About
Nothing is black and white. But sometimes, art is.
Alex Senna is a Brazilian artist known for his elongated figures and monochromatic scenes that turn city walls into visual poetry. In a country as vibrant and full of contrasts as Brazil, he picked a direct and universal language: black and white, shadow and light.

His characters live at the intersection of silence and expression, the public and the private, the concrete and the human. They speak of love, friendship, longing, and hope—always at the margins of urban chaos.
Senna’s work isn’t about décor or technique, but about people and the stories he finds on the streets. Everyday moments become art—fleeting encounters, unexpected embraces, glances exchanged in silence.
More than graffiti, his work is a form of collective memory—an invitation to introspection amid the noise of the city. From São Paulo to Paris, from New York to Seoul, his winged figures and stretched shadows transcend borders and cultures, connecting people through the simplicity of the line and the depth of emotion.