Forever Connected is a newly commissioned mural by internationally acclaimed artist Damilola Odusote. Forever Connected is a visual meditation on the invisible threads that bind us to the moments that shape us–fragments of memory, emotion, and experience suspended in time.
This mural captures the beautifully tangled chaos of life, where joy, grief, love, and growth all collide. Each scene within the composition represents a different chapter of the human journey, flowing into the next–not with linear clarity, but through the organic, often chaotic web of time and circumstance.
Here, memory takes on a corporeal form – abstract yet visceral. It's a celebration of how seemingly fleeting moments become permanent fixtures in who we are. Some connections are deliberate; others are accidental. Yet all are meaningful.
In the disorder, there is truth. In the mess, there is meaning. Forever Connected invites viewers to pause, reflect, and recognise the quiet, powerful links between their past, present, and becoming.
Image: Damilola Odusote, Forever Connected
Visual artist and muralist working in drawing, painting, sculpture, spray-painting and mixed-media.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.
When you only have 10p in your pocket during a time of crisis, who would you call? More importantly, who would call you back?” Touring art installation that super-sizes the iconic phone booth from the 1990s.