ONE OF DUBLIN’S best-known street murals has been painted over and replaced with NFL-themed street art ahead of an American football game in Croke Park this weekend.
The mural, titled Do Not Remove, stretched across a two-storey hoarding on Ormond Quay.
It depicted a man with bricks covering his head, with the words “Do Not Remove” painted on one of the bricks.
The site is the derelict Ormond Hotel, which famously featured in the Sirens episode of James Joyce’s Ulysses.
The hotel fell into disuse in the early 2000s, though planning conditions for its redevelopment stipulate that it must reopen as a hotel and retain the Ormond name.
In 2022, Brazilian artist Neto Vettorello and Dublin artist Asbestos collaborated on the Do Not Remove mural.
Commissioned by the Association of Brazilian Families in Ireland, with support from the Brazilian Embassy, site owners Monteco Holdings Ltd, and Dublin City Council, the project marked 200 years of Brazilian independence and was presented as a “gift” from the Brazilian community to Dublin.
The striking, colourful piece blended both artists’ styles while delivering a commentary on dereliction and the housing crisis.
Now, only fragments of the mural remain, almost entirely covered by NFL branding.
The removal comes as part of a wider rollout of football-themed installations across the city, including works on Tara Street, Dame Street, and Barnardo Square, where a giant helmet has been erected.
Sunday’s game is expected to draw in thousands of US visitors, as the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Minnesota Vikings.
A passerby on Ormond Quay described the new NFL artwork to The Journal as “gaudy-looking.”
One of the artists installing the new artwork said that the replacement of the Do Not Remove mural had been ordered by Dublin City Council.
Artist Neto Vettorello told The Journal that he was not contacted by Dublin City Council before his mural was painted over.
“It’s quite ironic, since the title of the piece was actually “Do Not Remove”,” Vettorello said.
“The Council just did what they usually do: keep the city grey, silent, and stripped of colour and voice.”
He added that the NFL theme was disappointing, and quizzed the US influence on the Dublin artwork.
“Nobody questions it, because we live in apathetic societies where public art is rarely created as a form of questioning. That’s what made the Ormond Quay mural special, it wasn’t decoration or advertising, it was a dialogue.
“I was celebrating female symbolism and independence, while Asbestos raised the issue of how stories are constantly erased.”
The council has been contacted for comment.
The artist added that the NFL installation will be painted over following the game on Sunday.