1 of 9 Perhaps the most famous of the images depicted in the People's Gallery this detail from the Bloody Sunday wall shows Father Edward Daly with a white handkerchief leading a casualty out
2 of 9 Another of the gable walls in the Bogside remembers the civil rights movement of the late 60s and early 70s
3 of 9 Depicting an image from the day known as Operation Motorman when the British Army smashed barricades to bring an end to "no-go" areas for the security forces in the Bogside
4 of 9 The inspiration for this monochrome image of a boy wearing a gasmask came from a famous photograph taken near Rossville Flats
5 of 9 A rioter confronts an army vehicle. The artists say these images have universal appeal and could refer to any number of conflict situations across the world
6 of 9 A representation of the 1981 hunger strike when ten republicans starved themselves to death inside the Maze prison, then known as Long Kesh.
7 of 9 The last of the murals to be completed in 2004 is a colour image of the dove of peace designed by schoolchildren.
8 of 9 Artists Tom Kelly and Kevin Hasson at work on the scaffolding
9 of 9 Kevin Hasson, William Kelly and Tom Kelly - the men behind the murals that have become known as the People's Gallery.