In London, a 15-Foot Flower by Shepard Fairey Advocates for Environmental Justice

At 36 Boundary Street in London, a bold new mural rises 15 feet above the street. Anchored by scales atop a small seedling, the public artwork by Shepard Fairey addresses environmental justice and our responsibility to care for the planet.

“I believe that our individual and collective actions will dramatically impact current and future generations, be it for the better or for the worse. It is our responsibility as the citizens of Earth to protect it,” the artist said.

A series of workshops with young Londoners inspired the bright, graphic motif. The group was interested in expanding access to green space and reducing air pollution, and given the recent convening of the United Nations General Assembly focusing on international cooperation, connection between countries and cultures was top of mind.

The project was produced by Charlotte Pyatt, Simon Butler, and Migrate Art, which has raised more than £2.1 million in the last decade through creative projects in refugee camps in France and Northern Iraq, with the Indigenous Xingu people in the Amazon, and in collaboration with U.K.-based charities feeding London’s unhoused population.

Find more from the artist on his website.

an in-progress photo of a blue and red mural of a flower with the words "rise above earth justice"
an in-progress photo of a blue and red mural of a flower with the words "rise above earth justice"
an in-progress photo of a blue and red mural of a flower with the words "rise above earth justice"
a white man in black spray paints a mural