Sydney Wall Art

Aerial photography on the eastern suburbs coastline of Sydney snapped by Nicolas Letoublon from a drone. From Bondi, Bronte, Coogee, Tamarama, Maroubra to the Sydney Opera House. Every photo is made from the air, where the familiar becomes geometric. The places most Sydneysiders know at water level, observed from directly above.

Sydney beach photography prints from Bondi to Maroubra

The collection spans the eastern suburbs coastline from north to south. Bondi Icebergs from above, the lanes visible through the water. The rock pool at Bronte, seen at high tide when the ocean pushes over the edge. The rainbow steps at Coogee, their arc readable only from above. Tamarama, Clovelly, the Opera House pictured where the shells read as architecture rather than landmark. Familiar places viewed from an angle that changes their reading.

Sydney wall art for people who know these places

Most Sydney photography takes place from street level or a coastal walk. The Bondi Icebergs shot that most people have ever seen is from the road above. These pictures are filmed between 50 and 80 metres above that height, where the geometry of the pool becomes abstract and crowds are gone. The recognition is instant for anyone who knows the eastern suburbs. The angle is not. Which is why these wall art prints on Sydney’s streets serve more as art than documentation of a place.

Frequently asked questions

  • What Sydney locations are available as prints?

    The collection spans the coastline of Sydney’s eastern suburbs. Bondi Icebergs, the rock pool at Bronte, rainbow steps in Coogee, Tamarama, Maroubra, Clovelly and the Sydney Opera House. Each is captured from above, a view most people visiting these locations have never seen before.

  • Do you have Bondi Icebergs prints?

    Yes. The Icebergs pool is among the most requested prints in the collection, shot directly above with the lanes seen through the water and the ocean beyond. Available in multiple sizes. View the Bondi Icebergs print.

  • Why is Sydney aerial photography different from regular Sydney photography?

    The majority of photos of Sydney are taken down on the streets, along a beach or on a well known lookout. These shots come from a drone 50 to 80 metres above the ground and are entirely a change in scale relationships. Bondi Icebergs reads as geometry. The Opera House shells are no longer a landmark, but rather a study in structure. Where the same places exist, in a way that most people have never seen.