots. Painted for Gulìa Urbana/Rublanum, it pairs a local young man with a European bee-eater, a bird known for long seasonal journeys. The portrait keeps the idea of home in the face, the bird, and the title.
💡 Nerd Fact: The bee-eater is a perfect “roots and routes” bird: Animal Diversity Web notes that European bee-eaters dig nesting burrows in steep banks, while the Migration Atlas tracks them as long-distance migrants between Europe and Africa.
More: ROOTS by Giulio “Rosk” Gebbia in Mangone, Italy
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💙 “GLITCH” — By Theora in Corsica, France 🇫🇷
Theora leaves the wall looking partly unfinished, and that is the point. One face is realistic; another breaks into sketch lines, flowers, and exposed marks. The rough concrete and the hillside around it do some of the work too.
💡 Word Fact: “Glitch” is a newer little troublemaker of a word: Merriam-Webster defines it as a usually minor malfunction and notes a possible Yiddish root connected to a “slippery place.”
More: GLITCH: A Lovely Blue Mural by Theora in Corsica, France
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🌸 “Belfast Spring” — By Studio Giftig in Belfast, Northern Ireland 🇬🇧
On Studio Giftig’s portfolio, Belfast Spring is a Hit the North mural on a former linen mill: the blue flax flowers refer to linen and to new beginnings. The petals sweep around a pink-haired figure on the pale brick facade, turning local textile history into a spring wind.
💡 Nerd Fact: The flax link goes beyond the old mill: Studio Giftig writes that flax plants are traditionally given to newlyweds to honor a new home, so the mural ties industry, marriage, and renewal into one flower.
More: Studio Giftig’s Flax Flower Mural at Hit the North
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❤️ “Wild Hearts” — By Studio Giftig in The Hague, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Studio Giftig’s portfolio describes Wild Hearts as a 50-metre Music & Murals piece inspired by DI-RECT’s song of the same name. Figures, birds, objects, and white lines pull across a hot orange wall, making the whole facade feel restless and full of motion.
💡 Nerd Fact: This wall has an award story too: The Hague & Partners reports that Wild Hearts won “Most Intense Mural” at the Dutch Street Art Awards in 2023.
More: Wild Hearts by Studio Giftig in The Hague, Netherlands
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🦋 “The Painted Lady” — By Jim Vision in Beeston, UK 🇬🇧
Visit Nottinghamshire’s Beeston Street Art guide places The Painted Lady on High Road, Chilwell, and explains that the mural references painted lady butterflies migrating from North Africa to Attenborough and Beeston Marina. Jim Vision turns that local nature story into a brick-wide burst of wings.
💡 Nerd Fact: Painted lady migration is not one butterfly doing one heroic commute. Research in Biology Letters describes the Europe–North Africa journey as an annual, multi-generational migration.
More: Jim Vision in Beeston, UK
🔗 Follow Jim Vision on his website

🦫 Platypus Silo — By Jimmy Dvate in Rochester, Victoria, Australia 🇦🇺
Jimmy Dvate’s own silo portfolio lists the Platypus at Rochester, Victoria, and the Australian Silo Art Trail identifies it as Site Two of the Rochester Silo Art project. The close-up bill and water reflections turn industrial grain storage into a local wildlife portrait.
💡 Nerd Fact: A platypus bill is basically a hunting instrument: the American Museum of Natural History explains that platypuses use electroreceptors and mechanoreceptors in the bill to find prey in murky water.
More: Platypus Mural by Jimmy Dvate in Rochester, Australia
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🐅 Siberian Tiger — By Alegria del Prado in Balashikha, Russia 🇷🇺
Alegria del Prado is the duo of Octavio Alegria and Esther del Prado, known for dreamlike murals where nature pushes back into modern surroundings. Here the white tiger sits high on the facade, calm and sharp-eyed, with the apartment blocks around it looking much smaller.
💡 Nerd Fact: White tigers are not a separate tiger subspecies. WWF explains that the pale coat comes from leucism, and that breeding white tigers for display is not the same thing as tiger conservation.
More: Siberian Tiger by Alegria del Prado in Balashikha, Russia
🔗 Follow Alegria del Prado on Instagram and Octavio Alegria on Instagram

🐶 “Chien Pirate” — By DULK in Le Locle, Switzerland 🇨🇭
DULK’s official page roots Chien Pirate in Le Locle’s 18th-century smuggling history, when trained dogs carried hidden cargo across the border. Exomusée documents the mural at Rue du Tertre 6; the forest, clocks, owl, and tiny frog make the history read like a folktale.
💡 Smuggling Fact: The history behind this dog gets oddly specific: Street Art Cities lists contraband such as salt, sugar, coffee, tobacco, cloth, gunpowder, matches, playing cards, and gold watches carried by dogs across the Franco-Swiss border.
More: Chien Pirate by DULK in Le Locle, Switzerland
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🦜 “Bird Love” — By Daniel Mac LLOYD in Heerlen, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Amsterdam Street Art identifies the work as Daniel Mac LLOYD’s Heerlen mural of two loving parrots and places it at Klompstraat 10. The mural gets its warmth from posture and color, not from a big explanation.
💡 Nerd Fact: The mural is part of Heerlen’s public-art ecosystem: Amsterdam Street Art says it was made with Amsterdam Street Art and Heerlen Mijn Stad, the city initiative that helped put this pair of parrots on the wall.
More: Bird Love by Daniel Mac LLOYD in Heerlen, Netherlands
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👁️ The City Looks Back — By My Dog Sighs in London, UK 🇬🇧
My Dog Sighs paints one huge eye on a black riveted wall. The blue iris holds a small city reflection. It is hard to walk past without feeling watched.
💡 Nerd Fact: My Dog Sighs’ eyes often hide a second story. In a London Calling interview, the reflection inside the eye is described as “the subject within a subject,” which is why his eyes feel like tiny worlds.
More: Mural by My Dog Sighs in London, UK
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😺 Sleeping Painted Cat — By Jack Lack in Grenoble, France 🇫🇷
Jack Lack adds a sleeping cat to a hard city surface. It curls up where you do not expect softness, and the street suddenly feels quieter.
💡 Nerd Fact: Jack Lack’s animals are not random cute add-ons. His artist site says his mural research keeps returning to the interplay between nature and the urban landscape.
More: Sleeping Painted Cat by Jack Lack in Grenoble, France
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🐈 “The Cat Walk” — By Seth in Shanghai, China 🇨🇳
Seth’s own Shanghai portfolio places Cat Walk in the old city, among more than twenty alley paintings he made in early 2018 as central Shanghai neighborhoods were being emptied before demolition. A girl leans from a painted window while a cat reaches for her braid, and the alley does the rest.
💡 Nerd Fact: Seth’s Shanghai series was also a memory project: his portfolio says the alley paintings show children playing games from the 1970s and 1980s in neighborhoods about to disappear.
More: Seth’s Street Art Collection
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🌼 Girl with Flowers — By Ster UPC in Southend-on-Sea, UK 🇬🇧
Ster UPC fills the end of a house with a blue-haired portrait, flowers, and a small butterfly. The face stays calm while the colors do the moving.
💡 Nerd Fact: Ster UPC is not only filling walls; Southend City Jam lists him as a co-organizer of the festival, helping turn the city itself into a live painting ground.
More: Mural by Ster UPC in Southend-on-Sea, UK
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⛵ “Niña con barco, Leive” — By Mon Devane in Fuengirola, Málaga, Spain 🇪🇸
Fuengirola’s official mural route lists the work as Niña con Barco. Leive and places it in El Boquetillo, Fuengirola, not Málaga city. Mon Devane’s blue portrait turns a Picasso-inspired nautical theme into a personal image of his daughter, Leive, holding an orange paper boat.
💡 Nerd Fact: Fuengirola frames the work as neighborhood-making, not just decoration: the city’s mural route says Mon Devane’s facade helps turn El Boquetillo into an urban art museum.
More: Mon Devane’s Picasso-Inspired Mural in Málaga
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🌙 “Childhood Dreams” — By Andy J. Céspedes Fernández in Moyobamba, Peru 🇵🇪
Andy J. Céspedes Fernández paints a child resting among leaves, flowers, a bird, and a tiny kite-flying figure. The mural reads like a dream, but the details still feel grounded.
💡 Nerd Fact: Moyobamba is known as Peru’s “City of Orchids”; Peru North notes that locals claim around 3,500 orchid species have been identified in the area.
More: Childhood Dreams by Andy J. Céspedes Fernández
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💙 “CARINHO” — By Clara Leff with DIONISIO in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Carinho means affection. Clara Leff shows it as one child carefully braiding another child’s hair. The colors are bright, but the gesture is quiet.
💡 Word Fact: Carinho is even softer than a one-word translation. Collins gives it as affection or fondness, but also as a caress and as doing something “with care.”
More: I Just Found These Incredible Murals
🔗 Follow Clara Leff on Instagram

🧵 “Cut Through History” — By Fabian Bane Florin in Frauenfeld, Switzerland 🇨🇭
On Fabian Florin’s project page, Cut Through History is described as a 3D-anamorphic seamstress mural made for Street Art Festival Frauenfeld and tied to the building’s past as a former tailoring shop. A woman sews red cloth inside a fake window, with large green leaves catching the light beside her.
💡 Nerd Fact: This wall is part of Frauenfeld’s street-art map now: the festival page places Cut Through History at Schlossmühlestrasse 9, turning a former shop memory into a public stop.
More: Stitching Time: Fabian Bane Florin’s 3D-Anamorphic Mural “Cut Through History”
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🐾 “Wild Child” — By HERA in Civitacampomarano, Italy 🇮🇹
Street Art Cities notes that HERA drew inspiration from conversations with Civitacampomarano residents and from the village’s many cats. The cat-headed child holds a cup and looks out over the roofs, watchful and a little tired.
💡 Nerd Fact: HERA did not stop with the big wall. BLocal reports that after finishing Wild Child, she painted three smaller hidden works in the abandoned part of Civitacampomarano.
More: Wild Child by HERA in Civitacampomarano, Italy
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🍃 Portrait of Irma Silva — By Machuca in Moyobamba, Peru 🇵🇪
Machuca paints Irma Silva close enough that the eyes carry the wall. Large green leaves cross the face, red foliage sits above the head, and a person at the side shows the scale.
💡 Nerd Fact: Machuca’s work sits inside a wider Moyobamba mural movement. Anthropologist Luisa Elvira Belaunde describes “muralizing Moyobamba” as a way to show vital diversity in a human, urban, and Amazonian ecosystem.
More: Portrait of Irma Silva by Machuca in Moyobamba, Peru
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🌺 Tulum Portrait — By Emma Rubens in Tulum, Mexico 🇲🇽
Emma Rubens describes her practice as portrait painting and mural work rooted in memory, identity, and the histories embedded in place. Here the face fills the wall, with fine wrinkles, steady eyes, earrings, and patterned clothing; the orange background keeps all the attention on her.
💡 Nerd Fact: Emma Rubens treats portraiture like local memory work: her artist bio says she is developing a long-term project documenting Mayan elders through painted portraits and oral histories.
More: Portrait by Emma Rubens in Tulum, Mexico
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⚡ Untitled — By James Bullough and ONUR in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
Millecent documents the Berlin commission as a collaboration between ONUR and James Bullough, while Street Art Cities lists it as Untitled at Drontheimer Str. 34. Hands reach toward flowers, petals move through the air, and the body looks caught between falling and flying.
💡 Nerd Fact: Bullough’s fractured bodies have a theory behind them. In a Brooklyn Street Art interview, he explains that fragmenting figures helped him move beyond straightforward portraiture and create more movement and energy.
More: Mural by James Bullough and ONUR in Berlin, Germany
🔗 Follow James Bullough on Instagram and ONUR on Instagram

🐦 “Saint Mungo” — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 🇬🇧
Art UK records this as Saint Mungo by Smug, a High Street, Glasgow mural of a man holding a robin. The huge wall carries a city legend in one quiet hand.
💡 Legend Fact: The robin is one of Glasgow’s famous Saint Mungo symbols. Folklore Scotland recounts the story of Mungo reviving Saint Serf’s pet robin, a miracle still echoed in the city’s iconography.
More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
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🐝 Bees and Coneflower — By Matt Willey in Durham, North Carolina, USA 🇺🇸
This detail belongs to The Good of the Hive’s Burt’s Bees Global HQ mural at the American Tobacco Campus in Durham, where Willey’s project page notes that 400 Burt’s Bees employees helped paint flower petals. Bees move around a purple coneflower on red brick: a tiny pollinator scene painted large enough that nobody can miss it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Matt Willey’s bee count has a number with meaning: The Good of the Hive says he is hand-painting 50,000 honey bees, the approximate number in a healthy hive.
More: Before the Buzz Is Gone: 8 Must-See Bee Murals From Around the World
🔗 Follow The Good of the Hive on Instagram

♻️ Iberian Lynx — By BORDALO II in Lisbon, Portugal 🇵🇹
Street Art Cities identifies the work as the giant Iberian Lynx at Cais Português in Parque das Nações, made from colorful recycled materials as one of BORDALO II’s Trash Animals. From a distance it is a bright animal sculpture; up close, the waste material does the talking.
💡 Conservation Fact: The Iberian lynx is a rare good-news cat story: IUCN reported in 2024 that it moved from Endangered to Vulnerable after the total population rose to more than 2,000.
More: Iberian Lynx by BORDALO II in Lisboa, Portugal
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☀️ “The Boy Who Paints the Sun” — By TANAI and Ali Zakir in Almaty, Kazakhstan 🇰🇿
The Astana Times describes The Boy Who Paints the Sun as one of Almaty’s best-known murals, located near the intersection of Sauranbayev and Moldagaliyev Streets. TANAI and Ali Zakir paint a child adding the sun himself: a small act of imagined weather improvement.
💡 Nerd Fact: This mural sits inside a wider Kazakh street-art push: The Astana Times notes that artists in Almaty have used murals to brighten buildings with social messaging.
More: Boy Painting a Sun on a House in Almaty, Kazakhstan
🔗 Follow TANAI on Instagram and Ali Zakir on Instagram

🐱 Rooftop Explorer — By Sagie in Kristianstad, Sweden 🇸🇪
Sagie uses the corner of the brick building well. The giant cat seems to perch on the roofline, looking ready to climb down. The trick is simple and it works.
💡 Cat Fact: Sagie seems to have a running cat universe in Sweden: Street Art Cities also documents his Space Cat mural in Gothenburg, commissioned by Familjebostäder.
More: Cat Mural by Sagie in the Cozy Town of Kristianstad
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🤸 “Simple Acrobatic” — By Artez in Wuppertal, Germany 🇩🇪
Urbaner KunstRaum Wuppertal documents Simple Acrobatic at Steinweg 66 and describes Artez’s practice as a mix of photorealism and illustration. Here two acrobats turn a flat wall into a balancing act: one lifts the other upside down while a chair hovers above them.
💡 Nerd Fact: Artez does not simply copy a photo onto a wall. Urbaner KunstRaum Wuppertal notes that he often starts from a photo but improvises during painting, taking inspiration from the site itself.
More: Straight To The Heart And Soul
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🕶️ Girl and Stencil — By Andy Dice Davies
Andy Dice Davies puts the real girl beside her stencil portrait. Same outfit, same pose, two versions of the same small moment.
💡 Nerd Fact: This small daughter portrait has a public-art big sister: Street Art Cities documents Dice 67’s huge Izzy portrait on Williams Cycles, created for Cheltenham Paint Festival in 2018.
More: Street Artist Andy Dice Davies’ Portrait of His Daughter
🔗 Follow Andy Dice Davies on Facebook

🪶 “Garden of Feathers” — By Marcus Debie (GOMAD) in Kortenberg, Belgium 🇧🇪
GOMAD’s own portfolio calls Garden of Feathers an ode to birds circling our homes and to nature as a living connection on the doorstep. Street Art Cities places it at Leuvensesteenweg 138; the blue wall gives the whole scene a cool, open feel.
💡 Nerd Fact: The bird theme is domestic rather than exotic: Street Art Cities quotes the mural as an ode to birds that circle our homes and make nature feel close to the doorstep.
More: These Murals Must Make a Lot of People Smile
🔗 Follow GOMAD on Instagram

✨ Flowerborne Spirit — By Solvo Ibarra in Mexico City, Mexico 🇲🇽
Solvo Ibarra builds the portrait from eyes, petals, feathers, leaves, and gold shapes. A person standing in front shows the mural’s size. The face still holds the center.
💡 Nerd Fact: This piece comes through a festival route: Street Art Utopia documents it as a Festival Del Caimán work, tying the wall to Mexico City’s public-art circuit.
More: Pick Your Favorite: New Art #1
🔗 Follow Solvo Ibarra on Instagram

🦅 Peregrine Falcon — By Dan Leo in Thurles, Ireland 🇮🇪
Barbara Picci’s documentation identifies the work as Peregrine Falcon by Dan Leo for Street Art Ink in Thurles, and local Thurles coverage places it at Liberty Square. The sharp graphic bird stands on the white wall like it has just landed.
💡 Nerd Fact: The peregrine is not just dramatic-looking; Britannica calls it the world’s fastest animal, with hunting dives that can exceed 300 km/h.
More: Peregrine Falcon by Dan Leo in Thurles, Ireland
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🪶 Fierce Buzzard Bird — By DZIA & SONS in Duffel, Belgium 🇧🇪
DZIA & SONS let the brick show through the bird. The buzzard spreads across the gable wall with rough linework, open wings, and claws ready.
💡 Bird Fact: Buzzards are familiar raptors across Europe: BirdLife describes the Eurasian buzzard as widespread from Europe to central Asia, and the RSPB calls it the UK’s most common bird of prey.
More: Fierce Buzzard Bird by DZIA & SONS in Duffel, Belgium
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🐉 Dragon and Mouse — By Braga Last1 in Le Pont-de-Claix, France 🇫🇷
Documented for Street Art Fest Grenoble Alpes at Place Michel Couëtoux, the piece turns two nearby surfaces into one scene. A blue dragon waits on one wall while a mouse appears across the way; the space between them becomes part of the joke.
💡 Nerd Fact: Braga Last1’s joke has a serious method: Street Art Fest Grenoble Alpes says he uses humor and irony to question social norms, which makes the gap between dragon and mouse part of the idea, not just the layout.
More: Dragon and Mouse by Braga Last1 in Le Pont-de-Claix, France
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🌈 “Nature is Future” — By CÉZ ART in Laon, France 🇫🇷
Barbara Picci’s documentation places Nature is Future in Laon’s international urban arts festival, organized by Ville de Laon, with CÉZ ART explaining that the school-facade frescoes highlight biodiversity and local natural heritage. The raccoon, bird, flowers, and rainbow colors make the message easy to read: nature is future.
💡 Nerd Fact: The audience was built into the location: Barbara Picci’s documentation quotes CÉZ ART saying the two frescoes were painted on the Île de France school façades to raise awareness among students and passers-by.
More: “Nature is Future” by CÉZ ART in Laon, France
🔗 Follow CÉZ ART on Instagram
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Love Notes For You (9 Photos)
Nine street artworks that say what people sometimes cannot. Love notes do not always arrive on…
All of these works are just a big “WOW” in subject, scope, scale, and detail. Fantastic art and expression all around. Thanks for sharing.
Oh I would help her; everytime.
Beautiful, so life like 👍..
I would sleep with her; right next to her
So real. Love ❤️ the feeling.
So innocent; makes you think of being a child again.
Shows what it’s like to be a child without haters.
Looks so real. I love the art of real life.
👏
The falcon is my spirit animal!
[…] Source: Life Through Art (37 Photos) – STREET ART UTOPIA […]
Bad acid CAT!!
Such a strong face of a good person.
👏Such a strong, calm face of a good person.
👏Out of this world realism!!
👏
I tried to help paint a huge reproduction of a H.S. Yearbook for my senior class. It took 5 tries b4 it even began to look like the Yearbook cover! What an amazing skill to do such a huge painting & make it beautiful!!nior