Airborne Mark is a Polish-born, London-based street artist known for his distinctive origami-inspired murals that transform folded paper forms into large-scale urban wildlife. At the centre of his work is “Origamia"; an imagined world inhabited by animals constructed entirely from geometric paper folds. What makes his process unique is that every mural begins as a real, hand-folded origami model created by the artist. These physical paper sculptures are carefully lit and photographed to study the interplay of light and shadow before being translated onto walls with spray paint. When encountering Airborne Mark painting live at festivals, visitors can often see the original origami model beside the wall, revealing the physical object behind the mural. The artworks are not digital constructions or imagined shapes. Every piece painted on a wall originates from a real folded model created by the artist. His murals are instantly recognisable for their layered planes, sharp folds and vibrant colour palettes, creating the illusion that giant paper animals have landed directly in the urban landscape. A defining ritual completes each work: once the mural is finished, the original paper model used as reference is ceremonially burned, marking the end of its life cycle and highlighting the ephemeral nature shared by both street art and fragile paper sculptures. With more than two decades of experience working with spray paint, Airborne Mark’s murals can now be discovered across Europe, including walls in Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Portugal, Kosovo, Poland and the United Kingdom. Each wall becomes another inhabitant released from the evolving world of Origamia, waiting to be discovered by street art hunters exploring cities around the globe.