What Time Reveals (9 Photos)
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From buried mosaics to trees shaping themselves around bricks, these 9 artworks and urban phenomena show how time quietly alters the world around us.
Featured in this collection: a Roman mosaic uncovered beneath modern London, living sculptures shaped by season, and a weathered bronze statue worn by human ritual. Nature, memory, decay—and renewal—are all etched into these moments.
Urban historians often describe cities as “palimpsests” — places where older layers are never fully erased, just built over. That is why one collection can hold a Roman floor, living roots, weathered bronze, and seasonal sculpture: time keeps editing the city instead of replacing it.
More: Playing With Statues (11 Photos)

1. Roman Mosaic Unearthed — Southwark, London, UK
Two archaeologists gently uncover a large Roman mosaic beneath a construction site near The Shard in central London. The vibrant geometric patterns, preserved underground for nearly 2,000 years, reveal a glimpse into an ancient dining room once part of a Roman mansio (guesthouse).
💡 Nerd Fact: The same Southwark site later revealed a rare Roman mausoleum too, which means one patch of modern London preserved traces of both elite dining and later burial rituals from Roman times.
More!: Hidden for Centuries! Stunning Ancient Mosaics Discovered Beneath Modern Cities (7 Photos)

2. Mondrian Roots — Hong Kong
The roots of a banyan tree spread across the brick sidewalk in sharp, grid-like formations. Pressed by the rigid pavement, the natural growth has conformed over time into a geometric pattern that echoes Mondrian’s abstract art.
💡 Nerd Fact: Banyan trees are famous for aerial roots that sprout from their branches and search downward for support. In tight urban spaces, those roots can end up adapting to walls, paving, and cracks — almost like the tree is drawing with the city itself.
More photos!: Nature at Work: “Mondrianish” Banyan Tree Roots Create Art in Hong Kong

3. Freedom Sculpture — Philadelphia, USA
A bronze figure emerges from a textured wall, breaking free while others remain embedded in its surface. Over time, the patina adds depth to the story of struggle, memory, and liberation. Sculpture by Zenos Frudakis.
💡 Nerd Fact: Frudakis designed Freedom to be physically interactive — there is even a marked spot where viewers can stand and visually become part of the sculpture’s story of breaking free.
🔗 Follow Zenos Frudakis on Instagram

4. The Mud Maid — Cornwall, UK
A sleeping woman sculpted from earth, moss, and plants lies beneath the trees in the Lost Gardens of Heligan. Created by Sue Hill, the sculpture changes with the seasons: lush green in spring, snow-covered in winter. More!: Mud Maid – Living sculpture by Sue and Pete Hill (5 photos and video)
💡 Nerd Fact: The Mud Maid is part of Heligan’s larger woodland sculpture trail, where visitors can also find the Giant’s Head and the Grey Lady hidden among the trees.
🔗 Follow Mud Maid on Facebook

5. The Hidden Melody — Milan, Italy
A child appears to push through a peeling concrete wall with a violin bow. The cracks themselves become the strings, transforming urban decay into a moment of performance. Artwork by Golsa Golchini. More by Golsa!: You Might Walk Past These—But They’re Tiny Masterpieces in Disguise
💡 Nerd Fact: Golsa Golchini’s small Milan interventions are site-specific and built around cracks, peeling plaster, rust, and other imperfections: she does not hide damage, she collaborates with it.
🔗 Follow Golsa Golchini on Instagram

6. Pavement Sundial
A painted clock face surrounds a metal pole on the sidewalk. Its shadow moves with the sun, turning an ordinary urban element into a functioning sundial that tracks time by design and decay.
💡 Nerd Fact: The shadow-casting part of a sundial is called a gnomon. Even a perfectly made sundial can still differ from clock time by around 15 minutes because it shows local solar time, not the standardized time on your phone.

7. Worn Bronze — Victor Noir’s Grave, Paris, France
Victor Noir’s grave in Père-Lachaise cemetery, created by Patrick Magaud in 1984, has gained fame not for Noir’s journalistic work but for the legend surrounding his death and burial site. Noir was a journalist shot dead, and his grave features a full-sized bronze statue of him lying down, as if recently shot. Over time, the statue became a fertility symbol. Legend has it that kissing the statue on the lips, leaving a flower in Victor’s hat, and rubbing the genital area enhances fertility, improves one’s sex life, or helps find a husband within a year. This has led to the lips and trousers’ bulge on the statue becoming noticeably shiny from repeated contact.

8. Vertical Garden — Madrid, Spain
A building façade is overtaken by a lush vertical garden designed by botanist Patrick Blanc. Over the years, hundreds of plant species have grown to cover the wall in waves of green, yellow, and pink. More photos!: Vertical Garden – By Patrick Blanc in Madrid and Paris
💡 Nerd Fact: Patrick Blanc is widely credited as the inventor of the modern “vertical garden,” and CaixaForum’s living wall uses a hydroponic felt-and-mesh system with roughly 15,000 plants from nearly 300 species.

9. Radium – SHOK-1 in Le Locle, Switzerland
Painted with SHOK-1’s signature X-ray style, this glowing green mural shows a skeletal hand delicately drawing time with a pencil, its tip forming a clock shape. Located in the birthplace of Swiss watchmaking.
SHOK-1: This piece is about the tragic story of the Radium Girls, who suffered horribly with radiation poisoning from painting watch faces back in the 20s. I think we can still learn from it today as a narrative about the misuse of science by commerce, and of profit over people. I rendered it in the colour of radium watch lume, as if it were the dial glowing in the dark.
💡 Fun Fact: The women later known as the Radium Girls were once nicknamed “ghost girls” because radium dust could make their clothes, hair, and even skin glow.
🔗 Follow SHOK-1 on Instagram
More: 30 Sculptures You (probably) Didn’t Know Existed
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