#2 Made You Love Art (10 Photos)
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New street art! From ZABOU’s beautiful flower-and-skull mural in London to David Zinn’s tiny sidewalk dancer in Ann Arbor. These 10 fresh works show exactly why the street is still the best gallery in the world.
These new murals and urban interventions are truly amazing. They move from giant emotional walls to playful small-scale surprises. You will find a perfect mix of beauty, humor, memory, fantasy, and 3D illusion in one scroll-stopping post. Some artworks feel intimate and quiet. Others feel huge and cinematic. And some are honestly just too clever not to love immediately!
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🌹 “Alive” — By ZABOU in London, UK 🇬🇧
ZABOU makes this wall feel lush and haunted at the same time. The grayscale face and skull could have easily tipped into pure dark symbolism. Instead, the red peonies, pink roses, and orange butterfly keep the mural feeling vivid and full of life. Organized by Blank Walls, this is the kind of new London street art that stops you cold. Then, it quickly pulls you back in for a second look.
💡 Nerd Fact: ZABOU usually builds black-and-white portraits around vivid colour. Because of this, the piece reads like a brilliant street-level update of vanitas painting. This is the old still-life tradition where skulls and flowers remind viewers that beauty and life are fleeting. It turns the wall into a fantastic contemporary memento mori rather than just simple gothic decoration.
More: More by ZABOU on Street Art Utopia
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🟢 Galactic Elder — By Caer8th (Vladimír Hirscher) in Prague, Czech Republic 🇨🇿
Caer8th takes a familiar sci-fi icon and lands it squarely in classic graffiti territory. The wrinkled green face is rendered with absolutely impressive realism. Meanwhile, the sharp silver letterforms on both sides make the whole wall pop with energy. It feels like a brilliant collision between pop mythology and old-school spray-can style. This is playful fan art that hits with the supreme confidence of a massive mural production.
More: Star Wars! (18 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Caer8th did not arrive at realism through a clean studio route. He started with graffiti in Prague in 1999. He describes his unique style as a wild mix of graffiti, realism, post-graffiti surrealism, and sci-fi. That history helps explain why the silver letters stay so active here instead of fading into the background. The mural clearly still thinks like graffiti even while painting a famous pop-culture face.
🔗 Follow Caer8th on Instagram

🌸 Still Life Tower — By Fintan Magee in Bitola, North Macedonia 🇲🇰
Fintan Magee turns an entire apartment building into a towering still life. He layers gorgeous flowers, grapes, crystal vessels, and travel documents together. The result is something that feels deeply personal yet wonderfully monumental. The soft pink facade keeps the giant mural looking airy and bright. However, the composition still carries real emotional weight. It feels like a quiet meditation on memory, movement, and what people take with them across borders.
💡 Nerd Fact: Magee has often said he likes to link personal experience to broader issues like displacement, movement, and uncertainty. The passport is doing some real heavy lifting here symbolically. It pushes the mural toward the classic language of still life painting. He updates a genre traditionally built from flowers and fruit into a modern story about borders, migration, and what we carry through life’s transitions.
🔗 Follow Fintan Magee on Instagram

🐆 Ancestral Presence — By Franklin Piaguaje in Pasto, Colombia 🇨🇴
Franklin Piaguaje loads this colorful wall with incredible spiritual gravity. The elder’s outstretched hand feels like an invitation, a warning, and a blessing all at once. Beside him, a pale jaguar form brings in a powerful sense of magic. It acts like an animal guardian moving through memory rather than flesh. Painted for Resistencias y Reexistencias, this stunning street art reads like a vivid story about land, knowledge, and survival.
💡 Nerd Fact: Piaguaje was raised among the Siona people. He has explicitly stated that he paints to “make memory” and rescue traditions, knowledge, and Indigenous identity. This purpose turns the mural into so much more than a simple portrait. It works as vital visual memory-keeping right on a public city wall.
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🦉 “The Great Equalizer” — By HERA in Los Angeles, California, USA 🇺🇸
HERA absolutely shines in this piece. She effortlessly makes a wall feel like a beautiful story, a poem, and a bold confrontation at the very same time. You can instantly feel the girl’s steady, confident gaze. The black panther standing behind her, the owl resting on her shoulder, and the handwritten Horace Mann quote all blend into one emotional masterpiece. Painted at Mann UCLA Community School for the Branded Arts Festival, it is fierce, thoughtful, and deeply human. Photo beautifully captured by Impermanent Art.
More: HERA: Crafting Stories on Walls Around the World
💡 Nerd Fact: The artwork’s title is doing brilliant double duty here. Horace Mann famously called education “the great equalizer”. Also, the school was celebrating its 100th anniversary when this mural was painted! HERA is not just adding a poetic phrase to a school wall. She is plugging the piece directly into the vibrant history of the campus, which perfectly fits her wider storytelling practice.
🔗 Follow HERA on Instagram

👽 Close Encounter — By Nego in Salamanca, Spain 🇪🇸
Nego turns a rough, everyday underpass wall into pure sci-fi magic. The oversized black eyes instantly do the job of grabbing your attention. But the real knockout is the 3D illusion of the hand reaching straight toward the viewer. It makes the piece feel totally alive and suddenly present rather than just painted. It is creepy, very funny, and technically sharp. This is exactly how fun and dynamic great graffiti should be!
💡 Nerd Fact: Nego is a self-taught graffiti artist. However, he also trained extensively in editorial design, graphic design, and fine arts in Salamanca. That solid background helps explain why his cool aliens read so cleanly. They land with the instant pop and legibility of a printed poster, not just the raw energy of a quick throw-up.
🔗 Follow Nego on Instagram

🌀 “Peliguana” — By Saulo Metria and Julián Cruz Solano in Santa Anita, Lima, Peru 🇵🇪
Saulo Metria and Julián Cruz Solano go all in on joyful color, rhythm, and amazing mutation here. The creature looks like a pelican, a reptile, and a wild dream-animal all packed into one. Behind it, a blazing circular pattern turns the whole wall into something truly ceremonial and special. Painted for the GREENGRAFF festival. This wild new mural looks amazing from far away and gets even more fascinating the closer you look.
💡 Nerd Fact: This brilliant collaboration makes perfect sense once you know the artists. On his official bio, Saulo Metria says his work fuses organic nature with geometric and mandala-like forms. Meanwhile, Buenos Aires Street Art notes that Julicru often paints beautiful nature- and Indigenous-culture themes. So “Peliguana” is much more than just a funny hybrid creature title. It is a perfect, seamless mash-up of both artists’ core visual styles!
More: The roar of the storm by Julián Cruz Solano in Sibiu, Romania
🔗 Follow Saulo Metria on Instagram and Julián Cruz Solano on Instagram

🐼 Peekaboo Panda — By SMOK in Antwerp, Belgium 🇧🇪
SMOK uses the tricky corner of this building absolutely perfectly. It looks exactly as if a giant panda has quietly stepped out from behind the architecture to say hello. The clean realism and gentle expression give the wall instant warmth and charm. Meanwhile, the clever 3D illusion placement makes the whole facade feel incredibly playful. Supported by District Berchem, this is a flawless example of a mural making a street feel instantly more welcoming.
More by SMOK: Mural by SMOK in Antwerp, Belgium
💡 Nerd Fact: This delightful panda was part of SMOK’s larger Berchem “fake views” series. The artist’s own explanation is wonderfully straightforward. They wanted to paint an animal full of positive energy and cuteness.
🔗 Follow SMOK on Instagram

🩰 “Elise has legs for ballet but her hands are all jazz” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn takes a simple crack in the sidewalk and a tiny tuft of weeds. Then, he turns them into a complete magical performance! The little dancer’s arms are pure jazz-hands chaos. Her legs are neatly poised for ballet. Best of all, the real greenery becomes the perfect improvised tutu. It is tiny, temporary, and completely irresistible.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s amazing tiny sidewalk beings are never pre-planned studio sketches. On his official site, he explains that they are improvised on location using chalk, charcoal, and found objects. He uses “ephemeral pareidolic” thinking. This is basically the same pareidolia effect that makes people see faces in the clouds. The tuft of weeds told him a dancer was already hiding in the sidewalk waiting to be drawn!
More: Happiness Maker David Zinn (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

🌙 Night Catcher — By Oakoak
Oakoak turns one lonely streetlamp into a full nighttime adventure! With almost nothing more than a painted silhouette, the scene comes brilliantly alive. A figure leaps up with a butterfly net. They look like they are trying to catch the glowing bulb as if it were a giant firefly. It is simple, witty, and incredibly fun. This is exactly the kind of small urban joke that makes a city feel magical.
💡 Nerd Fact: Oakoak has been using the city as his personal playground since 2006. He constantly turns cracks, signs, manholes, and street fixtures into hilarious comic scenes. This piece fits perfectly in the spirit of détournement. He does not just cover the city with a flat image. Instead, he hijacks an existing urban element and gives it a brand new joke, story, and meaning!
More: Wrong but Right: Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
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#1 Made You Love Art (10 Photos)
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