#5 New Street Art (10 Photos)
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This batch moves from loud protest to quiet human connection. It brings together cosmic myths, glowing neon energy, local memory, and shared rituals. Here are ten very different walls, each with its own rhythm.
Roundups like this show how wide street art can be. We begin with a screaming Statue of Liberty in Paris, a warning painted straight onto the wall. In Barcelona, one intervention turns a single mural into a story about power and public space. In Ostend, Alexis Diaz and Lula Goce go large with completely different moods: one cosmic and mysterious, the other floral and cinematic. The set keeps shifting as we travel, with quiet figuration in São Paulo, wild characters in France, glowing futurism in Poland and Indonesia, historic memory in Luxembourg, and a simple, beautiful exchange in Peru. No single style owns the street today.
More: #4 Made You Love Art (10 Photos)

🌊 Crossing in Silence — By Hanna Lucatelli Santos in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Hanna Lucatelli Santos shared this mural from Jardim Bonfiglioli in São Paulo, and the work carries a quiet weight. This procession of women and children avoids dramatic effects. The power is in the posture, the lowered eyes, the baby held close, and the basket of dried plants. It can read as a study of migration, endurance, and care. The line slowly fades into the background, making the mural feel like a collective memory drifting in and out.
💡 Artist Nerd Fact: On her artist site, Hanna Lucatelli says her murals try to create “small moments of stillness” in the city and rebuild the collective imagery of women. That context helps explain why this wall feels less like one frozen event and more like memory, territory, and care quietly surfacing together.
More: See Hanna Lucatelli Santos in #4 Made You Love Art (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Hanna Lucatelli Santos on Instagram

🦝 Wild Neighbor — By Indey NLK in Bourgoin-Jallieu, France 🇫🇷
Indey NLK shared this raccoon wall in April, and the appeal is immediate. The oversized stare is mischievous, but the piece does not rely on cuteness alone. Crisp fur, soft hoodie folds, and the coiling green snake give the whole mural bounce and contrast. It feels like a cartoon wandered into the real world and confidently claimed the wall.
💡 Word Nerd Fact: Even the animal’s name carries history: Merriam-Webster traces “raccoon” to Virginia Algonquian and records it in English as early as 1608. So this very contemporary hoodie character is wearing a word that entered English long before graffiti culture did.
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🔗 Follow Indey NLK on Instagram

🌺 “EVE” — By Lula Goce in Ostend, Belgium 🇧🇪
Lula Goce’s mural for The Crystal Ship is officially titled “EVE”. The festival describes it as the story of the first woman reimagined by the sea, surrounded by flowers and dunes typical of Ostend’s coastline. Goce later shared the finished wall after the festival. The grayscale figure calmly holds the center, while the red-orange circle and dense blooms warm the whole facade. Look closer and you can spot the apple and the small winged figure, with the windows beautifully absorbed into the composition.
💡 Coastal Nerd Fact: The plants here are not generic decoration. The Crystal Ship says “EVE” is reimagined by the sea, and the Oosteroever nature guide lists dune species like sea purslane, blue sea holly, and sea rocket as typical for this stretch of coast. So Goce is not painting a generic Eden. She is anchoring it in Ostend.
🔗 Follow Lula Goce on Instagram

💥 Acid Daydream — By Richie Mozger Madano in Zabrze, Poland 🇵🇱
Richie Mozger Madano goes full voltage here. The green portrait feels unreal, but the glasses and lips keep the face grounded. Around it, hard geometric fragments burst outward like a digital landslide. The result is glossy, futuristic, and full of motion, as if the wall is expanding in front of you.
💡 Local Nerd Fact: The jam’s name is a regional wink: Poland’s Ministry of Agriculture lists kluski śląskie as a traditional Silesian dumpling with the signature thumb-made dimple. And Richie wrote on Instagram that this Zabrze wall was his personal record for the number of colors used, which makes the visual overload feel even more earned.
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🔗 Follow Richie Mozger Madano on Instagram

🔵 “Ser Infinito” — By Alexis Diaz in Ostend, Belgium 🇧🇪
Alexis Diaz titled this The Crystal Ship mural “Ser Infinito”, and the festival’s artwork page places it on Passchijnstraat 12. Everything is blue, but never flat. The figure is packed with symbols: horns, scales, a tail, a moon, and a star. There are also fish, keys, and arrows. Yet the mural feels strangely calm. It is cosmic and slightly unsettling in the best way, and it keeps changing the longer you look at it.
💡 Language Nerd Fact: In Spanish, ser is both the verb “to be” and a noun meaning “being,” according to the RAE. That makes “Ser Infinito” read almost like a double title: “Infinite Being” and “To Be Infinite,” which fits how The Crystal Ship describes Diaz’s hybrid worlds of vulnerability, metamorphosis, and survival.
More: Mural by Alexis Diaz and David Zayas in Miami, FL
🔗 Follow Alexis Diaz on Instagram

🎭 Neon Glare — By NIDE in Bangkalan, Indonesia 🇮🇩
NIDE gives this wall a nightclub glow and comic-book attitude. The central portrait shines in electric blue and pink. A small side character keeps the mural strange and playful. The pose has swagger, while the blank glowing eyes push it into a dreamlike space. The piece blends classic graffiti, character art, and synthetic color.
💡 Tag Nerd Fact: NIDE is not just a short tag. In a ThrowUp profile, he explains that the name comes from “natural idealist,” and that his wall language grows out of illustrative cartoon characters mixed with pop art. That backstory helps this piece read as more than neon attitude. It is portraiture filtered through character design.
More: Street Art That Changes the Feeling of a Place
🔗 Follow NIDE on Instagram

🏍️ “Quand la colline devenait ferveur et poussière” — By Rémi Tournier in Ettelbruck, Luxembourg 🇱🇺
Rémi Tournier titled this mural “Quand la colline devenait ferveur et poussière”, and the City of Ettelbruck says it makes a piece of Waarken history visible again, based on an old image tied to the motocross races once held in the neighborhood. The sepia tones, blurred crowd, and sense of bodies pushing forward give it the feel of a recovered photograph. The scale matters too: the whole facade becomes a local memory of speed and teamwork, not just a racing scene.
💡 History Nerd Fact: This is more than a vintage look. RTL Today notes that Ettelbruck hosted a motocross Grand Prix there in 1959 as part of the World Cup series, so Tournier is reviving a real local sports memory rather than inventing a nostalgic mood from scratch.
More: 106 of the Most Beloved Street Art Photos of 2024
🔗 Follow Rémi Tournier on Instagram

🤝 Shared Vessel — By Serpientesal in Piura, Peru 🇵🇪
This mural becomes much more specific once you read Serpientesal’s own caption: it is a brindis nortino, a northern toast with chicha de jora, shared in a calabash vessel called a poto. That turns the simple gesture into something rooted in Piura rather than just symbolic. The tattooed arms, the careful grip, and the long roadside format keep it intimate even at scale, and NCS later mapped the wall at Carr. Panamericana Norte and Calle Fortunato Salazar.
💡 Culture Nerd Fact: Once you know the drink, the whole mural deepens. Peru’s official tourism site calls chicha de jora “the nectar of the Incas,” a fermented corn drink with deep Andean roots, so this is not just two arms meeting in the middle. It is a toast loaded with regional memory.
More: Street Art Utopia Urban Love (21 Photos)
🔗 Follow Serpientesal on Instagram

🗽 “Liberté sous pétrole” (“Freedom Under Oil”) — By K2B Graff in Paris, France 🇫🇷
K2B Graff titled the piece “Liberté sous pétrole”, created for Blacklines’ “Les contestations actuelles” wall on Rue Henri Noguères. Liberty is no longer standing proud. The red, white, and blue across her face read more like damage than patriotism, and the black drips feel closer to oil than tears. It is blunt, furious, and hard to ignore.
💡 Protest Nerd Fact: Black Lines is not just a mural organizer. Le Monde describes the collective as part of the banner culture of French protests. Add the fact that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the United States, and the choice of symbol becomes even sharper: this is Paris throwing a founding icon back into the argument.
More: A Mural of the Statue of Liberty in Shame
🔗 Follow K2B Graff on Instagram

🏈 “A Brief History of the Bad Bunny’s Mural” — By LEÓN and Rockaxson in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
Reuters photographed the original mural in Barcelona’s Gothic Quarter showing Donald Trump, Bad Bunny, and a younger version of the singer, inspired by the Super Bowl halftime show. What makes this image special is what happened next: the overpainting turned the wall into a second accidental work, which the artists later framed as “A Brief History of the Bad Bunny’s Mural”. It is a sharp reminder that street art never controls the whole story. The city always has a chance to answer back.
💡 Archive Nerd Fact: Once the worker painted over it, the mural turned into what the Britannica Dictionary calls a palimpsest: a surface reused after an earlier layer is erased. That is why this intervention feels so street-specific. The second image does not replace the first. It preserves the argument by partly burying it.
More: Welcome to the Year of the Snake: TVBoy’s Satirical Take on Power
🔗 Follow LEÓN on Instagram and Rockaxson on Instagram
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