9 Breathtaking Artworks For Sea Lovers

From majestic ships crashing through waves to powerful portraits of sailors and sea gods, these murals span cities and coasts to bring ocean legends to life. This curated collection includes works from France, Germany, Spain, Belgium, and beyond—each one a tribute to maritime culture, the mysteries of the deep, and the stories carried by the tide.

More: 8 Inspiring Sculptures Seamlessly Integrated with Nature


Mural of Poseidon painted in vivid blue tones on a house in London, showing the god holding a golden trident, with swirling waves around him and a golden crown on his head.

Epic Poseidon Mural by Ster UPC in Southend-on-Sea, London, UK

A towering tribute to Poseidon, this vivid blue mural by Ster UPC features the god of the sea with a flowing beard, golden crown, and trident. The swirling waves and powerful gaze give the illusion of oceanic movement.


Monochrome mural of an elderly man crafting a ship model with ghost ships behind him and a curled tentacle below, painted on a large building wall.

Life at Sea by DJOELS in Basque Country, Spain

In this grayscale mural, a weathered man with glasses builds a ship model while ghostly ships loom behind him. A tentacle curls beneath his hands, merging memory and maritime legend.


Large-scale mural of a man in black looking at a shipwreck and a misty city skyline, inspired by romantic landscape paintings, on a building facade.
Photo by Dieter Wundes

Wanderer by Innerfields in Cologne, Germany

Referencing Caspar David Friedrich’s famous painting, this mural shows a modern wanderer gazing at a capsized ship as a distant cathedral rises through the mist—blending romanticism and catastrophe.

More photos: Wanderer – By Innerfields in Cologne, Germany (5 photos)


Black and white mural showing an old sea captain with a puffin and a lighthouse in the background, painted on a stone-walled house in France.

Old Man and the Sea 2.0 by Creaero in Morlaix, France

A powerful monochrome portrait of an elderly sea captain, paired with a puffin and a storm-lashed lighthouse. The mural evokes life at sea, resilience, and solitude.


Trompe-l'œil mural in Berlin showing a huge ocean liner bursting through a corner building, with architectural details seamlessly integrated into the ship.

PHOENIX by Gert Neuhaus in Berlin, Germany

Painted in 1989, this monumental mural blends architecture and illusion, depicting a massive ship bow slicing through waves, crashing right through the building’s facade.


Immersive street art inside a round concrete ruin showing a realistic 3D shark with coral and reef, and the artist sitting on top wearing fins and a snorkel mask.

Shark by Blesea in Cherbourg, Normandy, France

In an abandoned structure, Blesea paints a 3D great white shark swimming through coral reefs. The artist sits above it with snorkel gear, merging art with play.


Large-scale mural covering a building in Brussels depicting a tall ship navigating through waves, painted to appear three-dimensional with the building’s shape.

The Drunken Ship by Claire Daliers in Brussels, Belgium

A full-building mural of a sailing ship cutting through waves, perfectly integrated with the structure’s windows and walls—an iconic piece of trompe-l’œil art.


Photo collage of a Neptune statue standing in the ocean with waves crashing around, captured from various angles including dramatic stormy scenes.

The Ocean Statue of Neptune in Gran Canaria, Spain

This haunting sculpture of Neptune emerging from the sea holds a trident and appears in multiple sea states. It evokes awe and reverence for ocean mythology.


Poseidon Mural by Braga Last One in Lisbon, Portugal

This mural shows Poseidon in decayed classical ruins, holding his trident and surrounded by graffiti, creating a fusion of mythology and urban decay. The first image shows the wall before it was painted, and the second shows the completed mural in its full glory.


Mural by Näutil on a WWII bunker in Siouville-Hague, France, painted to resemble a realistic human eye with detailed eyelashes and a reflection of a ship in the blue iris, located directly on the beach with waves nearby.

The Eye by Näutil in Siouville-Hague, France

Painted on a WWII bunker, this eye-shaped mural gazes across the beach —turning a relic of war into a watchful guardian of the sea.


Octopus Mural by Tyler Toews in Vancouver, Canada

Painted for the Vancouver Mural Festival, this surreal piece shows a giant octopus grappling with a plastic bottle drifting through the ocean. Inside the bottle, a sailing ship is trapped—blurring the line between myth and environmental warning. The vibrant blues and dynamic composition stretch across the building’s surface, blending underwater perspective with striking realism.


More: When Street Art Meets Nature (40 Photos)


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