London Mural Festival 2026 Artists
The London Mural Festival has assembled an international roster including D*Face, eL Seed, Mr Doodle, and Marija Tiurina for 2026. The festival offers a self-guided exploration map, cementing London's role as a global canvas for public art across multiple neighborhoods.
- The London Mural Festival, first held in 2020, is a recurring event that has produced over 150 permanent murals across the city. The 2024 edition, themed 'Connection', added around 100 new murals in more than 15 boroughs, including Lambeth, Camden, and Shoreditch. - London-native artist D*Face, real name Dean Stockton, is a key figure in the urban art scene, known for his pop-art-influenced style that critiques consumerism. He founded the Stolen Space Gallery in London and has collaborated with musicians Christina Aguilera and Blink-182 on album cover art. - French-Tunisian artist eL Seed is globally recognized for his intricate "calligraffiti," which blends Arabic calligraphy with street art to convey messages of peace and unity. His work has been displayed in prominent locations worldwide, including on the façade of the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris, at the DMZ between North and South Korea, and his art is held in the collections of the MET Museum and the Louvre Abu Dhabi. - Mr Doodle, whose real name is Sam Cox, is known for his "graffiti spaghetti," a dense pattern of characters and symbols. He gained viral fame for doodling every square inch of his 12-room mansion in Kent, a project that required 900 liters of white paint and 286 bottles of black drawing paint. - Marija Tiurina is a Lithuanian-born multidisciplinary artist based in London who explores themes of nature, folklore, and fantasy in her work. She has a background as a concept artist for video games and an illustrator for children's books, with a client list that includes Apple, Disney, and Microsoft. - A significant portion of the festival's murals are created on local authority housing estates, with a model where commissioned murals from commercial landlords help fund murals in community spaces at no cost to residents. - The festival's producer, Global Street Art, also runs programs like "Art for Estates" to match artists with housing estates, aiming to regenerate urban spaces and foster a sense of community pride. Research has indicated that the presence of street art can lead to increased foot traffic and has been linked to rising property values in London postcodes.