The Art Of Snow, Before It Melts (10 Photos)

A snowy landscape featuring a person walking on a snow-covered path with large outlines resembling glasses in the foreground, alongside a creatively built snow sculpture of a person with a surprised expression and hair made of twigs.

Snow can turn a street into a gallery overnight, then erase it again by morning.

That short life is exactly why this art hits so hard. These 10 photos show winter as a creative tool, not just a season: a lamp becomes giant glasses, a mailbox becomes a monster, and a small patch of slush becomes a full scene. Fast to appear, impossible to keep, and hard to forget.

More: Fun With Snow Sculptures (35 photos)


Frozen ghost snow sculpture

👻 1. The Frozen Haunting

Nature made this one first. A sheet of ice on a wall looks like a ghost stopped mid-motion. It is a perfect example of pareidolia, our habit of seeing faces in random shapes, and proof that winter can produce accidental street art.


Giant eyeglasses in snow by Pavel Puhov

👓 2. Vision in White by Pavel Puhov (P183)

Pavel Puhov (P183), often called the Russian Banksy, loved visual tricks. Here he draws glasses in snow around a streetlamp. One small gesture changes the scale of the whole scene and gives a quiet park a personality.


Chalk art snow angel by David Zinn

👼 3. Tiny Snow Angel by David Zinn

David Zinn, known for street chalk characters in Ann Arbor, needs very little snow to tell a story. A tiny figure lies in a white patch and leaves a miniature snow angel. It is playful, precise, and instantly readable.

More!: This Is Amazing Art By David Zinn! (11 Photos)

🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram


Mailbox snow monster

📬 4. The Mailbox Monster

Someone turned a mailbox into an open-mouthed snow creature. The idea is simple and cheap, but the effect is huge: a routine object becomes a neighborhood punchline. This is guerrilla winter art at its best.


Easter Island head in snow

🗿 5. Easter Island in Canada by Matt Morris

This large Moai-inspired sculpture was built by Matt Morris in Waterloo, Canada (2011). Morris became known for ambitious front-yard snow builds that drew local crowds. It shows how public art can happen right outside a home.


The Runner statue in Athens covered in snow

🏃 6. The Ice Runner (Athens)

The Runner (Dromeas) in Athens, by sculptor Costas Varotsos, is made from stacked glass sheets. In normal weather it glows in sunlight. Under snow and frost, it looks like an ice giant in motion. Same sculpture, completely different emotion.


Snow cats climbing trees

🐈 7. The Climbing Cats

By packing snow onto tree trunks, an artist created a group of cats that seem to be climbing upward. The method is basic, but the illusion is strong. A quiet winter park suddenly feels alive.


Giant snowflake sculpture

❄️ 8. A Real Giant Snowflake

Snowflakes are tiny and brief. This one is enlarged and carefully carved so we can see the geometry up close. It turns a familiar winter symbol into something architectural.


Tiny alien sledding by David Zinn

👽 9. Sledding Into Reality by David Zinn

In this second Zinn piece, a tiny alien sleds from a snowbank onto clear pavement. The work uses the border between shoveled path and snow as the story engine. It is a smart example of drawing with existing terrain.


Venus de Milo snow sculpture in Madrid

🏛️ 10. Venus de Snow (Madrid)

During Storm Filomena in Madrid (2021), locals built more than snowmen. This Venus de Milo recreation appeared on a street corner with striking precision. Classical sculpture, temporary material, public space, and perfect winter timing.


Which one would make you stop and take a photo?


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