Absolutely Silly (12 Photos)
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Look at these amazing painted trees and playful shadows! These clever murals perfectly wrap around street corners. They show how artists beautifully merge their graffiti with the environment. You will find these street art illusions in places from Vienna to London. Each piece uses real objects to become much more than just paint on a wall.
More: Silly Signs (10 Photos)

R2-D2’s Day Off by EFIX
Even droids need a moment of romance. EFIX added a paper cut-out character to a public trash bin, making it look like R2-D2 is sheepishly offering flowers. It’s a brilliant way to humanize our city streets with a bit of pop-culture humor. More!: EFIX’s Clever Art (9 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: EFIX says he uses childhood pop-culture characters to keep our “child soul” alive and make people see street furniture differently; the Star Wars trivia layer is that R2-D2’s name itself came from a sound-editing label, “Reel 2, Dialog 2.”
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🌱 Sibling Pep Talk — By David Zinn in USA 🇺🇸
This small green character drawn on stone is so cute. It appears to have wild hair made of real grass. Purple flowers grow from a crack right behind it. The chalk drawing wears a pink shirt and light blue pants. It stands barefoot on the rock. More!: Cute Art By David Zinn (14 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: David Zinn’s own artist bio says his street drawings are made entirely with chalk, charcoal, and found objects, and are improvised on location, so these tiny creatures are meant to live briefly, then vanish with weather and footsteps.
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🐪 Camel Caravan — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
Look at these small black silhouettes of camels and riders. They move single-file along a natural crack in a low wall. This brilliant trick turns the fracture into a desert path. The green grass below contrasts beautifully with the pale wall. More!: Wrong but Right: Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Oakoak’s official presentation says the Saint-Étienne artist has treated streets, walls, pavements, and roads as his playground since 2007, often turning cracks, flaws, and ordinary urban details into small poetic scenes.
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🚀 Diego le robot — By näutil in Saint-Pierre-Église, France 🇫🇷
Näutil’s own project page lists this 2017 work as Diego le robot, made in Saint-Pierre-Église in La Manche. A giant yellow LEGO-style figure is painted across an old WWII bunker, cleverly using the two rectangular openings as the eyes. The pillbox top perfectly becomes the blocky head, with a classic space emblem on the chest against the weathered concrete. More!: Life and Poetry By Näutil (15 Photos!)
💡 Nerd Fact: This piece quietly smashes together two very different histories: the Atlantic Wall, built by Nazi Germany between 1942 and 1944, and LEGO Space, one of LEGO’s first play themes, launched in 1978 with the now-iconic spaceship-circling-a-moon logo.
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📰 Vent-Cover Reader — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This small wall intervention is often shared as an accordion player, but the louvered vent reads more like a folded newspaper or book. The painted hands grip the real metal cover while the face peeks over the top. The unknown artist turns a plain wall grille into the whole joke.
💡 Nerd Fact: The everyday object does almost all the work here: without adding a prop, the artist lets the slatted vent become the thing the character is holding.

💋 The Kiss — By BOGi FABiAN in Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹
This gorgeous reproduction of Gustav Klimt’s famous painting wraps around the corner of a yellow building. A real street sign is perfectly positioned to obscure part of the embrace, making the artwork pop in a magical way. BOGi FABiAN describes it as a reinterpretation of Klimt’s iconic The Kiss in the city where the original was created. More!: A Masterpiece on the Streets: Klimt’s The Kiss Reimagined in Vienna
💡 Nerd Fact: Klimt’s original The Kiss was first exhibited in 1908 at the Kunstschau in Vienna and was bought there by the Ministry for 25,000 Kronen, according to the Belvedere entry on Google Arts & Culture.
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📖 1984 Book Bowl — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This is more porch intervention than mural: a spooky Halloween bowl sits on a doorstep, filled with copies of George Orwell’s 1984 instead of candy. The sign delivers the punchline: “One copy of 1984 per child.”
💡 Nerd Fact: George Orwell’s 1984 was published in 1949 while Orwell was seriously ill with tuberculosis, and The Orwell Foundation credits the novel with bringing words and phrases like “Big Brother,” “thought police,” “doublethink,” and “newspeak” into English.

🌳 Painting Tree — By Semi Ok in Istanbul, Turkey 🇹🇷
This mural shows a giant hand holding a paintbrush. It is painted so the real tree behind the wall forms the bristles of the brush. You can even see blue paint dripping onto the pavement. How creative is that! More!: Playful Art By Semiok (8 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Street Art Utopia’s earlier entry documents this Istanbul work as made for Kartal 100; the joke works because the living tree supplies the brush bristles, while the painted blue drips complete the illusion.
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🦏 Rhino on the Loose — By Banksy in London, UK 🇬🇧
A fantastic black-and-white rhino is painted on a brick wall beside a real parked car, turning the whole corner into one wild urban illusion. Banksy confirmed the piece with his own Instagram post, and the setup instantly became one of the most talked-about works in his 2024 London animal run. More!: 24 artworks by Banksy: Who Is The Visionary of Street Art?
💡 Nerd Fact: This rhino was not a one-off: The Guardian reported that it was the eighth artwork in Banksy’s 2024 animal-themed London series, appearing on Westmoor Street in Charlton after seven straight days of new animal pieces.
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🎢 Roller Coaster Shadow — By Tom Bob in USA 🇺🇸
A wonderful line of painted black silhouettes appears on the ground. You can only see the full picture when the sun casts the blue fence’s wavy shadow in just the right place. Tom Bob’s own post tagged the work with “rollercoaster” and “shadow,” so this is better read as a tiny amusement ride than a train. More!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
💡 Nerd Fact: Tom Bob’s playful street pieces are often more planned than they look: UP Magazine notes that legal permission from property owners can be part of his process when he transforms urban fixtures.
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🌿 Vine Painter — By Pejac in Madrid, Spain 🇪🇸
Look closely at this painted silhouette of a crouching figure. The artist reaches up toward a section of the wall. The plaster has cleverly peeled away to reveal the red brick beneath. It perfectly resembles beautiful climbing vines. More!: Street Art by Pejac – A Collection
💡 Nerd Fact: Pejac’s own artist bio says he is highly selective about “the right place, right context, and right medium or tools” for each message, which is why his outdoor works often feel like they could only exist in that exact spot.
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👻 Flowers die — By Oakoak in Le Locle, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Exomusée lists this Oakoak work among its 2021 “Urban Pranks” as Les fleurs sont périssables (Flowers die). The little ghost holds a real bouquet of yellow flowers on Rue de la Gare, turning a tiny street fixture into a lovesick apparition. More!: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Le Locle is not just a pretty Swiss backdrop: together with La Chaux-de-Fonds, it forms a UNESCO World Heritage watchmaking town-planning site, where the urban layout was shaped around the needs of the watchmaking industry.
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A Halloween bowl filled with copies of George Orwell’s 1984 sits on a doorstep, accompanied by a sign that reads “One copy of 1984 per child.”
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