This conceptual series interrogates fame, fantasy, and decay. Audie juxtaposes iconic Hollywood visuals—starlets, red carpets, vintage cameras—with fragmentation, distortion, and layering. The work suggests how celebrity mythology is constructed and unraveled. Each piece in the Hollywood Destroys series invites reflection on image, identity, and truth behind the glamour.
Audie Adams (also known as Audroc) is a Nashville-based muralist, visual storyteller, and creative force whose work blends bold imagery, cultural memory, and public engagement. Over the past two decades, Audie has transformed walls, parking structures, and public spaces into immersive narratives that speak to identity, place, music, and community.
For Audie, commissioned work is more than decoration — it is a collaboration in vision. Each project begins with conversation: about site, audience, and intention. From there, the imagery evolves in conversation with the space — whether a barn, business façade, or community wall. His approach centers shared ownership: the client becomes part of the story, the neighborhood becomes part of the art.
Audie’s murals not only beautify—they amplify local voices. Working in the public sphere enables transformation: a blank wall becomes a landmark, a forgotten alley becomes a drawing ground, and everyday viewers become part of the narrative. His impact lies in turning public surfaces into living art that belongs to everyone.
Hollywood Destroys Series
12 x12

