Art On The Streets: How 15 Artists Turned London’s Billboards Into the World’s Largest Gallery

In December 2025, The Public Canvas placed 15 artists on real billboards, bus stops, and London Underground stations — turning the city into the world’s largest open-air gallery.
Ruth Swain artwork displayed on a digital billboard at night in central London - Art On The Streets billboard art exhibition by The Public Canvas and Creative Flair
Billboard Art Residency – London

Art On The Streets
Fifteen Artists. One City. Zero Walls.

A Creative Flair × The Public Canvas Initiative

In December 2025, fifteen artists had their work displayed on real billboards across London. No gallery. No velvet ropes. No admission fee. Just art, placed directly in the path of millions.

The Public Canvas – a Creative Flair initiative in collaboration with Fetch London and Women In Art – did something the London art world had never seen at this scale. Working with advertising partners across the city, they secured placements on digital billboards, bus-stop screens, and high-street displays at locations including Kings Cross station, then handed those spaces to artists. The result was Art On The Streets Week: a billboard art residency that transformed London into the world’s largest open-air gallery.

These were not mockups or digital renders. These were real artworks, on real billboards, seen by real Londoners on their daily commute. The same advertising infrastructure that usually sells insurance and fast food was, for one extraordinary week, given over entirely to art.

Amy Haynes posing in front of her billboard art in London - Art On The Streets artist billboard exhibition with red double-decker bus Stavri Georgiou artwork on a real London billboard near Shoreditch street art - Art On The Streets billboard art residency Adela Osmani artwork displayed on a London billboard with red bus passing - The Public Canvas art billboard programme

What Is a Billboard Art Residency?

A billboard art residency is a programme that takes artists out of the studio and places their work on large-format public spaces – billboards, bus shelters, digital screens, and high-street displays. It is one of the most powerful forms of public art exhibition available today.

Traditional residencies offer studio time. A billboard residency does the opposite – it takes the finished work and broadcasts it to the widest possible audience. A single art billboard in London can be seen by tens of thousands of people in a single day. More viewers than most gallery exhibitions attract in an entire month.

The Public Canvas – working alongside gallery partner Fetch London and advocacy group Women In Art – understood this. Take the commercial billboard infrastructure that already exists and repurpose it as a platform for artistic expression. Give artists the same visibility that multinational brands pay millions for. The result is a public art billboard programme that doesn’t just exhibit art – it democratises who gets to see it.

Annam Butt artwork on a digital bus stop billboard in London - billboard art exhibition by The Public Canvas Amelia Wood City Chimneys on a London billboard - Art On The Streets public art billboard programme

Turning London Into a Gallery

The scale of Art On The Streets was ambitious. The Public Canvas secured digital billboard placements at high-traffic locations across London – from busy high streets to central London thoroughfares. Each artwork appeared alongside the artist’s name and social handle, with a People’s Choice Award QR code inviting public votes.

This wasn’t a passive exhibition. It was designed to create a dialogue between the art, the artist, and the city. Commuters stopped to photograph the billboards. They scanned the codes. They voted. In a city saturated with commercial messaging, art cut through in a way that advertising rarely does.

The Artists

The fifteen selected artists brought painting, photography, mixed media, and digital art to the streets of London. Here are some of the standout works that appeared on artist billboards across the city.

Brad Kenny Unforgettable Gaze expressionist portrait painting displayed on London billboard - Art On The Streets artist billboard

Brad Kenny

“Unforgettable Gaze”

Brad Kenny’s expressionist portrait stopped commuters in their tracks. Rendered in bold reds, yellows, and teals with thick, fragmented brushwork, the painting demands a second look – and on a billboard, it got thousands. The partially obscured face, with one piercing eye staring at the viewer, created an arresting experience at scale.

Stavri Georgiou The Impossible hand reaching for the moon photography - billboard art residency artist

Stavri Georgiou

“The Impossible”

A single hand reaching upward toward a luminous blue moon against soft clouds. Deceptively simple in composition but immense in emotional resonance. On a billboard, the gesture became monumental – a quiet, universal statement about aspiration and the human instinct to reach for what seems beyond our grasp.

Amy Haynes posing beside her billboard artwork The Obscured Mother on a London high street with red double-decker bus - Art On The Streets artist billboard

Amy Haynes

“The Obscured Mother”

Amy Haynes’s ethereal black-and-white photography of a figure in motion, blurred and wrapped in translucent material, took on a spectral quality at billboard scale. Against the chaos of a London high street, her work stopped traffic – figuratively and, by several accounts, almost literally.

Adela Osmani Depths of Memory artwork displayed on a London billboard with red bus passing - The Public Canvas art billboard programme

Adela Osmani

“Depths of Memory”

Adela Osmani’s abstracted forms and colour explored the layered nature of recollection. At billboard scale, the work became a shared psychological space – each commuter reading something different in its depths. Against the rush of passing buses, the piece invited a moment of stillness.

Angela Rimmer Golden Hour II artwork displayed on London billboard - The Public Canvas artist billboard programme Art On The Streets

Angela Rimmer

“Golden Hour II”

A luminous painting capturing the warmth and transience of golden-hour light. On a billboard, the piece delivered a blast of warmth amid the grey concrete of London’s commercial architecture – a reminder that beauty exists in fleeting moments, even on your daily commute.

Sheila Akposubi Which Direction artwork on London billboard - Art On The Streets public art billboard exhibition

Sheila Akposubi

“Which Direction”

A question every commuter could relate to, both literally and existentially. Sheila Akposubi’s work resonated with a directness that cut through the noise of the city. On a billboard at street level, the piece became a quiet provocation – art meeting you exactly where you are.

“We’re turning London into a gallery. Fifteen artists will see their work displayed on real billboards across London. Will one of them be you?”

The Public Canvas
Sheila Akposubi Which Direction artwork on London billboard - Art On The Streets public art billboard exhibition Satha Nanthan Letchumanan Let the Body Speak on London billboard - billboard art residency Angela Rimmer Golden Hour artwork on London billboard - The Public Canvas artist billboard programme

The Full Roster

Ruth Swain – “Self Portrait à la Norman Rockwell”

A hyperrealistic painting of the artist from behind, working on a large canvas. The meta-narrative – an artist painting herself painting – was perfectly suited for the billboard context, where the line between creator and audience collapses.

Annam Butt – “Spill”

Figurative oil painting bringing classical technique to a contemporary setting. The rich, warm palette and the subject’s direct gaze created an intimate moment amplified to a public scale.

Satha Nanthan Letchumanan – “Let the Body Speak”

Striking black-and-white photography of the human form – a muscular figure shot from behind, every sinew visible. A masterclass in physical storytelling, transformed into something primal and powerful at billboard scale.

Amelia Wood – “City Chimneys”

Mixed-media work capturing the texture and rhythm of the urban landscape. Seeing it on a London billboard created a mirror effect – the city looking at an artist’s interpretation of itself.

Serpil Eryalcin – “The Girl With The Red Rose”

Narrative portraiture balancing delicacy and emotional weight. The titular red rose served as a focal point of vivid colour, drawing the eye of anyone passing.

Julia Lambert – “The Weight of Unsaid Things”

The invisible burdens people carry, rendered visible through paint and placed in spaces where millions of strangers pass each other without a word.

Judy Clarkson – “Angel”

A sense of the sacred brought to the secular space of the billboard – a reminder that beauty and meaning can exist in the most unexpected places.

Dead Seagull – “wake up.”

Under a provocative pseudonym, a piece that functioned as both artwork and public statement. The deliberate lowercase and full stop carried an urgency perfectly suited to the billboard medium.

Fatima M Khan – “Puddle”

Beauty found in the overlooked. A commonplace urban detail elevated into something worthy of a billboard – the kind of perceptual shift that the best public art creates.

Stavri Georgiou The Impossible artwork on London billboard at dusk - billboard art exhibition Dead Seagull wake up artwork on London billboard - Art On The Streets public art billboard

Why Billboard Art Is the Future

The traditional gallery model is not broken, but it is limited. Galleries serve a self-selecting audience. A billboard art exhibition inverts that model entirely. The audience doesn’t come to the art. The art goes to the audience.

A well-attended gallery exhibition in London might draw 20,000 visitors over a multi-week run. A single billboard on a busy London street is seen by tens of thousands of people per day. Art On The Streets reached more people in a single week than most galleries reach in a year.

For emerging artists, that kind of exposure is transformative. It builds recognition. It builds audiences. And it does so without requiring artists to navigate the often exclusionary gatekeeping of the traditional gallery system.

How a Billboard Residency Differs From Traditional Programmes

A traditional artist residency provides time and space – a studio, accommodation, and weeks to develop new work. A billboard residency focuses on distribution and visibility. The Public Canvas provides something far rarer: a massive, guaranteed audience. Your work at the same scale as campaigns by Nike, Apple, and Netflix.

The most effective career strategy is to pursue both. Use traditional residencies to develop your practice. Use billboard art residencies to build your audience. Art On The Streets represents a model gaining momentum across the UK, Europe, and North America.

How to Get Your Art on a Billboard

How do I get my artwork on a billboard? The answer is more accessible than most artists assume. The Public Canvas runs open calls for each edition. Artists can apply through a Creative Flair Elevate membership or via a one-time submission pass. Each applicant submits a portfolio and specific works for consideration.

A curatorial panel – led by James Carter (Creative Flair) and Victoria Comstock-Kershaw (Fetch London) – evaluates every submission against four weighted criteria: Originality (40%), Public Impact (30%), Craft and Technique (20%), and Story/Message (10%). Around fifteen artists are selected per edition, and the programme handles all production, formatting, and placement.

The Public Canvas has established itself as the leading artist billboard programme in London, distinguished by the rigour of its curation process, the prestige of its placements at locations like Kings Cross, and the People’s Choice Award that gives the public a voice in deciding which artwork resonates most.

The Impact

Several featured artists reported significant increases in social media followers, portfolio enquiries, and direct sales. The People’s Choice Award generated thousands of public votes. Plans are underway for expanded editions in 2026, including showcases tied to International Women’s Day and the Affordable Art Fair.

Londoners did not ignore these works. They stopped. They photographed. They voted. That is a powerful proof of concept – not just for The Public Canvas, but for the entire billboard art movement.

The Public Canvas Art On The Streets campaign We Are Turning London Into A Gallery - billboard art exhibition London
“We’re Turning London Into A Gallery” – The Public Canvas

Want Your Art on a Billboard?

The Public Canvas is accepting submissions for upcoming billboard art exhibitions across London.

Apply Now
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