Melbourne street art
When I walked past this wall, I immediately fell in love with its vibrancy and electric designs. I call it the “Hand of Life.”

In the U.S., we vilify it and call it graffiti. Whether in the garbage alleys of Los Angeles or by the loading zones of New York City, graffiti artists must resort to secret midnight runs to express their creativity in order to avoid the red and blue sirens of the police. Even though the reasons for the “no graffiti” law are understandable (can you imagine the presidents of Mount Rushmore with multi-colored mustaches?), the line between an expression of art and defacement of property can get fuzzy at times. However, once you step onto Australian soil, get ready to swap that word for a more endearing term that Melburnians embrace publicly: street art.

Melbourne street art
Me by one of my favorite alleyways because there’s a cute little café right around the corner that makes the best flat whites (a non-foamy latte in Aussie terms) and is super close to the university!

I know nothing about painting. I mean, I do have some background from elementary school years and art class, but all of that knowledge is long gone. And yet, I am still able to appreciate the awesomeness that is Melbourne’s street art. Every single day in Melbourne is a thrill because you never know when you are going to see a new wall of art that you haven’t come across just the week before. Additionally, street art takes no prisoners in that you can literally find a few pieces up an alleyway, a dead end or truck loading zone completely tagged in color, or even a solo piece right under someone’s windowsill.

Melbourne street art
This is one of my most favorite walls because of the section at the top with the papier-mâché Icarus-like-depiction. This was my first time seeing 3-D street art!

As omnipresent and noticeable as street art is, I don’t think that Melbourne is just about that one characteristic though. Just like in cooking, you can totally make banana pancakes with the majority of it being solely the batter, but you also need the bananas, maybe a sprinkle of chocolate chips topped off with some whipped cream, and drizzled with maple syrup! In the end, Melbourne isn’t the bustling and beautiful city that I have come to know without the constant screeching of trams, various palettes of fashionable (and some unfashionable) fabrics worn by its citygoers, scrumptious international flavors and foods, and of course the pièce de résistance—street art.

Melbourne street art
Here’s the bigger picture of street art on the backside of an entire building! Like I said before, street art is literally anywhere and almost everywhere

Jodi Huang is a student at the University of California, San Diego and a TEAN Featured Blogger. Jodi is currently studying abroad with TEAN in Melbourne, Australia.