
About Me
All photos are watermarked. You do not have the right to use my photos without my consent. I will hunt you down and hurt you if you do
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Recent Posts
- Street Art and Morsi – Cairo Artists Continue the Fight May 1, 2013
- Art in The Streets: Videos on Beirut, Palestine, Tripoli and Cairo for MOCATV April 16, 2013
- Graffiti for a Social Cause: Zeft, Nazeer, Nemo and Mona Lisa Brigades March 11, 2013
- Women in Graffiti: A Tribute to the Women of Egypt January 7, 2013
- Return to Tahrir: Two Years and Graffiti of the Martyrs December 29, 2012
- Graffiti in Palestine: Female Street Artist from East Jerusalem and Rockets over Gaza November 15, 2012
- Egyptian Graffiti Artists Exhibit Around the World November 4, 2012
- The Art of Movement: Another Chapter of Mohamed Mahmoud Graffiti September 20, 2012
- For the Love of Graffiti: Cairo’s Walls Trace History of Colourful Revolution September 20, 2012
- Beirut Graffiti: Quirky, Colourful Street Art in Lebanon August 28, 2012
Follow Me on Twitter
- @Mariquon hurry up 2 days ago
- @Mariquon where are you 2 days ago
- @alexnunns yes yes no 2 days ago
- Happy to report my first koshari meal @KoshariStreet was pretty good- homesick Egyptians, head there now #london http://t.co/LXPiuttBco 2 days ago
Tag Archives: El Morshed
Return to Tahrir: Two Years and Graffiti of the Martyrs
It was my first time to walk through Tahrir after three months away from Egypt, and I don’t quite know why I was so bewildered and shell-shocked. Perhaps it was the heaviness of the atmosphere in the square, the squalid … Continue reading
Posted in Street Art Fascination
Tagged tahrir, hosny, Mohamed Mahmoud, Mina Daniel, Ultras, Mansour Street, Ammar Abo Bakr, Alaa Awad, Zeft, Sheikh Emad Effat, Amr Nazeer, Laila Magued, Tefa, Koran, Mogamaa, Lycee, Assiut Train Crash, January 25, El Morshed, Iyad El Oraby, Gika, Pharaonic mural, Kasr El Eini Street, El Husseiny Abo Deef, Amal Donqol, Omar Picasso
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