Lidia Cao mural shared
- Artist Lidia Cao's mural was shared by @nouatre on April 18, appearing across urban-art feeds. (x.com) - The post recorded roughly 10 likes and more than 126 views in early circulation. (x.com) - The share prompted local conversation about the mural's palette and placement on social threads. (x.com)
A repost on April 18 pushed one of Lidia Cao’s murals into urban-art feeds, where viewers focused on its muted color palette and wall placement. (x.com) The share came from the account @nouatre and, in its early circulation, drew roughly 10 likes and more than 126 views. The clip showed a large figurative mural by Cao, a Galician illustrator and muralist born in 1997. (x.com) (bookastreetartist.com) Cao describes her work as centered on “dreamlike environments” and emotionally weighted faces, usually built with desaturated or near-monochrome color. That helps explain why comments around the repost zeroed in on tone and composition rather than bright spectacle. (bookastreetartist.com) The timing also landed as Cao’s public mural work was already visible in Spain. In A Coruña, a 16.8-meter-by-22-meter mural she made for Marineda City was inaugurated on April 4, 2025, as a tribute to women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. (lavozdegalicia.es) That A Coruña wall was installed on the main construction enclosure at the shopping center during renovation work, giving the piece a temporary, highly visible urban setting. Local organizers said the project was backed by Marineda City and the A Coruña city government. (lavozdegalicia.es 1) (lavozdegalicia.es 2) Cao’s recent profile has also grown through festival and street-art programming outside Galicia. Seedhead Arts, which listed her for Hit The North 2024, said she has combined illustration with mural work since 2018 and now works from a studio in Madrid while returning often to Galicia. (seedheadarts.com) Street Art Utopia included Cao in an April 18 roundup of new murals from around the world, another sign that her work is moving through international repost networks as much as through physical walls. The @nouatre share fit that pattern: a single post, modest engagement, and fast pickup in niche art feeds. (streetartutopia.com) (x.com) For now, the mural’s online afterlife is being shaped less by a formal campaign than by reposts and comment threads. In Cao’s case, that means viewers keep returning to the same elements visible in the work itself: restrained color, a human figure, and a wall chosen to be seen in passing. (x.com) (bookastreetartist.com)