

Another armlatite-carrying lark, between a clenched fist and a strand of barbed wire. To the right (in the second image), a celtic cross.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00775 M00774

Graffitied 1989 version of Don’t Let Them Die.
Beechmount Street, Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00764

Faded first panel from Jeff Perks’s The Training Ground in Beechmount Avenue, Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00765


Here are two faded panels (the first and last) from the four shown in Ireland’s Cross To Bear.
Beechmount Avenue, Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00761 M00763

Faded 1989 vertsion of 1981’s The Conveyor Belt Of Justice (Castlereagh – Crumlin Road Gaol – Diplock Court – H-Blocks of Long Kesh) in Beechmount Avenue, Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00762

Paintbombed 1989 version of Mandela Father Of Freedom.
Lesson Street, west Belfast
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00770

A year after creation, the boards at the top of the Gibraltar 3 mural have given way. 1988 image of A Legitimate Right To Take Up Arms.
Falls Road, Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00756

1989 image of Our Day Will Come in Westrock Drive, Belfast.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00754

1989 image of Is É Seo Nuadha Rí Tuatha Dé Danann and Loch gCál together at the top of Springhill Avenue, west Belfast.
See also 1988 image of the pair, with Loch gCál in better condition.
Click image to enlarge
Copyright © 1989 Peter Moloney
M00752