Brooklyn based painter Beau Stanton
has honed his artistic talent over the years with his mural works,
adapting the techniques of his mandala-like nautical inspired paintings
to his largescale mural works. Although he has painted in some of the
most undoubtedly interesting places around the world, from the Berlin
wall to the 12th century Crypt of Saint John the Baptist, featured here, his most recent mural presented a particularly unique challenge.
By Caro Hi Fructose
Stanton’s new mural at City Walk in Dubai is lenticular- which means
that the image appears to change or move as the wall is viewed from
different angles. When the artist first told us about the mural, he
admitted that the nature of the building, which is not an entirely flat
surface and extrudes outwards, posed an interesting problem that lent
itself well to creating “three murals in one”:
The face of a man appears on one side, a woman on the other, in the style of Stanton’s earlier works inspired by the Bronzes of Riace statues. Above them, a ship sails
triumphantly along the horizon. The piece reflects Stanton’s creative
ideal of using ornaments, symbols and icons to represent different
places, people and times that come together in his pattern-making that
he calls “Ornamental Realism.”
Painted for Dubai Walls,
Stanton’s piece joins other notable artists like AIKO, EINE, D*FACE,
and The London Police, in an initiative to introduce street art to the
Middle East. In its inaugural project in March 2016, Dubai Walls invited
15 renowned street artists with the goal to create the conversation
about street art, now globally recognized art form, and introduce it to
residents and visitors in the region.


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