This Is Satisfying (13 Photos)
Trusted by 1.7M+ on Facebook ↗Most liked mode is active for this post: images are ranked by community likes.

So satisfying it feels illegal. Clean lines, perfect timing, and reality getting patched in real life.
Here are 13 street art fixes that make your brain go “yep… that’s the stuff.”
Hunt: one of these is so clean it feels fake. Find it.
More: Walls You Can Feel (9 Photos)

🏢 3D Balcony — By Kartitect in Sochi, Russia 🇷🇺
This one scratches the brain in the best possible way. Kartitect painted elegant, curved balconies onto a blank wall with such sharp perspective that the building suddenly looks more complete than the original architecture.
More: Walls You Can Feel (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Kartitect on Instagram

📚 Massive Bookshelf Mural — By Jan Is De Man in Utrecht, Netherlands 🇳🇱
There is something deeply satisfying about a building that suddenly becomes a library. Jan Is De Man wrapped this corner facade in towering book spines so cleanly that the shelves feel built into the brickwork rather than painted onto it.
More: 8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man That Will Make You Smile
🔗 Follow Jan Is De Man on Instagram

🍵 Tea Time Illusion — By Yip Yew Chong in Singapore 🇸🇬
Everything lands just right here: the teapot, the tea stream, the cups, the bird, the laundry, even the real windows. Yip Yew Chong makes the whole wall feel playful, precise, and unbelievably smooth.
More: Beautiful Street Art in Chinatown, Singapore (15 pics +video)
🔗 Follow Yip Yew Chong on Instagram

🔵 Pole Flacking — By Ememem in Lyon, France 🇫🇷
This is pavement repair with absurdly good manners. Ememem took a broken patch around a streetlamp and rebuilt it as a perfect circular mosaic, turning an ugly crack into something balanced, intentional, and weirdly calming.
More: Be The Change (17 Photos)
🔗 Follow Ememem on Instagram

🥛 “The Milkmaid” Reimagined — By Oakoak in Saint-Étienne, France 🇫🇷
The whole joke works because the alignment is exact. Oakoak places Vermeer’s milkmaid so precisely that the real metal can becomes part of the painting, and your brain accepts the trick before you even think about it.
More: Wrong but Right: Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram

✨ Grand Lobby — By WALLART in Łódź, Poland 🇵🇱
WALLART basically peeled open the side of the building and revealed a chandeliered lobby inside. The perspective is so controlled that the staircase, railing, and stained-glass window feel physically built rather than painted.
More: Impressive Three-dimensional Mural by WALLART in Lodz, Poland (4 photos and video)
🔗 Follow WALLART on Instagram

🪜 Wall of the Silk Weavers — By CitéCréation in Lyon, France 🇫🇷
This is one of those before-and-after transformations that feels impossible. CitéCréation turned a dead facade into an entire neighborhood full of stairs, balconies, windows, plants, and people, and the result is unbelievably satisfying to scan from top to bottom.
More: 10 Photos Of A building in Lyon before and after it was painted
🔗 Visit CitéCréation

🏘️ Juliette et les Esprits — By Patrick Commecy in Montpellier, France 🇫🇷
Patrick Commecy turns blank walls into architecture you wish was real. The balconies, little residents, flowers, dogs, and stone tower all slot together so naturally that the painted facade feels like it has always belonged there. This mural, visible on Google Maps!
More: A French Masterpiece in 9 Photos: Patrick Commecy’s Mural in Montpellier
🔗 Follow Patrick Commecy on Instagram

🚉 Train Station — By NESSÉ in Le Crey-Susville, France 🇫🇷
Painted on a simple gable wall, this mural becomes a calm little portal to another era. The train, rails, signage, and waiting passengers are placed so neatly that the whole composition feels complete and perfectly settled.
More: 3 Photos of Train Mural by NESSÉ in Le Crey, Susville, France
🔗 Follow NESSÉ on Instagram

🐟 Anglerfish Trap — By SKURK in Bergen, Norway 🇳🇴
This is architecture used to absolute perfection. SKURK lets the staircase become the creature’s jagged mouth and turns the lamp into its glowing lure, which makes the whole setup feel ridiculously right.
More: Anglerfish Trap: Amazing Street Art By SKURK!
🔗 Follow SKURK on Instagram

🧱 The Crumbling Smile — By Nikita Nomerz in Russia 🇷🇺
Nikita Nomerz is brilliant at finding the face that was already hiding inside the ruin. Here, the broken wall, cracked plaster, and exposed stones all snap together into a giant grin, and that perfect use of decay is incredibly satisfying.
More: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life
🔗 Follow Nikita Nomerz on Instagram

🏺 Pouring Statue — By Ozmo in Heerlen, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Ozmo made this one feel crisp, calm, and almost impossibly clean. The bright classical figure against the dark wall, plus the way the water seems to spill straight out of the facade, makes the entire mural feel like visual silk.
More: Simply Wonderful (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Ozmo on Instagram
![Description: The main subject is a land art sculpture consisting of stones meticulously arranged on a sandy beach to form a dynamic, circular wave pattern. The stones range in color from smooth greys and dark blues to earthy reds and purples, laid out in crescent-shaped, fluid lines that appear to swirl in a cohesive design. A person, presumably the artist, is crouching in the top left corner, admiring the finished artwork. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, nature, beach art Description: A person crouches next to an intricate land art installation made of stones arranged on a sandy beach. The smooth rocks, varying in shades of grey, purple, and brown, are meticulously laid out in sweeping, crescent-shaped lines that create a large, dynamic circular wave pattern. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A person crouches next to an intricate land art installation made of stones arranged on a sandy beach. The smooth rocks, varying in shades of grey, purple, and brown, are meticulously laid out in sweeping, crescent-shaped lines that create a large, dynamic circular wave pattern. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, as the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, as the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: [Write 1-2 sentences describing the main subject, colors, mood, and technique. If there is readable text in the image, include it in quotes.] Artist: [Provide name if known, otherwise "Unknown"] Location: [Provide city/country if known, otherwise "Unknown"] Theme: [List 3-5 specific keywords separated by commas] Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature" Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature Description: A large, circular land art sculpture made of varied stones is meticulously arranged on a sandy beach in fluid, sweeping wave patterns. The stones transition from small, scattered pieces on the left to larger, densely packed rocks in shades of grey, purple, and brown on the right, while the artist crouches nearby admiring the work. Artist: Jon Foreman Location: Unknown Theme: land art, stones, wave pattern, beach art, nature](https://i0.wp.com/streetartutopia.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Fluidus-Land-Art-Sculptures-by-Jon-Foreman-6380.webp?resize=696%2C696&ssl=1)
Fluidus by Jon Foreman
Jon Foreman creates temporary masterpieces using only what he finds on the shore. This stone swirl is a lesson in patience and precision, turning the beach into a gallery until the next tide comes to reclaim the materials. More by Jon Foreman!: Stone By Stone (20 Photos)
Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
PS: Drop your top 3 in the comments. No thinking. Just vibes. (And yeah — commenting right under a photo counts.)
Keep exploring 👇
6 Comments
Join the conversation
Drop into new walls weekly
No spam. Just the freshest city finds.
[…] More: So Satisfying (12 Photos) […]
This is brilliant! Great imagination.
l love buildings that come to life because someone paints life onto them and everyone gets to enjoy it. Thank you SO MUCH ♥️
Just need a comfy chair and a coffee
This one is my choice. It took alot of time and imagination. It’s just perfect.Salute to the artists that did this building superb and tidgist work. Congrats.
As a retired architect, I find the art on the buildings especially interesting. Thanks for sharing.