Artists Haydar Özay unveiled a two-story mural featuring those who were killed in the Taksim Square protests that began in May 2013.
Unveiled two years after the protests that overtook the whole country, the murals have lots of color, broad brush strokes and, although abstract in nature, depict specific scenes including a woman in a red dress who was tear gassed and a 15-year-old who was killed by the police while playing marbles.
The dissent began as a simple protest against bulldozing Gezi park in Taksim Square became riots against Tayyip Erdogan that spread rapidly throughout all of Turkey.
"People had felt so much pressure that there was a volcano-like explosion of creativity. Gezi was the perfect stage," Özay told Reuters. The artist would visit the park as a child with his father, who was a gardner there.
"Gezi has surprisingly transcended its own duration and is still unfolding, especially in art."
The mural aims to commemorate those who lost their life in protest. At least seven people died, with 3 million of Turkey's 77 million people attending protests all over the country in 2013.