Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
An old frontage holding its shape while the street moves past it. There’s history baked into those details, even if most people aren’t looking. Cities perform continuity like this all the time.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
A sticker on a pole, half lost in the noise of traffic and shadow, but clear enough if you bother to look. Anti-fascism does not need subtlety. It needs repetition, presence, and a bit of nerve. The street is still one of the few places where that message can’t be politely ignored.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Jen walking ahead, the street opening up in front of her. The frame keeps her central without making it about control. More about movement than destination. The kind of shot that feels like it could keep going.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Poles, wires, frames, all layered over a patch of stubborn greenery. The built environment pressing in, the plants pushing back. It’s not a fair fight, but it’s ongoing.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
A “criminal” poster wrapped around a pole in the middle of traffic. No ambiguity here. Melbourne protest culture tends to favour clarity over subtlety. You know where you stand, or at least where the poster does.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
A wall crammed with imagery, styles, messages, none of them asking permission from the others. It’s chaotic, but it holds. Melbourne’s visual language is built on this kind of density. You don’t tidy it, you navigate it.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Two people sitting apart, each locked into their own moment. Public space shared, not necessarily connected. The framing keeps it balanced, almost formal. Still feels a bit lonely.
Tasmanian.Kris has added a photo to the pool:
Smith and Carlos, barefoot on that podium, fists raised, refusing to let the moment pass quietly. The mural holds that defiance in place, a reminder that naming violence has always come with a cost. Peter Norman stands with them, calm, deliberate, and just as exposed. History like this does not fade. It waits for you to notice it again.