All posts tagged: Said Kinos

Murals, Box Trucks, and the City: HKWalls 2026 in Hong Kong

Murals, Box Trucks, and the City: HKWalls 2026 in Hong Kong

New photos today from HKWalls, one of the global standouts on the street art festival circuit, in part because of how it integrates the cultures of hip-hop, murals, graffiti, and street art within 2026 Hong Kong itself. Set against a city that is dense, fast-moving, and tightly managed, the festival brings these threads together in a way that feels considered, not improvised. Unlike a graffiti jam or open call that welcomes arriving artists who suddenly appear, this is not a free-for-all; it is a structured event that understands its environment and works fluently within it.

HKWalls knows the audience and knows its artists. You might say that it has always functioned as a negotiation rather than a confrontation. High property values, strict regulations, and a sensitive political climate define the terrain, and the graffiti/street art culture evolved outside of, sometimes in spite of, those considerations. Blending and winning is the challenge, and this festival finds a way to contribute meaningfully to the city’s visual and cultural life – and provide opportunity to artists from here and afar.

Mooncasket. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)

The HKWalls platform places its work directly into neighborhoods that have an opportunity to see fresh approaches and techniques and to encounter them on their own terms. The murals are discussed and selected, and by clever routes and hybrids, the field continues to expand. This year’s painted box trucks and installations are a telling development—mobile surfaces that carry work through the city while also functioning as temporary galleries and classrooms. It’s a practical evolution in a place where fixed space is limited: if walls are scarce, the exhibition moves. The result is a broader form of engagement, one that extends beyond the static image into circulation and interaction.

Asbestos. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Rhys Turner)

Call it a new golden age, if you like—but one built on agreements with trusted partners. Artists gain visibility and access; the city accrues new cultural capital; communities that don’t typically go to art galleries or glitzy art fairs are invited into the exchange. At the same time, some may tell you that a tension remains visible. A segment of graffiti writers and street artists has long resisted participation in organized festivals or sanctioned jams, wary that civic, commercial, or institutional support can dilute the anti-establishment credibility of graffiti’s origins. That concern still carries weight, but the development of new formats in street art festivals doesn’t deny the roots- it often creates new routes forward.

HKWalls, however, occupies its own lane—openly shaped by a mix of commercial backing, community presence, and institutional partnership. Founded in 2014 and now in its eleventh year, it has involved well over 300 artists from more than 30 countries, with the 2026 edition bringing together 20+ artists from 14 countries across murals, trucks, and digital works. Led by Jason Dembski, Stan Wu, and Maria Wong, the project continues to evolve as a hybrid platform—one that works within the system while still making space for talented local and international artists to be seen.

Hard Thirtheen. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Daniel Murray)

Participating artists in HKWalls 2026 (as identified in the program):
Fabio Petani (Italy), Hardthirteen (Indonesia), Enoch Wong (Hong Kong), Asbestos (Ireland), Leho (Taiwan), Mooncasket (Hong Kong), Saïd Kinos (Netherlands), Yubia (Spain), TAXA (Japan/Hong Kong), Awie (Canada), Ondřej Rakušan (Czech Republic), Anomalit Kate (Russia), Seohyo (South Korea), Chaaya Prabhat (India), Eggshellsea (Hong Kong), Chow Kai (Hong Kong), V3RBO (Italy) .



Mural Program
The 2026 mural program centers on a focused group of international and local artists working across Central and the Western District, with walls selected and developed in coordination with property owners and local stakeholders. This year’s muralists include Fabio Petani (Italy), Hardthirteen (Indonesia), and Enoch Wong (Hong Kong), alongside performative interventions by Irish artist Asbestos, whose roaming character brings a live, unscripted element into the street environment. The emphasis remains on large-scale, publicly accessible works created in real time, reinforcing the festival’s role as a visible, process-driven platform.

Trucks Program (“Art on the Move”)
A newer development, the trucks program extends the festival beyond fixed walls into the flow of the city itself. In partnership with a logistics platform, artists including Leho (Taiwan), Mooncasket (Hong Kong), Saïd Kinos (Netherlands), Yubia (Spain), TAXA (Japan/Hong Kong), and Awie (Canada) transform working vehicles into mobile artworks. These trucks operate as both moving murals and temporary interiors—housing small exhibitions, installations, and workshop spaces—effectively creating a circulating network of encounters that brings the work into everyday transit routes.

Digital Program
The digital component expands the festival into large-scale public screens and architectural facades, extending visibility beyond the street level into the skyline and harborfront. Featured artists include Ondřej Rakušan (Czech Republic), Anomalit Kate (Russia), Seohyo (South Korea), Chaaya Prabhat (India), Eggshellsea (Hong Kong), Chow Kai (Hong Kong), and V3RBO (Italy). Presented on major LED installations and public-facing screens, the program translates elements of street art and graffiti into motion-based, immersive formats, reaching audiences across multiple districts and timeframes.


Mooncasket. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Mooncasket. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Mooncasket. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Mooncasket. Childer workshop inside her truck. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Hard Thirtheen. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Daniel Murray)
Awie. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Awie. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Awie. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Awie. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © HKWalls)
Kai Tak. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Theo Haggai. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Theo Haggai. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Theo Haggai. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
LEHO. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
LEHO. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
LEHO. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
FLEKS. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
FLEKS. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
HEATH. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
JAUNT. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Rhys Turner)
ENOCH. WONG. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Rhys Turner)
ENOCH. WONG. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Fabio Petani. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Fabio Petani. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
TAXA. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © HKWalls)
TOM. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
TOM. Detail. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
TOM. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Victor Tong)
Said Kinos. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Said Kinos. HK Walls 2026. Hong Kong. March 2026. (photo © Kyra Campbell)
Read more