Street art, public art, towering murals, creativity, urban transformation, outdoor works that liven up the River City: at Brisbane Street Art Festival, they’re all in the spotlight. Each year for ten years now, this festival has splashed around a celebration of literally painting the town. In 2025, it’s marking that milestone with nine days of installations, exhibitions, demonstrations and workshops — and by adding new art around the Queensland capital.
Leans, Carley Cornelissen, Fintan Magee, Sofles, Dean Tyson, Rossella RZ and Simon Degroot are among the artists who’ll be using their talents across Brisbane — some of whom have joined the festival before — with this year’s BSAF taking place between Saturday, May 10–Sunday, May 18. If you’re keen to see how their mural work will give Brissie a new coat of paint, you’ll be wanting to head to Northshore, Spring Hill, the CBD, Fish Lane and DFO Brisbane.


Macami
At Northshore, Superordinary is again acting as a base for the fest, and will gain a number of new pieces — while also hosting the Aussie return of Meeting of Styles across Saturday, May 10–Sunday, May 11. This is the first time that the graffiti initiative has hit Brisbane, with 40 local and international artists taking part. Think of it as a fest within the broader fest, complete with live painting, revelling in the art of spray painting and passing on skills.
The first-ever Brisbane/Meanjin Paste Up Festival also falls into both BSAF and Meeting of Styles — also at Superordinary. Here, paste-up as a form of street art gets some love, giving it recognition that it doesn’t always receive as a type of public art, and acknowledging the format’s many guises from single posters to both intended and unintentional collages.
BSAF overall commences with a party, again at Superordinary — and again also celebrating Meeting of Styles — on Saturday, May 10.
If you’re keen to up your knowledge among watching the festival’s talents make art, sessions span aerosols, graffiti lettering, sticker art, calligraphy, collage and brushwork. Or, if you’d like to appreciate Brisbane’s street art while cycling around the city, you can take one of two tours — the first starting at Howard Smith Wharves, the second kicking off at Fish Lane.




Drapl and Treazy, Aimee Catt




Fintan Magee by @mellumae




Macami




Macami




tuyuloveme




Aimee Catt




Macami
The 2025 Brisbane Street Art Festival runs from Saturday, May 10–Sunday, May 18. For more information, head to the event’s website.
Top image: soggybreadissad.
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