A Tapestry of Harris Park
Client: The City of Parramatta, funded by the Australian Government’s Investing in our Communities program.
Artist Team: Em Hatton, Gauri Torgalkar, Patrick Hunter (InkHunter) with painting support from Colin Mckinnon (Digital Profet)
Date Completed: April 2026
Size: 120M x 7M
Location: Station St East, Harris Park
Methodology: This project was a collaboration between 3 artists in close consultation with the Harris Park community and Parramatta Council and their stakeholders.
The team undertook an extensive community engagement process to represent the lived experiences of Harris Park's diverse community. The team then translated this into a massive visual story exploring themes that arose from the community.
Following public exhibition and approvals on the design, the team delivered the project in 4 weeks and in the final week ran a community paint session with local community members and business owners.
Image gallery
Photo credit to Connor Neil Media












Press
ABC News: "100-metre mural celebrates Little India"
A massive mural spanning more than 100 metres has been unveiled in the heart of Sydney’s Indian community. Harris Park in the city's west is known as Little India, and the artwork is already being well received by locals.
IndianLink: "Brushstrokes of belonging: Harris Park mural"
"At Sydney’s Harris Park, affectionately called ‘Little India’, a 120-metre mural transforms Station Street East into a living, breathing canvas. There is no single story, no single narrative — and that refusal to simplify sits at the heart of this project." - Prutha Chakraborty
Indian Sun: "Harris Park gets 100-metre mural celebrating Little India"
"Harris Park is now home to the largest and longest mural in the Parramatta area, with a new artwork stretching more than 100 metres along Station Street East."
"City’s largest mural transforms Harris Park’s Little India"
“This is not just a mural – it’s one of the largest of its kind in Western Sydney and a powerful celebration of Harris Park’s identity,” Cr Zaiter said.
The largest mural in Western Sydney

