This travel poster celebrates the Belfast Peace Wall as a place of memory and quiet possibility. Framed by terraced rooftops and a fading evening sky, the wall is shown not simply as a barrier but as a canvas - a sequence of painted panels and hand-lettered messages that chart a city's long story. In Northern Ireland the Wall is both a monument to past divisions and a living record of communities finding ways to speak to one another.
The history sits lightly in the image. Begun in the late 20th century during the Troubles, the Peace Walls were practical responses to a fragile peace. Over time those sheets of metal and concrete were turned into murals, slogans and improvised artworks that record grief, protest and hope. Walking past them today you meet a mosaic of voices: local humour, political sentiment, names and dates, bright blocks of colour and careful lettering. The poster honours that complexity, inviting the viewer to pause and imagine the footsteps, the conversations and the afternoons that have altered the wall's meaning.
Belfast itself is a city of contrasts - industrial lines and green hills, shipyard cranes that recall a maritime past, busy cafés and quiet lanes. This piece evokes the city at dusk, when the light softens brickwork and casts long shadows across laneways. Nearby, the River Lagan carries reflections of cranes and stone bridges, and within easy reach lie sweeping coastal drives and the dramatic cliffs of the Antrim coast. Culture here is lived close to the street: pubs with music, galleries showing new voices, community projects that turn contested spaces into places for gardens, markets and conversation.
There is a romantic thread to that city life: the sense of discovery as you turn a corner and find fresh paint on a familiar panel, an evening conversation over a shared plate, or the quiet intimacy of a mural lit by sodium lamps.