Glasgow Built Different: 17 Murals From One of Europe’s Strongest Mural Cities
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Glasgow does not try to win you over by being delicate. It wins by being weathered, funny, political, proud, music-soaked, and full of walls that look like they have something urgent to say. That is exactly why its street art hits so hard. A great Glasgow mural does not feel pasted onto the city. It feels forged by it.
Some places collect murals. Glasgow absorbs them. The best ones here feel tied to local memory, working-city grit, neighborhood identity, and the kind of emotional scale that makes you stop walking mid-block. Below are 17 reasons this city feels like one of Europe’s hardest-hitting places to explore on foot if you care about public art.
More classics from Glasgow: Walk Glasgow’s official City Centre Mural Trail

️ Boba Fett — By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow, Scotland 
Bobby Rogue-One understands one of Glasgow’s great strengths: the city never loses points for sincerity if the execution lands. This Boba Fett tribute could have been just fan service. Instead it feels monumental, affectionate, and slightly mythic, exactly the kind of thing that makes you turn a corner and grin before you have even processed the technical skill.
Nerd Fact: Glasgow’s mural trail was officially launched in 2014 to rejuvenate the city center, and it has since transformed blank walls into massive, world-renowned public artworks.More: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)!
Follow Bobby Rogue-One on Instagram
Daffodil King — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
SMUG does not merely paint big. He paints with civic memory. By connecting this huge child-and-daffodil composition to Peter Barr and Govan’s local story, he turns a photorealistic showstopper into something far more Glasgow: proud, specific, and rooted in place.
Fun Fact: The mural honors Peter Barr, a famous Scottish botanist born in Govan, who became known globally as the “Daffodil King” for popularizing the flower in the 19th century.More: ‘Daffodil King’ inspired mural in Glasgow by SMUG
Follow SMUG on Instagram
The Animals Protest Back — By The Rebel Bear in Glasgow, Scotland 
Then Glasgow swerves from beauty into bite. The Rebel Bear’s protesting animals are funny for about two seconds, and then the edge lands. That mix of wit, anger, and street-level directness is one of the city’s signatures, and this wall captures it perfectly.
More: The Rebel Bear and his animals on the Climate Crisis at COP26
Follow The Rebel Bear on InstagramThis is where Glasgow separates itself from the usual “mural city” formula
In a lot of places, public art feels like an overlay. In Glasgow, it often feels fused to the city’s weather, politics, humor, grief, and scale. That is why even wildly different pieces still feel like they belong to the same place.

Night Piece — By Faith47 in Glasgow, Scotland 
This one proves Glasgow did not only become visually compelling in the Instagram era. Faith47 makes the wall feel half-vision, half-ghost, as if the whole surface is exhaling something ancient and fragile into the night. It is quieter than the newer blockbuster pieces, but it lingers.
More: Faith47
Follow Faith47 on Instagram
️ “STIMILUS” — By Rasmus Balstrøm in Glasgow, Scotland 
STIMILUS looks like a portrait passing through a signal glitch, or a thought mid-formation. That fractured rainbow distortion gives Glasgow something it does especially well: a collision between raw wall energy and high-concept visual experiment.
More: “STIMILUS” by Rasmus Balstrøm in Glasgow, Scotland
Follow Rasmus Balstrøm on Instagram
“SPEAK YA MIND” — By .EPOD in Glasgow, Scotland 
.EPOD brings sound-system thinking to the wall. The face, the speaker stack, the darkness, the red disc, it all feels tuned rather than painted. Glasgow has always had music in its bones, and this piece looks like the city visualizing volume.
Follow .EPOD on Instagram
Mid-Air Motion — By VOID ONE and WOSKerski in Glasgow, Scotland 
This collaboration feels pure movement. The floating body, the rollers, the snap of color against black, it reads like someone caught the exact second a painter turned into a performance. It is playful, stylish, and impossible to ignore.
More: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
Follow VOID ONE and WOSKerski on Instagram
Doberman Energy — By FROD in Glasgow, Scotland 
FROD’s Doberman is all teeth, velocity, and attitude. It has the punch of graffiti culture without sacrificing realism, which is exactly why it suits Glasgow so well. The city likes art that can look sharp and still bark.
Follow FROD on Instagram
“Guided by the Light” — By Jay Kaes in Glasgow, Scotland 
Jay Kaes gives Glasgow a different kind of power wall: stylish, synthetic, cinematic. The portrait is grounded in realism, but the surrounding geometry and symbols make it feel like a billboard from a better future, or a memory of one.
Follow Jay Kaes on Instagram
🪧 Brandalism Glasgow — By Glasgow Unknown in Glasgow, Scotland

Strictly speaking, this is more street intervention than classic mural, and that is exactly why it belongs here. Glasgow has never been only about beautiful walls; it is also about public space, friction, satire, and people using the city as an argument. This piece keeps that spirit in the mix.
More: Brandalism: 40 street artists, 10 cities, 365 ad takeovers

Mary Barbour — By Jeks in Glasgow 
Painted for the Yardworks festival, this mural by Jeks reimagining local activist Mary Barbour as a modern-day campaigner is exactly the kind of wall Glasgow does best. It ties public art to public memory, and it proves the city is strongest when history is allowed to talk back.
History Fact: Mary Barbour was a legendary political activist who led the famous 1915 Glasgow rent strikes, forcing the government to change the law to protect tenants.More: 9 Murals by JEKS ONE That Blur the Line Between Paint and Reality

Man with Birds — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
This is one of those SMUG pieces that slows the whole street down. The robin, the lowered gaze, and the soft palette make it feel intimate even at mural scale, which is not an easy trick to pull off.
Fun Fact: Australian-born artist SMUG (Sam Bates) now lives in Glasgow and paints exclusively freehand using only spray cans—no stencils or projectors.More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
Yardworks Portrait — By SMUG at Yardworks in Glasgow, Scotland 
Even without birds or a big narrative hook, this one lands because the face carries everything. The piercings, the skin texture, and the quiet weight in the expression make it feel intensely human from a distance that should have flattened it.
More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
🤍 Mother and Child with Robin — By SMUG in Greenock, Scotland

SMUG can go huge without losing tenderness, and this is the best proof of that. They say Greenock is part of the greater Glasgow City Region, so I included the mural in this collection.
Fun Fact: This beautiful mural was specifically commissioned to help normalize and encourage breastfeeding in public spaces across Scotland.More about this mural here: Smug’s Powerful Mural in Greenock, Scotland: A Conversation Starter for Normalizing Breastfeeding
Follow SMUG on Instagram
Girl with Magnifying Glass — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
This older Glasgow wall still feels brilliant because it plays with scale so confidently. The crouching figure and magnifying glass turn the whole lane into part of the scene, as if the city itself is being examined.
More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
1. Planting the Future — By Rogue One in Glasgow, UKThis giant mural shows a child planting acorns next to a massive oak tree. Even the tallest trees started as tiny seeds! Just remember to water your acorns or they will just be snacks for squirrels. More by Rogue One: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)!
Follow Rogue One on Instagram
Caught in a Glass — Bobby “Rogue-One” in Glasgow, UK
A woman painted in sharp detail holds a drinking glass—trapping a real man inside its transparent cylinder. The artist plays with perspective to stage an optical illusion in full scale.
More by Rogue-One!: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Are you taking the giant headline walls first, or the extra route-stops that make Glasgow feel endless once you really start walking?
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Glasgow does not try to win you over by being delicate. It wins by being weathered, funny, political, proud, music-soaked, and full of walls that look like they have something urgent to say. That is exactly why its street art hits so hard. A great Glasgow mural does not feel pasted onto the city. It feels forged by it.
Some places collect murals. Glasgow absorbs them. The best ones here feel tied to local memory, working-city grit, neighborhood identity, and the kind of emotional scale that makes you stop walking mid-block. Below are 17 reasons this city feels like one of Europe’s hardest-hitting places to explore on foot if you care about public art.
More classics from Glasgow: Walk Glasgow’s official City Centre Mural Trail

️ Boba Fett — By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow, Scotland 
Bobby Rogue-One understands one of Glasgow’s great strengths: the city never loses points for sincerity if the execution lands. This Boba Fett tribute could have been just fan service. Instead it feels monumental, affectionate, and slightly mythic, exactly the kind of thing that makes you turn a corner and grin before you have even processed the technical skill.
Nerd Fact: Glasgow’s mural trail was officially launched in 2014 to rejuvenate the city center, and it has since transformed blank walls into massive, world-renowned public artworks.More: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)!
Follow Bobby Rogue-One on Instagram
Daffodil King — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
SMUG does not merely paint big. He paints with civic memory. By connecting this huge child-and-daffodil composition to Peter Barr and Govan’s local story, he turns a photorealistic showstopper into something far more Glasgow: proud, specific, and rooted in place.
Fun Fact: The mural honors Peter Barr, a famous Scottish botanist born in Govan, who became known globally as the “Daffodil King” for popularizing the flower in the 19th century.More: ‘Daffodil King’ inspired mural in Glasgow by SMUG
Follow SMUG on Instagram
The Animals Protest Back — By The Rebel Bear in Glasgow, Scotland 
Then Glasgow swerves from beauty into bite. The Rebel Bear’s protesting animals are funny for about two seconds, and then the edge lands. That mix of wit, anger, and street-level directness is one of the city’s signatures, and this wall captures it perfectly.
More: The Rebel Bear and his animals on the Climate Crisis at COP26
Follow The Rebel Bear on InstagramThis is where Glasgow separates itself from the usual “mural city” formula
In a lot of places, public art feels like an overlay. In Glasgow, it often feels fused to the city’s weather, politics, humor, grief, and scale. That is why even wildly different pieces still feel like they belong to the same place.

Night Piece — By Faith47 in Glasgow, Scotland 
This one proves Glasgow did not only become visually compelling in the Instagram era. Faith47 makes the wall feel half-vision, half-ghost, as if the whole surface is exhaling something ancient and fragile into the night. It is quieter than the newer blockbuster pieces, but it lingers.
More: Faith47
Follow Faith47 on Instagram
️ “STIMILUS” — By Rasmus Balstrøm in Glasgow, Scotland 
STIMILUS looks like a portrait passing through a signal glitch, or a thought mid-formation. That fractured rainbow distortion gives Glasgow something it does especially well: a collision between raw wall energy and high-concept visual experiment.
More: “STIMILUS” by Rasmus Balstrøm in Glasgow, Scotland
Follow Rasmus Balstrøm on Instagram
“SPEAK YA MIND” — By .EPOD in Glasgow, Scotland 
.EPOD brings sound-system thinking to the wall. The face, the speaker stack, the darkness, the red disc, it all feels tuned rather than painted. Glasgow has always had music in its bones, and this piece looks like the city visualizing volume.
Follow .EPOD on Instagram
Mid-Air Motion — By VOID ONE and WOSKerski in Glasgow, Scotland 
This collaboration feels pure movement. The floating body, the rollers, the snap of color against black, it reads like someone caught the exact second a painter turned into a performance. It is playful, stylish, and impossible to ignore.
More: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
Follow VOID ONE and WOSKerski on Instagram
Doberman Energy — By FROD in Glasgow, Scotland 
FROD’s Doberman is all teeth, velocity, and attitude. It has the punch of graffiti culture without sacrificing realism, which is exactly why it suits Glasgow so well. The city likes art that can look sharp and still bark.
Follow FROD on Instagram
“Guided by the Light” — By Jay Kaes in Glasgow, Scotland 
Jay Kaes gives Glasgow a different kind of power wall: stylish, synthetic, cinematic. The portrait is grounded in realism, but the surrounding geometry and symbols make it feel like a billboard from a better future, or a memory of one.
Follow Jay Kaes on Instagram
🪧 Brandalism Glasgow — By Glasgow Unknown in Glasgow, Scotland

Strictly speaking, this is more street intervention than classic mural, and that is exactly why it belongs here. Glasgow has never been only about beautiful walls; it is also about public space, friction, satire, and people using the city as an argument. This piece keeps that spirit in the mix.
More: Brandalism: 40 street artists, 10 cities, 365 ad takeovers

Mary Barbour — By Jeks in Glasgow 
Painted for the Yardworks festival, this mural by Jeks reimagining local activist Mary Barbour as a modern-day campaigner is exactly the kind of wall Glasgow does best. It ties public art to public memory, and it proves the city is strongest when history is allowed to talk back.
History Fact: Mary Barbour was a legendary political activist who led the famous 1915 Glasgow rent strikes, forcing the government to change the law to protect tenants.More: 9 Murals by JEKS ONE That Blur the Line Between Paint and Reality

Man with Birds — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
This is one of those SMUG pieces that slows the whole street down. The robin, the lowered gaze, and the soft palette make it feel intimate even at mural scale, which is not an easy trick to pull off.
Fun Fact: Australian-born artist SMUG (Sam Bates) now lives in Glasgow and paints exclusively freehand using only spray cans—no stencils or projectors.More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
Yardworks Portrait — By SMUG at Yardworks in Glasgow, Scotland 
Even without birds or a big narrative hook, this one lands because the face carries everything. The piercings, the skin texture, and the quiet weight in the expression make it feel intensely human from a distance that should have flattened it.
More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
🤍 Mother and Child with Robin — By SMUG in Greenock, Scotland

SMUG can go huge without losing tenderness, and this is the best proof of that. They say Greenock is part of the greater Glasgow City Region, so I included the mural in this collection.
Fun Fact: This beautiful mural was specifically commissioned to help normalize and encourage breastfeeding in public spaces across Scotland.More about this mural here: Smug’s Powerful Mural in Greenock, Scotland: A Conversation Starter for Normalizing Breastfeeding
Follow SMUG on Instagram
Girl with Magnifying Glass — By SMUG in Glasgow, Scotland 
This older Glasgow wall still feels brilliant because it plays with scale so confidently. The crouching figure and magnifying glass turn the whole lane into part of the scene, as if the city itself is being examined.
More: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life
Follow SMUG on Instagram
1. Planting the Future — By Rogue One in Glasgow, UKThis giant mural shows a child planting acorns next to a massive oak tree. Even the tallest trees started as tiny seeds! Just remember to water your acorns or they will just be snacks for squirrels. More by Rogue One: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)!
Follow Rogue One on Instagram
Caught in a Glass — Bobby “Rogue-One” in Glasgow, UK
A woman painted in sharp detail holds a drinking glass—trapping a real man inside its transparent cylinder. The artist plays with perspective to stage an optical illusion in full scale.
More by Rogue-One!: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow (6 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Are you taking the giant headline walls first, or the extra route-stops that make Glasgow feel endless once you really start walking?
@streetartutopia now I want to visit.
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