When Nature Become Art (100 Photos)
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Sometimes a mural is only half the fun! A simple tree magically transforms into wild hair.
A tiny weed becomes a dancer’s tutu. Stones turn into stunning portraits, and driftwood awakens as a forest spirit. Even whole buildings can bloom into giant flowers or tell amazing animal stories. We mixed fresh street art with beloved nature-driven graffiti favorites. Get ready to smile at these brilliant 3D illusions and clever murals!
More: When Nature Finishes the Artwork

🌿 “Elise has legs for ballet but her hands are all jazz” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn finds magic hiding right on the sidewalk. A simple crack and a tuft of weeds become the perfect green tutu. This tiny chalk raccoon dancer is ready for her big show!
💡 Nerd Fact: David Zinn’s sidewalk pieces are intentionally temporary: his own artist bio says they are made entirely from chalk, charcoal, and found objects, then improvised on location through what he jokingly calls “ephemeral pareidolic anamorphosis”.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🦋 “Alive” — By ZABOU in London, UK 🇬🇧
ZABOU paints a breathtaking balance of life and loss. On her own project page, she describes “Alive” as a 9 × 4 m London mural for BlankWalls’ “Strength” series, with Barbara’s portrait and a skull overgrown by flowers. Vibrant blooms and an orange butterfly keep the wall alive rather than simply gothic.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🌼 La Saison des Fresques — By DAN23 in Strasbourg, France 🇫🇷
DAN23 brings a burst of spring right to the wall. He shared this Strasbourg piece as the opening move in his “La Saison des Fresques” return, painted on the façade of La Fignette. A glowing face dissolves into daisies, bright wings, and a flying bird.
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🍒 De Tielse geschiedenis in groen — By Jan Is De Man in Tiel, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Jan Is De Man completely transforms the Agnietenhof theatre tower. Working with Gert de Graaff, he turns the wall into a massive local still life packed with fruit, flowers, insects, and civic memory. Butterflies and local pride make this mural a true masterpiece!
💡 Nerd Fact: This wall is rooted in local memory: Street Art Cities notes that Jan Is De Man worked with Gert de Graaff on a design filled with plants, fruit, and flowers that have played an important role in Tiel’s history.
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🐦 Sunrise Country — By D-V-Ate in Lockington, Australia 🇦🇺
D-V-Ate paints a stunning rural panorama that takes your breath away. A giant painted magpie watches over cattle and shimmering water. The golden sunrise light feels perfectly rooted in this beautiful landscape.
💡 Community Fact: D-V-Ate said he worked with Lockington & District Business Centre on a design shaped by community feedback. Local coverage had earlier identified the project as a 3 m × 15 m mural on the Lockington District Business Centre, funded by Lockmore Financial Services.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🐻❄️ “Souvenir” — By NEVERCREW in Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹
NEVERCREW paints a giant Arctic animal as a plastic model kit. This clever 3D illusion looks adorable at first glance. The longer you look, the deeper its powerful message hits.
💡 Climate Fact: “Souvenir” was created for Klima Biennale Wien’s public-art exhibition “(No) Funny Games” on Baumgasse 77, in cooperation with Calle Libre. Colossal’s 2026 feature also frames the piece through NEVERCREW’s own statement about nature being filtered into a simulation rather than treated as a living system we belong to.
More: New street art and mural designs
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🌻 Still Life Tower — By Fintan Magee in Bitola, North Macedonia 🇲🇰
Fintan Magee turns an entire apartment building into a towering still life. Macedonian news agency MIA reported that the Bitola mural was unveiled in November 2025 as part of Australian Embassy activities marking 30 years of diplomatic relations, and Magee said it used Macedonian and Australian flowers and national objects to connect the two countries.
💡 Nerd Fact: Fintan Magee is often described as a social realist muralist, and festival bios note that his public art frequently tackles migration, consumption, diversity, and environmental issues. That makes the painted passport here feel like more than just a travel prop.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🦎 “Peliguana” — By Saulo Metria and Julián Cruz Solano in Lima, Peru 🇵🇪
This amazing hybrid creature feels like nature dreaming in vivid color. It is part pelican, part reptile, and all spirit animal. We absolutely love this vibrant graffiti collaboration!
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🐼 “Peep!” — By SMOK in Antwerp, Belgium 🇧🇪
SMOK turns an ordinary building corner into the ultimate hide-and-seek trick. A giant, fluffy panda playfully peeks out at passersby. This clever 3D illusion instantly brings joy to the whole street!
💡 Series Fact: SMOK identified the panda as “Peep!”, the final mural in his Fake Views series for District Berchem. Local coverage places it at Lange Pastoorstraat and Klauwaardsstraat, making the wall a neighborhood marker rather than just a cute animal moment.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🐆 Ancestral Presence — By Franklin Piaguaje in Pasto, Colombia 🇨🇴
Franklin Piaguaje paints a magnificent jaguar as a pale, glowing guardian. The majestic cat moves gracefully through memory and land. This gorgeous mural is a stunning tribute to ancestral knowledge.
💡 Indigenous Art Fact: South American Street Art Fund identifies Franklin Piaguaje as an Indigenous Siona artist raised with a strong relationship to nature and territorial rights. That context makes the elder and pale jaguar read as memory-keeping rather than simple animal symbolism.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🐸 Wingbeat & Watcher — By klub_znc in Leipzig, Germany 🇩🇪
A beautiful bird lifts off while a glossy, colorful frog watches closely. These two small wild creatures explode into a giant wall full of motion. The bright splashes of graffiti color make it impossible to ignore!
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🐅 “Marionette King” — By Jack Lack in Lippstadt, Germany 🇩🇪
Jack Lack paints a majestic tiger that looks incredibly powerful yet trapped. Painted strings control the wild cat like a giant puppet. It is a brilliant 3D illusion with a sharp message.
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🐟 “Noyer le Poisson” — By Veks Van Hillik in Dijon, France 🇫🇷
Veks Van Hillik paints a delightfully strange and surreal aquatic world. A glowing blue fish meets cool glass reflections and deep shadows. This dark niche is transformed into a totally impossible ecosystem!
💡 Language Fact: Veks Van Hillik posted the mural under the title “Noyer le Poisson”, a French expression for dodging the issue or muddying the waters. That makes the fish, glass, and shifting reflections even slyer.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🦈 Under Pressure — By Nuno Miles in Guarda, Portugal 🇵🇹
Nuno Miles completely transforms a rusted industrial tank. He painted an epic underwater vessel complete with a magical blue glow. Look closely to spot the giant shark swimming right through the 3D illusion!
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🌿 Sibling Pep Talk — By David Zinn in Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
A simple sidewalk weed magically becomes a head of wild purple hair. David Zinn brings this tiny chalk creature to life with so much personality. We just love these small moments of street art joy!
More: When Nature Finishes the Artwork
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🦁 Mane Problem — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
A random tuft of grass handles both the comedy and the character design here. It perfectly completes this tiny chalk lion’s mane. David Zinn turns the ordinary sidewalk into a living, breathing joke!
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🌳 Family Tree — By Falko One in Riebeek West, South Africa 🇿🇦
Falko One uses a living tree trunk to anchor beautifully painted, reaching arms. This brilliant mural turns a broken, abandoned wall into a touching story of connection.
💡 Graffiti History Fact: Falko One’s public-art career reaches back to apartheid-era South Africa. 16 on Lerotholi notes that he made his first graffiti artwork in 1988 and became a major figure in the development of South Africa’s graffiti scene.
More: Family Tree on Street Art Utopia
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🌺 Bougainvillea Shades — Street Art in Pondicherry, India 🇮🇳
This painted face looks incredibly cool in her blue sunglasses. The real magic happens above the wall: a lush bougainvillea bush blooms into a seasonal head of floral hair. The artist is not clearly verified here, so the safest credit is to the site-specific Pondicherry street art and the photographer/source account below.
💡 Plant Nerd Fact: The pink “flowers” doing the heavy lifting here are mostly not flowers at all. NC State Extension notes that bougainvillea’s three tiny white flowers are surrounded by three to six brightly colored paper-like bracts, which is why the plant can look like a full floral hairstyle.
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📷 Photo/source: Kanthan on Instagram

🍂 “Colos Curva” — By Jon Foreman in Little Milford Woods, Wales 🏴
Jon Foreman beautifully wraps brightly colored fallen leaves right around the bark. It looks as if the forest quietly decided to create its own abstract street art. This breathtaking land art perfectly honors the changing seasons.
💡 Land Art Fact: Jon Foreman’s land art is built with disappearance in mind. Colossal notes that he arranges stones, shells, and leaves knowing the tide, weather, or passersby may eventually reclaim them, making ephemerality part of the finished work.
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🪵 Spirit in Driftwood — By Debra Bernier in Victoria, Canada 🇨🇦
Debra Bernier clearly listens to the natural shape of the driftwood first. The peaceful sleeping face feels gently discovered rather than forced. It is a stunning blend of sculpture and wild nature!
💡 Driftwood Fact: Debra Bernier’s own artist statement says each piece carries the essence of nature: tides, ancient trees, and the connection between living things. That makes the driftwood a storyteller rather than just raw material.
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🌸 The Living Afro — By Fábio Gomes Trindade in Trindade, Brazil 🇧🇷
Fábio Gomes Trindade paints a gorgeous, expressive face on the wall. He then lets Mother Nature take over. A giant flowering tree perfectly completes her bright pink hairstyle right on cue!
💡 Culture Fact: Fábio Gomes Trindade’s tree-hair portraits also carry cultural weight. BrightVibes describes him as an Afro-Brazilian artist using urban vegetation to celebrate the natural hair of Black women and girls.
More: How Fábio Gomes Turns Trees into Hair
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🌱 Green Crown — By Fábio Gomes Trindade in Trindade, Brazil 🇧🇷
A massive green canopy transforms into a spectacular natural crown. This brilliant graffiti portrait relies entirely on perfect placement and scale. The living tree does all the heavy lifting!
More: How Fábio Gomes Turns Trees into Hair
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🌱 The Brick Eater — By Nature in Hong Kong 🇭🇰
No spray paint is needed for this incredible urban masterpiece! Giant banyan roots crawl through the city grid in a perfect geometric pattern. It looks exactly like nature drawing its own street map.
💡 Urban Nature Fact: Hong Kong’s “stone wall trees” are urban survivors. Landscape researchers describe them as a landscape artifact shaped by Hong Kong’s dense city form, climate, and old masonry walls, while the government keeps a Register of Old and Valuable Trees to help protect significant specimens.
More: When Trees Become Art

🦅 Floral Osprey — By Curtis Hylton in Nykvarn, Sweden 🇸🇪
Curtis Hylton makes wild beauty literally bloom right out of the city walls. He gives this giant osprey a perfect mix of fierce power and soft floral details. The giant flower petals look absolutely incredible!
💡 Nerd Fact: This was part of a larger Artscape project in Nykvarn: Street Art Cities records that Curtis Hylton painted three murals for the Bokoop cooperative housing development, using local fauna with a floral touch.
More: In Love with Nature by Curtis Hylton
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🌺 Colibri des Caraïbes — By Curtis Hylton in Fort-de-France, Martinique 🇲🇶
This dazzling hummingbird feels exactly like pure tropical sunlight in motion. Curtis Hylton uses vivid flowers to shape the flying bird. It is literally a gorgeous garden on the wing!
More: In Love with Nature by Curtis Hylton
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🦉 Dinner For One — By Curtis Hylton in Orsa, Sweden 🇸🇪
A majestic floral owl completely dominates this giant wall. Take a closer look at the stunning details below. Painted fish, antlers, sea shells, and a bright red crayfish create a bustling, beautiful ecosystem!
More: In Love with Nature by Curtis Hylton
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🕊️ Dove of Peace — By Hannah Bullen-Ryner in UK 🇬🇧
Hannah Bullen-Ryner carefully crafts a beautiful dove from soft petals and natural forest fragments. Her ephemeral artwork reminds us that peace is delicate and precious. This stunning land art will slowly return to the earth.
💡 Nature Fact: Hannah Bullen-Ryner’s process is deliberately gentle on the land. Her own artist statement says she uses only locally found natural materials and no permanent fixings, so the forest is allowed to take the work back.
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👀 Googly Eye Tree — By Vanyu Krastev in Sliven, Bulgaria 🇧🇬
Sometimes less is definitely more in street art! Just two large googly eyes instantly bring this chopped tree trunk to life. It quickly transforms into a wonderfully confused and hilarious street character.
💡 Eyebombing Fact: Vanyu Krastev’s work connects to the wider “eyebombing” tradition: adding googly eyes to overlooked public objects so the city suddenly feels populated by tiny characters. Visualflood describes his Bulgarian interventions as turning broken or ordinary street objects into anthropomorphic urban figures.
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🪵 Stillness in Motion — By Olga Ziemska in Orońsko, Poland 🇵🇱
Hundreds of cut willow branches magically become a standing human body. This incredible nature sculpture feels deeply rooted to the earth. At the same time, it looks perfectly windblown and alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Stillness in Motion” began in 2002 at the Centre of Polish Sculpture in Orońsko. Ziemska’s studio says it was made from locally reclaimed willow branches for her “Matka” series, where “matka” means “mother” in Polish.
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✋ The Giant Hand of Vyrnwy — By Simon O’Rourke in Wales, UK 🏴
Simon O’Rourke completely reimagines a damaged, dying tree. He carved the towering trunk into a spectacular giant hand reaching toward the sky. This is upcycling and nature art at its very best!
💡 Tree Fact: The hand was carved from a storm-damaged Douglas fir that had been known as the tallest tree in Wales. O’Rourke writes that the surrounding woodland was called the “Giants of Vyrnwy,” inspiring the idea of the tree’s last reach toward the sky.
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🌍 Make Earth Green Again — By HIJACK in Los Angeles, USA 🇺🇸
HIJACK turns a boring wooden fence into a magical green portal. A painted worker peels back the boards to show a vibrant, painted forest. It feels like this lush oasis was hiding there all along!
💡 Street Art Context: Urban Nation describes HIJACK as a Los Angeles-based artist making political, social, and cultural commentary with tongue-in-cheek humor. That gives this green portal a sharper edge as environmental protest in playful disguise.
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👁️ The Eye — By Näutil in Siouville-Hague, France 🇫🇷
This abandoned concrete bunker already had plenty of dark history. The addition of a giant, bright blue eye completely wakes up the coastline. It is a fantastic example of street art transforming old ruins.
💡 Coastal History Fact: Older coverage preserves the artist’s statement that the pupil also contains the silhouette of the La Hague nuclear plant. So this WWII blockhaus is not only looking back at war history; it also points toward newer human scars on the coast.
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🌿 Living Crown — By Fin DAC in Portland, Oregon, USA 🇺🇸
Fin DAC beautifully lets real, living plants finish this elegant portrait. The painted mural naturally blends right into the vibrant greenery. It allows the artwork to actually grow and change with the seasons!
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🤗 Hugging the Tree — By Unknown Artist
A beautiful painted child gives this planter a warm, loving hug. It instantly turns a simple street tree into a heartwarming scene. We adore how street art can make the city feel so much softer.
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🌳 Tree Ring Mandala — By James Brunt in Syria 🇸🇾
James Brunt makes a mighty tree the stunning center of a living diagram. Smooth stones and colorful leaves radiate outward in a perfectly calm rhythm. This mesmerizing land art invites you to pause and breathe.
💡 Ephemeral Art Fact: Colossal describes James Brunt’s practice as elaborate temporary land art made from natural materials found near his Yorkshire home, often arranged into mandala-like spirals and concentric circles.
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🌲 Forest Spirit — By Unknown Artist
No paint or chisels were used for this natural masterpiece! Rough bark, deep shadows, and green moss perfectly align over time. It makes this broken trunk look exactly like a wise, ancient woodland face.
More: When Nature Finishes the Artwork

🐗 The Old Sow — By Hannelie Coetzee in Knislinge, Sweden 🇸🇪
Hannelie Coetzee keeps the stacked timber wonderfully rough and natural. A giant, imposing wild boar powerfully rises from the quiet forest floor. It feels like an incredible rewilding memory brought to life!
💡 Ecology Fact: Wanås Konst gives the original Swedish title as “Gamla suggan mellan träden.” Their collection text links the wild boar to Swedish ecology, noting that the animal disappeared from the Swedish fauna for centuries before returning and sparking debate about coexistence with other species.
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🌍 World in Progress — By Saype in Geneva, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Saype uses eco-friendly paint to make the actual grass carry his message. He turns a massive lawn into an awe-inspiring giant drawing. It is a powerful statement about children and the future of our planet.
💡 Scale Fact: The scale here is wild: Saype’s official notes list “World in Progress” as a 6,000-square-meter grass painting made with biodegradable paint at the Palais des Nations in Geneva for the UN’s 75th anniversary year.
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🪨 Fisherman — By Justin Bateman in Chiang Mai, Thailand 🇹🇭
Justin Bateman brilliantly turns simple pebbles into artistic pixels. He builds an incredibly detailed and weathered portrait using only stones found on the ground. The level of patience and skill here is absolutely mind-blowing!
💡 Pebble Fact: Justin Bateman treats pebbles like a slow, low-tech pixel system. My Modern Met describes his portraits as impermanent artworks where each naturally colored stone works like a paint stroke or pixel.
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🔥 Prometheus — By David Popa in Crete, Greece 🇬🇷
David Popa uses natural earth pigments to paint directly onto the rocky coast. The cracked stone makes the Greek myth feel incredibly ancient and raw. This ephemeral art will eventually wash away with the rain and tide.
💡 Earth Fact: David Popa’s “earth frescoes” are designed to leave almost no trace. His artist bio says he works in nature with chalk, charcoal, and earth mineral pigments, while an interview notes that he mixes pigments only with spring water for site-specific works.
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🤲 The Caring Hand — By Eva Oertli & Beat Huber in Glarus, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Huge, beautifully sculpted fingers reach out from the earth to gently cradle a living tree. It is a striking visual reminder to protect our environment. This amazing sculpture makes the idea of caring for nature deeply visible.
💡 Public Art Fact: The idea for this sculpture predates the viral photos by decades. Beat Huber writes that he developed the concept in 1990, produced it for Skulptura 04, and that Glarus later received the work after private donors helped purchase it for the town.
More: Sculptures That Blend With Nature

🐎 Pebble Stallion — By Beach4Art in UK 🇬🇧
Beach4Art makes the sandy shore literally gallop to life! They carefully arranged dark stones for the powerful body and long driftwood for the flowing mane. This pebble stallion is packed with wild, incredible motion.
💡 Family Land Art Fact: Beach4Art is a family project. My Modern Met reports that Ieva Slares, Dzintars, and their two children create ephemeral North Devon beach art from rocks, shells, sea glass, and other materials gathered along the shore.
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🌺 Hummingbird Bloom — By Safe in Moyobamba, Peru 🇵🇪
Safe completely transforms a plain, boring wall into a glowing pocket of the rainforest. The dark background makes the hummingbirds and vibrant flowers pop with fast color. It is a stunning, high-energy graffiti mural!
💡 Local Nature Fact: The hummingbirds and flowers fit Moyobamba’s real ecosystem beautifully. Waqanki Ecolodge describes the Alto Mayo area as an oasis of orchids and birds, with more than 250 orchid species and 400 bird species.
More: Mural by Safe in Moyobamba
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🌊 Birth of Venus — By Jben beach art and Thomas Cambois atelier in France 🇫🇷
This epic sand version of a classic Botticelli painting returns Venus right to the shoreline. Deep shadows from the sun carve out the incredible details. It is beautiful to know the rising tide will soon wash it all away.
💡 Art History Fact: Botticelli’s original “Birth of Venus” is not a fresco or a panel painting. The Uffizi lists it as tempera on canvas, about 172.5 × 278.5 cm, painted around 1485.
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🟩 “Tapis Rouge!” — By Gaëlle Villedary in Jaujac, France 🇫🇷
Gaëlle Villedary rolls out a spectacular green carpet of real grass straight through the village. It beautifully softens the hard, old stone streets. This living green path invites everyone to take a barefoot stroll!
💡 Land Art Fact: The work’s real title is “Tapis Rouge!” and it was made to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Jaujac’s Art and Nature Trail. Landezine describes it as a living path meant to connect the village center with the surrounding valley.
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🌿 Mural Gets Hijacked by Nature — By Marquitos Corvalán in Chaco, Argentina 🇦🇷
The carefully painted face sets up the perfect joke, but Mother Nature delivers the punchline! A massive explosion of green ivy drops in like wild, chaotic cartoon hair. It completely steals the show on this funny graffiti wall.
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🌿 Nature Portrait — By El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador 🇪🇨
El Decertor brilliantly steps back and lets the natural landscape complete the portrait. The lush greenery seamlessly becomes part of the painted figure’s body. It creates an incredible flow of artistic and natural energy!
💡 Muralist Fact: El Decertor is Daniel Cortez from Lima, Peru. Gateway to Newark describes his work as “weatherproof memories in public spaces,” with portraits that explore the connection between individual people and collective memory.
More: When Street Art Meets Nature
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🌴 Nature Face — By Nuxuno Xän in Fort-de-France, Martinique 🇲🇶
Nuxuno Xän perfectly blends his painted character with the wild, living surroundings. He turns this ordinary concrete wall into a beautiful stage for nature. The tropical leaves bring the entire graffiti portrait to life!
💡 Caribbean Art Fact: Nuxuno Xän is based in Fort-de-France, Martinique, and his practice is broader than wall painting. Street-Artwork describes him as combining graffiti, body painting, and graphic design while also sharing urban-art knowledge with Martinican youth through workshops.
More: When Street Art Meets Nature

🌳 Tree Hair — By Unknown Artist in Nicaragua 🇳🇮
A beautiful real tree behind the wall perfectly completes this painted figure. The brilliant 3D illusion depends entirely on the changing seasons and natural sunlight. It is street art that actually grows over time!
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🌼 Rooftop Flower Crown — By OG Millie and Floratorium in New York, USA 🇺🇸
This striking portrait and its lush botanical setting work together in perfect harmony. It feels exactly like a secret rooftop garden turned into a high-fashion photo shoot. We love the bright, bursting floral crown!
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🌱 Living Hair — By Robson Melancia in Dois Córregos, Brazil 🇧🇷
Robson Melancia expertly places his painted face right where a real tree can work its magic. The leafy branches finish the portrait with incredible, living texture. It is a brilliant and joyous natural optical illusion!
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😄 Green Smile — By Xanoy
A simple, messy cascade of green plant matter perfectly completes this funny expression. It instantly turns a basic mural into a cheerful face that feels totally alive. Street art that makes you smile is the absolute best!
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🌿 Nature Wall — By SFHIR in Málaga, Spain 🇪🇸
SFHIR lets the wild environment push directly into his artwork. This gorgeous mural gives the concrete city and the living plants one beautiful shared language. The blending of paint and leaves is totally flawless!
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🌱 Urban Green Trick — By Fauxreel in Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦
Fauxreel makes a tiny, easily ignored natural detail feel entirely intentional. He cleverly turns a random tuft of street weeds into the absolute center of attention. This is urban street art at its most playful!
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🌿 UMI — By Daniel Popper in Lisle, Illinois, USA 🇺🇸
Daniel Popper’s towering sculptural figure feels like it naturally grew out of the garden. He transforms the human form into a massive, immersive green doorway. Walking through this artwork feels like pure magic!
💡 Sculpture Fact: “UMI” belonged to Popper’s “Human+Nature” exhibition at The Morton Arboretum. The Arboretum says the 15–26 foot sculptures were created exclusively for its 1,700-acre site and formed Popper’s largest exhibition anywhere in the world.
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💧 “The Legend of Giants” — By Natalia Rak in Białystok, Poland 🇵🇱
Natalia Rak perfectly aligns her massive, colorful mural with the living tree down on the sidewalk. It creates a brilliant 3D optical illusion where the giant girl appears to be watering reality itself. An absolute street art classic!
💡 Mural Fact: This mural’s original title is “The Legend of Giants.” It was painted in 2013 for Białystok’s Folk on the Street festival, and Colossal helped spread it globally soon after its festival debut.
More: When Trees Become Art
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🌼 Please Do Not Touch — By Michael Pederson in Sydney, Australia 🇦🇺
Michael Pederson playfully gives a tiny, random dandelion the grand status of a priceless museum object. This clever street installation makes the ordinary city cracks feel incredibly precious. It is guaranteed to make you giggle!
💡 Tiny Sign Fact: Michael Pederson’s tiny interventions work because they borrow the authority of official public signage. Colossal notes that his pieces are often camouflaged like legitimate street signs around Sydney, turning overlooked corners into absurd little civic instructions.
More: When Street Art Meets Nature

🌿 Nature in Plaster — By Pejac in Madrid, Spain 🇪🇸
Pejac uses a brilliant optical illusion to make a tiny plant feel like both a wound and a repair. He painted fake medical plaster holding the cracked bricks together. This small, powerful detail screams volumes about protecting nature.
💡 Street Art Fact: Pejac’s tiny interventions are usually site-specific acts of precision, not random decoration. His own bio says he is highly selective about the right place, context, medium, and tools for each message.
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✏️ Colour Pencils — By Jonna Pohjalainen at Pedvāle Open-Air Art Museum, Latvia 🇱🇻
Jonna Pohjalainen magically turns ordinary cut logs into massive, colorful oversized pencils. The work is better documented as “Colour Pencils,” a set of local aspen trunks carved during an environmental-art workshop at the Open Air Art Museum in Latvia. It is a playful reminder that our favorite drawing tools begin their lives as trees.
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🌳 Nature Illusion — By Wild Drawing in Athens, Greece 🇬🇷
Wild Drawing forces the real, living tree to become a crucial part of the painted composition. It is no longer just something blocking the wall. This epic graffiti mural creates a jaw-dropping natural optical illusion!
💡 Artist Background Fact: Street Art Cities notes that Wild Drawing was born and raised in Bali, studied both Fine Arts and Applied Arts, and began painting in the street in 2000. His murals carry that East-West cultural background into public space.
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🌿 Banksy Bush — Often attributed to Banksy in London, UK 🇬🇧
This widely circulated stencil is often credited to Banksy, though a strong official claim for this specific older bush piece is hard to pin down. The clever joke only works because the green shrub was already growing there: the physical location becomes the medium.
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🍓 Berry Workers — By Oakoak in Avignon, France 🇫🇷
Oakoak magically shrinks the world down right around these fallen red berries. A simple creeping plant instantly becomes a bustling, tiny construction site. This hilarious miniature street art is bursting with creativity!
💡 Miniature Fact: OAKOAK has been turning small urban details into comic scenes since 2006. Urban Nation describes the Saint-Étienne artist as a humorous interventionist who turns everyday city objects into comic-like stories.
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🌿 Vine Adventure — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
A simple green vine quickly becomes an entire jungle playground for Calvin and Hobbes. Oakoak turns a creeping plant into a classic comic strip waiting to happen. This is pure, joyful nostalgia on a wall!
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🍎 Small Girl and Small Apple — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
Oakoak cleverly lets a low-hanging branch of red berries become a magical, miniature apple tree. A tiny stenciled figure reaches up to pick her prize. This sweet and simple illusion is an absolute delight!
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📣 Grass Pom-Poms — By Sandrine Boulet in France 🇫🇷
Sandrine Boulet hilariously turns ordinary tufts of sidewalk grass into bursting cheerleader energy. A quick sketch brings these annoying pavement weeds to life. It is the perfect way to make a boring street totally fun!
💡 Process Fact: Sandrine Estrade Boulet’s own site describes her world as a mix of photography, illustration, urban art, and in-situ work, floating between dream and reality. That is why her street pieces feel like quick visual jokes discovered inside the city.
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🍃 The Fig Leaf — By Sandrine Boulet in France 🇫🇷
Just one carefully placed leaf changes the entire meaning of this funny image. It instantly becomes a perfectly placed, classic comic cover-up. We love how Sandrine Boulet plays with the everyday things we drop!
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🍂 Sideways Leaf — By Sandrine Boulet in France 🇫🇷
Sandrine Boulet creatively turns a random fallen leaf into a dramatic street prop. It makes this tiny, funny pavement scene feel totally complete. You will never look at autumn leaves the same way again!
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💧 Tiny Gardener — By Pappas Pärlor in Sweden 🇸🇪
A cute, retro pixel-art character carefully waters a real, living plant. Pappas Pärlor uses colorful Perler beads to make the natural world the punchline. This clever street art brings awesome video game vibes to reality!
💡 Pixel Fact: Urban Nation notes that Pappas Pärlor’s favorite material is fuse beads. That means this little gardener is not only street art; it is old-school pixel logic exported from screens and games into real public space.
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✨ Flower Magic — By Unknown Artist
This gorgeous real flower becomes the sparkling centerpiece of the graffiti. It is placed exactly where the painted fairy needs a touch of bright magic. It creates a stunning, fairy-tale optical illusion right on the street!
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🪵 Here’s Johnny! — By Unknown Artist in Kaisariani, Athens, Greece 🇬🇷
A dark, hollow tree trunk becomes a terrifying and brilliant natural frame. It makes this famous movie portrait feel like it is staring right out from inside the wood. This is an absolutely killer street art surprise!
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🪴 Potted Tree Illusion — By Dr Love at Upfest in Bristol, England 🇬🇧
A heavy, real potted tree on the sidewalk becomes the final piece of this brilliant painted joke. Dr Love nails the 3D perspective perfectly. It looks exactly like the stenciled man is carrying the giant plant away!
💡 Festival Fact: Upfest says it began in 2008 as a one-day event with 30 artists and has grown into a major Bristol street-art program attracting around 80,000 visitors and showcasing more than 250 artists.
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🌱 Moss Graffiti — By Carly Schmitt
This is an incredible form of graffiti that literally grows over time. It beautifully softens the harsh stone wall with thick, living green moss. It is a brilliant, eco-friendly way to leave a lasting street message!
💡 Moss Fact: Carly Schmitt’s own archive lists this living-letter experiment under “Moss Graffiti”, which helps confirm the attribution while keeping the focus on the moss itself as the medium.
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🐎 Horse Jump — By JPS in UK 🇬🇧
JPS cleverly lets a real, thick tree branch act as the ultimate equestrian obstacle. It makes the painted horse look like it is leaping straight through the actual street. The forced perspective on this stencil is flawless!
💡 Stencil Artist Fact: JPS is Jamie Paul Scanlon, born in Weston-super-Mare near Bristol. Urban Nation’s artist bio links him to the UK stencil scene, giving this tiny horse-and-rider moment a place inside a longer British street-art lineage.
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🌈 Color Hair — By Vinie in Paris, France 🇫🇷
Vinie lets the wild greenery completely take over her gorgeous portrait. The thick vines push the character’s hair way beyond spray paint and into the real, 3D world. Her signature girls always look stunning in nature!
💡 Character Fact: Street Art for Mankind notes that Vinie moved to Paris in 2007, when she began exhibiting her iconic afro-hairstyle feminine character on walls while playing with nature and the surrounding environment.
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❤️ Beautiful Love — By Alter OS in Mexico City, Mexico 🇲🇽
Alter OS lets vibrant flowers and deeply painted emotion beautifully collide. The real hanging plants make this incredible street wall feel soft, direct, and completely alive. It is a stunning tribute to love and nature!
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🌴 “Ven a la Luz” (Come Into Light) — By Daniel Popper in Tulum, Mexico 🇲🇽
Daniel Popper’s giant wooden figure dramatically opens her chest into a burst of greenery. She transforms into both a beautiful human body and a welcoming, magical doorway. This colossal art piece feels like a sacred forest temple!
💡 Title Fact: The sculpture’s Spanish title is “Ven a la Luz,” meaning “come into the light.” Popper’s studio lists it as a 33-foot work made for Art With Me in Tulum using steel, wood, rope, and natural fibres, with a focus on the fragile coastal ecosystem.
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🧷 “Skin 2” — By Mehmet Ali Uysal in Belgium 🇧🇪
Mehmet Ali Uysal literally makes the solid ground look completely pinched. It playfully makes the grassy landscape feel exactly like a piece of soft, folded fabric. This massive park sculpture is an absolute mind-bender!
💡 Sculpture Fact: This work is actually titled “Skin 2.” Pi Artworks lists Mehmet Ali Uysal’s 2010 Belgian version at 700 × 800 cm, turning the landscape itself into the “skin” held by the oversized everyday object.
More: Sculptures That Blend With Nature

🌱 Sidewalk Seeds — By Kindergarten children
A boring, gray crack in the sidewalk bursts into a lush, tiny garden. It only happened because curious kindergarten children decided to test what could grow there. We are obsessed with this sweet, hopeful guerilla gardening!
More: When Trees Become Art

🏸 Shuttlecocks — By Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen in Kansas City, USA 🇺🇸
This pristine green lawn is instantly transformed into a frozen, giant badminton court. These massive, oversized shuttlecocks turn the serious museum grounds into a playful, larger-than-life game. It is a pop art classic!
💡 Pop Art Fact: The museum grounds are part of the joke. The Nelson-Atkins Museum says Oldenburg and van Bruggen imagined the museum as a badminton net and the lawn as a playing field; each shuttlecock weighs about 5,500 pounds.
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🪟 “Window with Ladder — Too Late for Help” — By Leandro Erlich
Leandro Erlich places a floating piece of architecture right in the middle of an open field. It makes the entire grassy landscape feel like a surreal, dreamlike stage. This gravity-defying optical illusion is absolutely breathtaking!
💡 Nerd Fact: The full title is “Window with Ladder — Too Late for Help.” The New Orleans Museum of Art lists the 2008 work as made from a metal ladder, steel underground structure, fiberglass, and aluminum frames, standing 177 inches tall.
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🌳 “Give” — By Lorenzo Quinn
Lorenzo Quinn beautifully turns the abstract idea of care into a massive physical gesture. Two giant white hands emerge from the earth to gently hold a young, living tree. It is a stunning plea for environmental conservation!
💡 Sculpture Fact: Halcyon Gallery describes “Give” as a work made from resin and recycled materials, with an olive tree symbolizing peace and environmental sustainability. Quinn’s official biography adds that the sculpture was placed in the Uffizi’s Boboli Gardens in Florence in 2020 before later becoming part of Pietrasanta’s International Park of Contemporary Sculpture.
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🔗 Follow Lorenzo Quinn on Instagram

🪑 “Schleudersitz” — By Cornelia Konrads in Neustadt an der Donau, Germany 🇩🇪
Cornelia Konrads turns a boring place to sit into a thrilling, high-speed launched object. The official title, “Schleudersitz,” makes the joke sharper: a quiet park bench suddenly looks ready to fling someone across the landscape.
💡 Sculpture Fact: Sculpture Network documents “Schleudersitz” as a 2010 installation for the Flying Objects exhibition in Neustadt an der Donau, made from rubber, steel cable, a wooden bench, and paint, with a bent pine tree completing the slingshot illusion.
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🧷 “Corridor Pin, Blue” — By Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen in San Francisco, USA 🇺🇸
This gigantic, towering safety pin turns a quiet grassy park into a major attraction. It makes an ordinary, everyday object suddenly become a massive, shiny city landmark. Oldenburg and van Bruggen always made the mundane look totally epic!
💡 Pop Art Fact: The official title is “Corridor Pin, Blue.” Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco lists the 1999 sculpture as stainless steel, aluminum, and glazed acrylic enamel, made by Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen.
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💧 Zipper — By Yasuhiro Suzuki in Tokyo, Japan 🇯🇵
Yasuhiro Suzuki literally makes the solid ground look like it is being slowly unzipped. It magically reveals a pool of water, as if nature has its own hidden seam. This massive zipper is an unbelievably clever optical illusion!
💡 Design Fact: Yasuhiro Suzuki also made a moving “Zip-Fastener Ship.” His artist bio explains that the boat’s wake appears to unzip the sea, turning an industrial zipper into a playful mediator between daily life, design, and nature.
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🌸 Hallow — By Daniel Popper in Lisle, Illinois, USA 🇺🇸
Surrounded by beautiful, brightly flowering spring trees, Popper’s giant wooden figure gently opens her chest. It creates an incredibly calm and peaceful space for deep reflection. This massive park sculpture is pure, quiet magic.
💡 Meaning Fact: Daniel Popper’s own Human+Nature archive describes “Hallow” through grief, remembrance, vulnerability, self-knowledge, and growth. The open body is not just dramatic form; it is tied to the emotional process of loss and healing.
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🔗 Follow Daniel Popper on Instagram

🌀 Augere — By Jon Foreman in Druidston, Wales 🏴
Jon Foreman meticulously builds a massive, sweeping stone spiral right on the sandy shore. It feels perfectly made for the rising tide to slowly change and eventually reclaim. This is the ultimate, beautiful temporary beach art!
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🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram

🪵 Mama Mimi — By Thomas Dambo in Wilson, Wyoming, USA 🇺🇸
Thomas Dambo’s lovable troll rests peacefully in the wild, open landscape. She looks just like a gentle giant built from recycled scrap wood and pure storybook magic. Finding one of these giant trolls feels like a true adventure!
💡 Troll Fact: “Mama Mimi” is part of Thomas Dambo’s global troll universe. Jackson Hole Public Art says the troll was produced with them and hosted at the Jackson Hole Land Trust’s R Park, turning a community conservation property into a public treasure hunt stop.
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🏹 Willow Archer — By Anna & The Willow
Anna & The Willow magically gives simple branches the intense, pulling tension of a loaded bow. She turns softly woven willow into a fiercely poised, life-sized human figure. This is an absolute masterclass in natural sculpture craft!
💡 Craft Fact: Anna & The Willow is Anna Cross, a willow artist based near Ripon in North Yorkshire. Her artist bio says she studied zoology and is inspired by British wildlife and the surrounding countryside, which helps explain the animal-like tension in her woven figures.
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🔗 Follow Anna & The Willow on Instagram

😴 Sleeping Beauty — By Made in Graffiti in Picardie, France 🇫🇷
This incredibly realistic sleeping figure gently settles right into the wild landscape. It makes the cold concrete wall feel like part of a quiet, beautiful natural dream. We love how the graffiti seamlessly fades into the tall grass.
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🔗 Follow Made in Graffiti on Instagram

⭕ Nature Rings — By Spencer Byles in a French forest 🇫🇷
Spencer Byles beautifully frames the quiet forest path with massive, woven branch circles. They look part bird’s nest, part magical doorway, and part ancient future ruin. This immersive land art completely transforms the woodland hike!
💡 Forest Art Fact: Spencer Byles says he has been making sculptures from natural materials in wild forests for over 15 years, and that most of his work is made from organic and ephemeral materials.
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🖌️ Painting Tree — By Semi O.K. in Istanbul, Turkey 🇹🇷
Semi O.K. brilliantly turns a real, heavy tree trunk into a giant paintbrush handle. He makes an ordinary street fixture the absolute star prop of the mural. The illusion of spilling bright blue paint is totally fantastic!
💡 Graffiti Timeline Fact: Semi O.K.’s own Instagram bio identifies him as a graffiti artist and street artist “Since1996,” putting this playful intervention inside a long-running Istanbul graffiti practice from the pre-social-media era of wall documentation.
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🍃 Four Seasons Tribute to Kora — By Bruno Althamer in Warsaw, Poland 🇵🇱
Bruno Althamer leaves his incredible mural unfinished entirely on purpose. He lets the massive real tree change the portrait’s hair color through every single season. It is a stunning, ever-changing living tribute to a rock legend!
💡 Living Mural Fact: This living mural has been studied academically. A 2024 paper in Arts describes “Four Seasons with Kora” as a large-scale Warsaw mural that uses a nearby tree as part of the composition and changes the portrait’s social meaning through the seasons.
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🌺 Looking Up — By Rodrigo Rodrigues in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Rodrigo Rodrigues places this child’s amazed gaze exactly beneath the hanging blossoms. The real, bright pink branches perfectly complete the child’s absolute wonder. It is a beautiful, heartwarming interaction between street art and nature!
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🐍 Snake Bus — By SWEO + Nikita 5.7crew in Larnas, France 🇫🇷
SWEO and Nikita 5.7crew turn an abandoned old bus into prey for a giant yellow snake. The incredible 3D painting makes the whole heavy installation feel terrifyingly alive. The way the snake crushes the metal is mind-blowing!
More: New street art and murals around the world
🔗 Follow SWEO on Instagram and Nikita 5.7crew on Instagram

🐟 Gold Memory — By INTI in Coquimbo, Chile 🇨🇱
INTI builds an incredibly quiet and towering golden mural. Two striking faces, a floating fish, and a crisp white flower float magically between memory and the city landscape. The sepia tones make it feel totally timeless!
💡 Name Fact: The golden mood fits the artist’s name perfectly. Art Public Montréal notes that Chilean muralist Inti Castro was born in Valparaíso and that “Inti,” translated from Incan, means “Sun”.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🦉 “The Great Equalizer” — By HERA in Los Angeles, USA 🇺🇸
HERA places a brave young girl right between a fierce panther and a wise owl. She turns these wild animals into the ultimate companions for courage, learning, and watchfulness. This is such an inspiring mural for a school wall!
💡 School Wall Fact: Impermanent Art documents the mural as a HERA work for Branded Arts Festival at Mann UCLA Community School in Chesterfield Square, and connects its title to Horace Mann’s famous line about education as “the great equalizer”.
More: New street art and murals around the world
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🍎 Glowing Persephone — By Bacon in Houston, Texas, USA 🇺🇸
Bacon uses a cracked pomegranate and intense golden light to make this ancient myth literally glow. The gorgeous lighting effects blast out across the entire dark city street. This massive 3D illusion is an absolute showstopper!
💡 Sustainability Fact: Street Art for Mankind’s Big Art Bigger Change program describes its Houston series as 50 large-scale murals amplifying social and environmental justice. Downtown Houston adds that the murals connect with the UN Sustainable Development Goals, giving Bacon’s Persephone and pomegranate a clear public-art context beyond the glow.
More: New street art and mural designs
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🎧 Headphones On — By NELS, EMI and ARYON A.K.A BEST in Murcia, Spain 🇪🇸
This super cool white ape, glowing neon letterwork, and wild tropical leaves completely own the wall. It feels exactly like pure, raw graffiti energy meeting serious jungle attitude. We cannot get enough of these blazing neon colors!
More: New street art and murals around the world
🔗 Follow NELS on Instagram, EMI on Instagram and ARYON A.K.A BEST on Instagram

🍊 “Secret In Amber” — By Speker in Beaumont, Texas, USA 🇺🇸
Speker uses fresh citrus fruit and incredibly warm amber light to create magic. The dark foreground trees help pull this flawless, studio-like portrait right back into the outdoor world. The lighting on her face is just breathtaking!
💡 Festival Fact: Speker posted the work under the title “Secret In Amber” and confirmed it was painted in Beaumont, Texas, for Beaumont Mural Festival.
More: New street art and murals around the world
🔗 Follow Speker on Instagram

🏖️ Head in the Sand — By Ian Mutch in Dunsborough, Australia 🇦🇺
Ian Mutch uses the massive sandy beach like his own personal, giant sketchpad. The wet sand perfectly holds this hilarious joke about hiding from the world. We love knowing the wild wind or high tide will eventually erase it!
💡 Beach Drawing Fact: Ian Mutch says “Head in the Sand” was created near Wyadup Rocks just a few days before Australia’s COVID lockdown. He describes it as a response to confusion, strange social behavior, and panic buying, which makes the joke much sharper than a random beach doodle.
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🔗 Follow Ian Mutch on Instagram

🪨 Merge — By Jon Foreman at Druidstone, Wales 🏴
Jon Foreman painstakingly arranges thousands of smooth stones so they seem to actually flow. It looks exactly like solid geology is finally learning how to move and ripple. This mind-bending beach land art is pure, meditative perfection!
More: Jon Foreman Uses Nature Like This
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📷 Natural Frame — By Collettivo FX in Palermo, Italy 🇮🇹
This is an unbelievably clever indoor and outdoor art intervention! A simple balcony doorway is totally transformed into a giant, painted camera lens. It perfectly frames the gorgeous natural landscape outside. Abitare’s 2016 documentation identifies the piece directly as Collettivo FX’s camera at Pizzo Sella, photographed by Mauro Filippi.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pizzo Sella is no ordinary ruin: Manifesta 12 frames it as part of Palermo’s “Sacco di Palermo,” while Blocal traces how the Fare Ala collective launched the unsanctioned Pizzo Sella Art Village in 2013 to spotlight illegal construction on the mountain.
🔗 Follow Collettivo FX on Instagram
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