This photo taken on April 12, 2026 shows people walking past a wall mural along the roadside in Tehran. — AFP/File
Murals and banners have long been a defining feature of Iran’s urban landscape, particularly in Tehran, where such paintings in central squares mirror the state’s political messaging and foreign policy.
This photo taken on April 11, 2026 shows women walking past a wall mural along the roadside in Tehran. — AFP/File
Since the 1979 revolution, which established the Islamic republic, such imagery has served as a medium to reflect ideology and collective memory.
In recent days, a mural in Tehran showed a US aircraft carrier carrying rows of coffins draped in American flags, surrounded by small Iranian-flagged boats and a helicopter.
This photo taken on April 8, 2026 shows a woman walking past an anti-USA and anti-Israel mural, in Tehran. — AFP/File
The image evoked dominance at sea, as Iran’s armed forces continue a blockade of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas in peacetime.
Another mural depicts a man raising both arms, each wrapped in the Iranian flag, his hands forming a heart.
This photo taken on April 6, 2026 shows a man walking past a banner depicting a man holding up a heart gestures before missiles being fired, in Tehran. — AFP/File
Another shows the Iranian flag flowing across the wall with its tulip-shaped emblem bearing a missile in its centre, while a young woman carries a banner reading: “We have all come for the revolution,” referencing support for the 1979 Islamic revolution.
This photo taken on April 8, 2026 shows a man walking past an anti-USA and anti-Israel mural, in Tehran. — AFP/File
Elsewhere, a mural traces a line of clerical leadership in Iran.
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It begins with the founder of the Islamic republic, Ruhollah Khomeini, followed by Ali Khamenei, who was killed in the opening US-Israel attack of the war on February 28, and culminating with his successor and son, Mojtaba Khamenei.
An Iranian woman walks past an anti-USA and anti-Israel mural, in Tehran on April 21 2026. — AFP
Separate works depict Iranian drones shattering the Star of David, the emblem of Israel’s flag, while one mural shows demonstrators gathered before Azadi Square, chanting “Death to America”, with one holding a portrait of Ali Khamenei.
Among the most striking long-standing anti-US murals are those around the former US embassy in central Tehran, now a museum known as the “Den of Spies”.
One depicts a fractured Statue of Liberty with a broken arm surrounded by scenes of destruction, while another shows the US flag with skulls replacing its stars.