Loading graphic

We use cookies to improve your experience on our site, personalise content and analyse our traffic. To find out more, read our updated privacy policy.

Kingpin Melbourne Art Walk

Kingpin Melbourne Art Walk

Kingpin commissioned local street artists to create bold, custom murals that transform each entertainment space within the new Melbourne CBD Collins Street venue into an immersive visual experience. 
Every mural is designed specifically for the space it decorates, giving each area of the Kingpin Melbourne venue its own identity while supporting contemporary street art and creative communities.

Adnates Mural in Kingpin Melbourne
Adnate (Matt Adnate) is an internationally acclaimed Australian street artist renowned for his monumental, hyper‑realistic portraits. Best known for his striking depictions of Indigenous Australians, Adnate’s work is grounded in deep collaboration, cultural respect, and community engagement. Using spray paint to achieve an extraordinary level of detail, his murals often feature intense gazes and muted, earthy palettes that command both intimacy and scale. From remote communities to major cities around the world, Adnate’s practice transforms public spaces into powerful sites of storytelling, visibility, and connection, celebrating the human spirit.



Sofles Mural in Kingpin Melbourne

Sofles (Russell Fenn) is a renowned Australian graffiti and mural artist whose work has become a defining presence across global street art culture. Though originally from Brisbane, he has made a strong mark on Melbourne’s street art scene through major collaborations and large‑scale projects. His style is instantly recognisable: bold graphics, vivid colour palettes, fine detail, and dynamic compositions that blend traditional graffiti with photorealism, abstraction and comic‑influenced imagery.

Adnates Mural in Kingpin Melbourne
Nense (Martín Gómez), also known by the pseudonym Nense Tango, is a Chilean‑born street artist, graffiti writer, and muralist who has become an active creative force in Melbourne’s street art scene. Beginning his graffiti journey around 2009, he gradually moved beyond traditional graffiti aesthetics, blending academic art influences with vanguard visual movements. This evolution has positioned him as part of a new wave of contemporary muralists who merge fine art sensibilities with urban expression.



Rosie's Mural in Kingpin Melbourne
Rosie Woods is a London‑born street artist and muralist whose practice spans Australia, the UK, and global festival circuits. Known for her flowing, ethereal forms, she creates dreamlike visual experiences that merge abstraction with hyper‑realistic textures. Her work often explores the life force and energy within us, visualising “invisible internal landscapes” through fluid shapes that hover between the real and the surreal.



Lauren's Mural in Kingpin Melbourne

Lauren YS (also known as LoLo YS or Squid Licker) is a Los Angeles-born, internationally active street artist whose work blends surrealism, psychedelia and bold narrative storytelling. With a background spanning academics, literature, writing, teaching, illustration and animation, her multidisciplinary foundation feeds into a richly layered visual language that carries across murals, fine art and public installations. Her aesthetic is instantly recognisable as imaginary heroines, dreamlike symbolism, mythological references and fluid, otherworldly forms, all influenced by dreams, mythology, death, comics, love, psychedelia, animation, and her Asian‑American heritage. The result is a “misfit wonderland” populated by powerful feminine figures who confront the absurdities of reality through fantastical narrative environments.



Jay's Mural in Kingpin Melbourne
Jay Kaes is a Spanish‑born, London‑based urban artist known for his bold fusion of street art, pop culture, and digital‑age visual language. With murals showcased in over 20 countries, his work is instantly recognisable for its vibrant Glitch Pop aesthetic; an approach that merges photorealism, comic‑influenced linework, and technological distortion to explore how modern life, media, and digital systems shape our perception of reality