New street murals roundup

A social roundup from nouatre highlighted fresh murals by Artez, Hebsarte and Adry Del Rocio, sharing photos of each new piece. (x.com) Hebsarte’s post in that thread showed notable engagement — roughly 15 likes, five reposts and about 234 views — suggesting regional buzz around the new work. (x.com)

A new social roundup from nouatre pushed three fresh murals into one feed, pairing new work by Artez, Hebsarte and Adry Del Rocio in a single post. (x.com) The post linked photos of each piece rather than a single project, turning the update into a quick survey of what three muralists were painting at once. Hebsarte’s entry in that thread drew about 15 likes, five reposts and roughly 234 views on the platform snapshot provided in the post. (x.com) Artez is a Serbian muralist listed by Street Art Cities, which describes him as an artist focused on a dialogue between painted figures and viewers. Street Art Cities also says its platform tracks work across more than 2,900 cities in 125 countries, giving artists like Artez a global discovery channel beyond any single festival or wall. (streetartcities.com, streetartcities.com) Hebsarte identifies himself through Meeting of Styles as an independent urban artist from Monterrey, Nuevo León, with more than 25 years of painting experience and work in more than 15 countries. The same profile says he now focuses on three-dimensional mural painting and teaching that technique to younger artists. (meetingofstyles.com) Adry Del Rocio’s own site presents her practice as a mix of two-dimensional and three-dimensional street painting, murals and anamorphic work, the optical style that shifts when viewed from a specific angle. Street Art Cities lists her among its artists, and Mexican coverage in January 2026 said her mural “Sembrar Paz” in Culiacán won Street Art Cities’ street art category for December 2025. (adrydelrocio.art, streetartcities.com, revistaespejo.com) That mix of names helps explain why a small roundup post can travel: it combines an established international muralist, a Monterrey-based veteran and a Mexican artist who recently picked up a global platform award. Street Art Cities says its monthly “best new mural” voting runs on Instagram, tying street work on walls to audience reaction on social platforms. (streetartcities.com, streetartcities.com, meetingofstyles.com, revistaespejo.com) The roundup also shows how mural coverage now moves through curator-style accounts as much as through festival announcements or city tourism pages. Street Art Cities describes itself as a worldwide street art community, while nouatre’s post used the same social logic in miniature: one account, three artists, immediate public metrics. (streetartcities.com, x.com) What the thread finally captured was not one unveiling but a rolling feed of new walls, with Hebsarte’s image getting the clearest early response in the engagement shown on the post. For mural artists, that kind of small, visible traction can now sit alongside festival profiles, artist databases and formal awards in shaping who gets seen next. (x.com, meetingofstyles.com, streetartcities.com)

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