Nouatre’s mural roundup

Curator account nouatre shared a set of recent mural photos highlighting works by Adry Del Rocio, Melissa Follet and Felipe Pincel, showcasing bold color and large‑scale figuration in city backlanes. (x.com) (x.com).

A curator account on X used two July 2026 posts to spotlight three muralists whose work turns side streets and blank walls into open-air galleries. (x.com) The roundup named Adry Del Rocio, Melissa Follet and Felipe Pincel, three artists whose public work spans Mexico, France and Spain. Street Art Cities and artist websites show each has built a portfolio around large-format walls rather than studio-only work. (streetartcities.com) (melissafollet.com) (streetartcities.com) Adry Del Rocio’s practice mixes murals with anamorphic street painting, a perspective trick that makes flat surfaces look three-dimensional from one viewpoint. Her website describes her work as 2D and 3D street art and murals, and Street Art for Mankind calls her one of the best-known 3D urban artists working today. (adrydelrocio.art) (streetartmankind.org) Her recent public profile has grown beyond Mexico. Mexico’s foreign ministry said Las Vegas awarded Del Rocio a Mayor’s Urban Design Award for her mural there, and the Generation Equality Forum says she created a Mexico mural unveiled in March 2021 for the forum’s closing ceremony. (gob.mx) (forum.generationequality.org) Melissa Follet’s murals work differently. Her site says she paints indoor and outdoor wall pieces built around realistic animals and human portraits, and her artist statement says the work is meant to draw attention to the living world through black-and-white contrast. (melissafollet.com 1) (melissafollet.com 2) That approach has moved into street-art programs and temporary wall projects. Street Art Cities lists her March 6, 2026 portrait of Alice Milliat in Paris, and organizers in Rennes said Follet was invited for the city’s M.U.R. wall project on March 8 and 9, 2025. (streetartcities.com) (rue.bzh) Felipe Pincel brings a more overtly social and political frame. Rebobinart says the Chilean artist, based in Barcelona, ties much of his work to the Mapuche people and to Latin American themes shaped by discrimination, migration and identity. (rebobinart.com) His recent murals show that range. Street Art Cities says his “Ecos del Mar” mural was painted for Estepona’s 2024 mural competition, while Rebobinart said another 2024 wall in Sant Andreu de la Barca honored migrant families and a changing, diverse society. (streetartcities.com) (rebobinart.com) What links the three artists is scale and access. Their work lives on exterior walls, parking structures and festival sites, where anyone passing through a lane or side street can see it without buying a ticket. (melissafollet.com) (streetartcities.com) (adrydelrocio.art) That is why roundup accounts like nouatre matter inside mural culture. They do not make the walls, but they circulate them across platforms, helping artists from different cities appear in the same feed and the same conversation. (x.com)

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