This mural by Akse P19 honours Andy Rourke with a striking, photo‑real portrait that captures the bassist in his prime and restores his presence to the heart of Manchester’s music geography.
Akse’s tribute to Andy Rourke, unveiled on the side of the Wheatsheaf Pub in Manchester’s Northern Quarter, transforms a familiar street corner into a site of collective memory. Based on a 1985 photograph taken during The Smiths’ UK/US tour by Nalinee Darmrong, the mural presents Rourke in crisp black‑and‑white, bass in hand, immersed in the quiet intensity that defined his musicianship.
The choice of location is deeply intentional. The Wheatsheaf was one of Rourke’s favourite pubs, a place woven into his everyday life as much as his legend. By placing the portrait here—towering, calm, and unmistakably present—Akse anchors Rourke not only in Manchester’s cultural history but in its lived, local rhythms. The mural becomes a point where memory, neighbourhood, and music intersect.
The mural is also the result of a community‑driven crowdfunding effort, initiated by former Smiths drummer Mike Joyce. Fans exceeded the fundraising target, ensuring the work could be completed and that additional donations would support Pancreatic Cancer Action, honouring Rourke’s life and raising awareness of the disease that claimed him in 2023.
As a public artwork, the mural functions on multiple levels: a memorial, a celebration, and a reminder of Rourke’s quiet but foundational role in shaping The Smiths’ sound. It stands as a new landmark in the Northern Quarter—one that invites passers‑by to pause, look up, and reconnect with a musician whose influence continues to echo far beyond the city.
