+40 Street Art Pieces Inspired by the 90s and Early 2000s
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The 90s and early 2000s gave us Saturday morning cartoons, anime afternoons, arcade icons, blockbuster sci-fi, and characters that still live rent-free in our heads. From Pikachu and Bart to TMNT, Terminator, Totoro, Tetris, Mario, and The Matrix, these artists turn pure nostalgia into public spectacle.
Here are +40 street art pieces that prove the best throwbacks do not belong in a storage box, they belong on the street.
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🐢 Ninja Turtles — By Cheone
This one hits like a rental-store cover come to life. Cheone leans fully into the oversized drama, and the Turtles land with the exact kind of muscle, attitude, and color that defined 90s kid obsession.
More: Ninja Turtles mural by Cheone

🍄 TMNT vs. Mario — By Efixworld in Le Cap d’Agde, France 🇫🇷
This is exactly the kind of crossover 90s kids used to sketch in the margins of school notebooks. Efixworld throws two giant pop universes together and somehow makes the whole collision feel perfectly natural.
More: Ninja Turtles vs Mario (2 photos)
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🛡️ Saint Seiya — By Mone & CEB in Tandil, Argentina 🇦🇷
For anyone who grew up on anime that felt impossibly epic, this wall delivers the full rush. The armor, the drama, the celestial energy—nothing about it is subtle, which is exactly why it works.
More: SAINT SEIYA: Knights of the Zodiac – In Tandil, Argentina
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🕶️ The Matrix — By CTO in Melbourne, Australia 🇦🇺
CTO keeps everything cold, tense, and cinematic. You can almost hear Agent Smith leaning in, which is exactly what makes this feel less like a mural and more like a frozen movie scene.
More: Can you hear me Morpheus?
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🤖 R2-D2 Bunker — In Prague, Czech Republic 🇨🇿
Turning a bunker vent into R2-D2 is one of those ideas that is so simple and so perfect it feels inevitable. This is pure public-space magic: goofy, clever, and unforgettable once you have seen it.
More photos and about it!: Transforming a Nuclear Shelter: The Rise of R2-D2 Graffiti

🦸 Superman Raising the Barn — By JPS in Lohr a. Main, Germany 🇩🇪
JPS takes one of the most classic comic-book power fantasies and drops it into a rural setting. The result is playful, huge-hearted, and exactly the kind of superhero logic you never get tired of.
More: Superman Raising the Barn (4 photos)
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📐 Math With Bart Simpson — By One Mizer
Bart has always been one of street art’s most natural guests, and One Mizer proves why. The wall feels like detention, rebellion, and after-school television all at once.
More: Math with Bart Simpson
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💗 Pink Panther — By Stohead in Toulouse, France 🇫🇷
Stohead keeps the Pink Panther smooth, sly, and impossibly cool. It feels like the character just slipped off a television rerun and onto a French wall without losing a single ounce of style.
More: Pink Panther – By Stohead in Toulouse, France
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🎭 Double Mickey Mouse — By Jerkface in New York, USA 🇺🇸
Jerkface knows how to twist familiar icons just enough to make them feel fresh again. This doubled-up Mickey is cheerful, slightly strange, and wonderfully pop in the best possible way.
More: Double Mickey Mouse in New York
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🎈 Snoopy Without Balloon — By Osch in Brick Lane, London 🇬🇧
Osch strips the idea down to something cleaner and a little sadder, and that is exactly what gives it staying power. It feels like a Peanuts memory with street grit still stuck to it.
More: Snoopy without balloon by Osch in Brick Lane
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🐾 Snoopy — By TRUST.iCON in London, UK 🇬🇧
Sometimes the smartest nostalgia hits come from simplicity. TRUST.iCON gives Snoopy a clean, confident presence that reads instantly from across the street.
More: Snoopy! By TRUST.iCON in London
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🚗 Terminator Tail Lights — By Rudy Willingham
Rudy Willingham is a master of turning everyday objects into pop-culture jokes, and this is one of his best. The car’s tail lights become the Terminator’s glowing eyes, making the whole thing feel wonderfully low-tech and genius at the same time.
More: Rudy Willingham 1: SpongeBob, Terminator m.m
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🔫 Terminator — By Pappas Pärlor in Motala, Sweden 🇸🇪
Pappas Pärlor knows exactly how to weaponize nostalgia. The pixelated Terminator lined up behind real metal tubes feels like an 8-bit action poster that accidentally escaped into real life.
More: The master of beads art give you: Superman, Wolfs and Terminator!
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🕴️ Men in Black — By Pieksa in Nowa Sól, Poland 🇵🇱
This one goes straight for late-90s blockbuster memory. Pieksa gives the film enough scale and swagger that you can practically hear the neuralyzer click before you turn the corner.
More: “Men in black” by Pieksa (graffiti guide)
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🕺 Michael Jackson Moonwalk — By SUNRA in Montpellier, France 🇫🇷
Not every 90s memory was a cartoon or a game. SUNRA turns Michael Jackson’s silhouette into a clean, joyful symbol of pop-era electricity, and it lands with instant recognition.
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🤖 Graffitimus Prime — By Esprit TZP in Geneva, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Optimus Prime was always built for mural scale, and Esprit TZP proves it. The piece feels huge, heavy, and heroic in a way that instantly taps into toy-box and cartoon nostalgia.
More: Graffitimus Prime

🧱 Tetris — By Andrea Ranieri Emeid in Baronissi, Italy 🇮🇹
Few games translate to walls as naturally as Tetris. Andrea Ranieri Emeid lets the blocks spill across architecture with exactly the satisfying order-and-chaos balance that made the game immortal.
More: Mural on the game Tetris by Andrea Ranieri Emeid in Baronissi, Italy

🪜 Tetris Stairs — By Dihzahyners in Lebanon 🇱🇧
This is one of those brilliant ideas that still feels fresh years later. A staircase becomes a falling-piece puzzle, and suddenly an ordinary climb turns into a tiny retro thrill.
More: Tetris stairs – By Dihzahyners in Lebanon

🥊 STREET SCAFTER 2 — By SCAF
SCAF takes arcade nostalgia and gives it depth, motion, and street presence. It feels like a Street Fighter screen glitching off the cabinet and straight onto the wall.
More: STREET SCAFTER 2 (3D graffiti by SCAF)
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🥋 Muhammad Ali vs. Street Fighter — By Combo in Paris, France 🇫🇷
This mashup is just ridiculously smart. Combo pulls a legendary boxer and arcade combat energy into the same frame, and the whole thing still feels as punchy as the first time you saw it.
More: Muhammad Ali vs. Street Fighter – In Rue Saint-Denis, Paris, France

🧡 Pippi Longstocking — By Carolina Adán Caro in Palma de Mallorca, Spain 🇪🇸
Pippi belongs here because 90s and Y2K childhoods were full of older icons that never stopped traveling forward. Carolina Adán Caro paints her with the exact fearless joy the character has always carried.
More: Art is Life (Pippi Longstocking in Palma)

🟪 Pink Panther Mosaic — By Space Invader in Paris, France 🇫🇷
Space Invader turns one cool icon into another by filtering the Pink Panther through pixel language. It is retro cartoon nostalgia and game-era texture all in one tiny, perfect package.
More: Pink Panther mosaic by Space Invader in Paris, France

⚡ Pikachu Riot — By BIG-REX in Santiago, Chile 🇨🇱
BIG-REX takes one of the sweetest characters in pop culture and throws it into a scene of unrest. That clash between cuteness and confrontation is exactly what makes this impossible to scroll past.
More: Embracing Reality and Fantasy: 8 Powerful Street Art Murals
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🧘 Yoda’s Meditation — By David Reichelt in Prague, Czech Republic 🇨🇿
This one swaps chaos for calm and still lands as pure fandom. David Reichelt paints Yoda with just enough stillness to make the whole wall feel like it is humming quietly with the Force.
More: 6 Vibrant Visuals: Unveiling Today’s Standout Creations
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🔥 Dragon Ball Z — By Zarb Fullcolor in Mérignac, France 🇫🇷
Zarb Fullcolor takes a familiar anime silhouette and drenches it in red-black intensity. It feels more dramatic than playful, which makes it stand out beautifully among all the louder nostalgia hits.
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🐢 COWABUNGA — By Johny Carlos & Ketu in Aracaju, Brazil 🇧🇷
Johny Carlos and Ketu go straight for big-screen Turtle energy here. Raphael and Michelangelo look like they are about to step off the wall and into a late-night game cutscene.
More: 10 New Street Art Murals from Brazil You Should See
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🚀 Boba Fett Tribute — By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow, Scotland 🇬🇧
Bobby Rogue-One gives Boba Fett a monumental stillness that makes the character feel even more iconic. It is fan art scaled up to myth size, and it works brilliantly on the street.
More: Amazing Murals By Bobby Rogue-One in Glasgow
🔗 Follow Bobby Rogue-One on Instagram

🍄 Super Mario Power-Up — By Hebs Art in Stadlau, Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹
Hebs Art turns a rough urban wall into something that feels one jump away from a coin sound effect. Mario, mushrooms, and power-ups all land with exactly the right amount of bright arcade optimism.
More: 6 Walls Where Hebs Art Left Something You Can Still Feel
🔗 Follow Hebs Art on Instagram

🛹 Come To The Dark Slide — By Blouh
This pun has absolutely no right to be this memorable, and yet it totally is. Blouh turns Darth Vader into a skater and somehow makes the galaxy’s darkest figure feel like a sticker from a 2000s bedroom door.
More: Star Wars! (18 Photos)

🌧️ Totoro Bus Stop — Unknown in Takaharu, Japan 🇯🇵
This one is gentler than a mural but just as unforgettable. A real bus stop becomes My Neighbor Totoro in full scale, which might be the sweetest possible way to end a nostalgia-heavy street art journey.
More: Grandparents Build Life-Size Totoro Bus Stop for Their Grandkids in Japan

⚡ Cracked Pikachu — By Golsa Golchini in Milan, Italy 🇮🇹
Golsa Golchini barely has to paint at all here. The broken plaster does half the work, making Pikachu feel like it has suddenly pushed its way out of the wall and back into the real world. It is tiny, playful, and very 90s in the best way.
More: You Might Walk Past These—But They’re Tiny Masterpieces in Disguise
🔗 Follow Golsa Golchini on Instagram

🚴 Pokémon Go Pikachu — By Nme
One tire mark becomes the perfect center line for a splatted Pikachu, and suddenly the whole thing feels like a memory from the first Pokémon craze and the weird humor of early internet culture. It is simple, fast, and exactly the kind of street joke that sticks in your head.
More: Street Art by Nme – Pikachu
🔗 Follow Nme on Instagram

🐌 Gary — By DavidL
DavidL turns an ordinary stairwell into a giant version of Gary, and the architecture makes the whole piece feel even stranger and better. It has that perfect SpongeBob balance of funny, gross, and slightly surreal that made the show unforgettable in the first place.
More: Gary… (SpongeBob) by DavidL
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🧽 SpongeBob (HTP) SquarePants — By Jak Umbdenstock in Strasbourg, France 🇫🇷
Jak Umbdenstock gives SpongeBob a tougher, sleepier, more street-ready attitude without losing the instant recognition. The utility box shape works perfectly, and the whole thing feels like a cartoon icon that grew up just enough to start painting walls.
More: SpongeBob (HTP) SquarePants
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🌺 Sideshow Bob — By Murdoc in Durango, Mexico 🇲🇽
Murdoc did not just paint Sideshow Bob, he let the bougainvillea finish the job. The real pink explosion of flowers becomes that unmistakable hair, turning a great Simpsons gag into one of those pieces that feels almost too perfect to be accidental.
More: Sideshow Bob killing Bart Simpson? (4 photos)
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⚡ Bart Man — By Fat Cap Sprays in London, UK 🇬🇧
This one looks like it should be buzzing above an arcade or flashing across a 90s TV bumper. Fat Cap Sprays turns Bart into a neon superhero sign, and the glow effect gives the whole wall that loud, instant, after-school-energy feeling.
More: 9 Unforgettable Street Art Masterpieces Illuminating Walls Around the World (May 2025)
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✂️ The Cut — By AleXsandro Palombo in Milan, Italy 🇮🇹
AleXsandro Palombo takes one of the most recognizable silhouettes of the 90s and turns it into a sharp political image. It is simple, direct, and proof that nostalgia can still carry real emotional weight when an artist knows exactly which symbol to use.
🔗 Follow AleXsandro Palombo on Instagram

💗 Pink Smomerfield — By Kid30 & Grim Finga in London, UK 🇬🇧
Kid30 and Grim Finga flatten Homer into a bubblegum-pink fever dream and somehow make him even funnier. It feels like The Simpsons passed through a warped billboard, and the result is weird, bold, and immediately memorable.
More: The elusive Pink Smomerfield (3 photos)
🔗 Follow Kid30 on Instagram and Grim Finga on Instagram

🐢 Raphael — By Scaf Oner
Scaf Oner gives Raphael the full 3D jump-scare treatment, and it works beautifully. The piece looks like it is punching straight through the wall, which is exactly the kind of exaggerated action-cartoon energy the Ninja Turtles deserve.
More: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – By SCAF Oner
🔗 Follow Scaf Oner on Instagram

🐭 Sewer Sensei — By Staphordshire & SOPER in Besançon, France 🇫🇷
This one channels Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles energy without copying the turtles directly. Staphordshire and SOPER build a rodent warrior who looks like he belongs somewhere between a sewer hideout, a comic crossover, and a late-night cartoon marathon.
More: 8 Powerful New Street Art Murals You Need to See (April 2025)
🔗 Follow Staphordshire on Instagram and SOPER on Instagram

🐉 Shenron Forever — By Mick Martinez in Mexico 🇲🇽
Mick Martinez goes huge with this Dragon Ball tribute, and it really does feel like a wall-sized opening sequence. Shenron, Goku, and the Dragon Balls take over the surface with exactly the kind of mythic anime scale that defined so many 90s and early-2000s afternoons.
More: 9 Powerful New Street Art Pieces from Around the World (March 2025)
🔗 Follow Mick Martinez on Instagram

☁️ Saiyan Glow — By Huggo Rocha in Londrina, Brazil 🇧🇷
Huggo Rocha chooses a softer, brighter version of Goku and lets the color do the nostalgia work. Instead of battle chaos, this one feels like pure memory: the kind of Dragon Ball image that instantly sends you back to waiting for the next episode.
More: Pick Your Favorite: New Art #3 (10 Photos)
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🦇 Batman and Penguin — By Matteo Ilcoffee Fronduti in Bastia, Italy 🇮🇹
Matteo Ilcoffee Fronduti leans fully into comic-book chaos here with purple tones, sound effects, and a gleefully smug Penguin. It feels like a 90s comic splash page stretched across a long roadside wall, and that is exactly why it works.
More: New Street Art #3 (21 Photos)
🔗 Follow Matteo Ilcoffee Fronduti on Instagram

🔥 Hellboy — By Monkey D. Muvin in Tangerang, Indonesia 🇮🇩
Monkey D. Muvin makes Hellboy look completely at home on a rough wall: cigar, glare, and all. The piece carries that grimy, graphic-novel, early-2000s feeling that made comic-book adaptations hit so hard when they first landed.
More: 9 New Street Art Highlights From Around the World (April 2025)
🔗 Follow Monkey D. Muvin on Instagram

🏴☠️ Davy Jones — By Blesea & BABY.K in Normandy, France 🇫🇷
Blesea and BABY.K turn a bunker-like structure into a full pirate nightmare. The scale, the tentacles, and the weathered seaside setting make it feel like a blockbuster creature has washed ashore and decided to stay.
More: Davy Jones in Normandy by graffiti artists Blesea and BABY.K
🔗 Follow Blesea on Instagram and BABY.K on Instagram
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