Made You Go On A Summer Road Trip (12 Photos)
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Some street art feels like it belongs on a summer road trip — the kind where every stop becomes a story.
This collection follows that feeling: painted cars and caravans, a tiny van-life picnic, rainbow village stairs, seaside murals, roadside sharks, giant trolls, bus-stop magic, neon night drives, and one ghostly lookout over Lake Como.
More: Summer Fun on Street Art Utopia

🚗 Road Live — By Román Linacero (Sr Momán) in Nava de la Asunción, Spain 🇪🇸
Román Linacero’s mural is listed by the Nava de la Asunción mural route as Road Live, a 2023 work by his muralist alias Sr Momán. The scene is part of a pictorial twinning between Nava and San Pietro Valdastico: Maya rides on the roof while Gianni, a San Pietro neighbor in his nineties, takes the wheel of his green Fiat. It feels like the whole journey has paused for heat, conversation, and a little shade.
💡 Nerd Fact: Nava’s mural route began much smaller than it looks today. The town’s own official route page says Sr Momán started the project in 2013 after convincing a relative to let him try painting a house wall; it has since grown into more than twenty murals across village façades.
More: Amazing Murals on Street Art Utopia
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🚐 Caravan Corner — By Odeith
Odeith turns a rigid concrete corner into a full summer camper. The illusion sits naturally within the Portuguese artist’s long-running wall practice, where architecture becomes part of the trick and paint behaves like a real object from the right viewpoint. The vehicle is right there, except it is also completely made of paint and perspective.
💡 Nerd Fact: Odeith’s road to international murals started early: his official biography says he was already experimenting with spray cans on neighborhood walls in Damaia, Portugal, in the mid-1980s, before fully joining Portugal’s graffiti movement in the 1990s.
More: How to Paint a Caravan on Concrete
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🧺 Picnic by the Van — By Slinkachu
Slinkachu shrinks the picnic until it fits beside a tiny camper van. On his official site, he describes his work as “abandoning” miniature people in cities since 2006, and his FAQ explains that many figures begin as train-set people that he remodels and repaints. Here, a toy vehicle, a blanket, and a miniature family meal suddenly feel like the biggest stop of the day.
💡 Nerd Fact: Slinkachu’s tiny travelers have gone much farther than they look. His FAQ says he has left miniatures in cities including Berlin, Beijing, Hong Kong, Paris, Moscow, Lisbon, Doha, and Cape Town — making the “little people” a global road crew.
More: Tiny Street Dramas by Slinkachu
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🌈 Rainbow Staircase — By Manuel Marotto in Arzachena, Sardinia, Italy 🇮🇹
Not every road trip needs a highway. Sometimes the best stop is a staircase glowing through an old village. Manuel Marotto’s rainbow was the 2019 ColorArz edition of Arzachena’s Santa Lucia staircase project, a recurring public-art tradition that gives the climb a new life. It is the kind of detour you would absolutely pull over for.
💡 Nerd Fact: The staircase is almost like a yearly art calendar. The Municipality of Arzachena lists the first edition in 2016 and notes that Manuel Marotto returned two years in a row: ColorArz in 2019 and Colorfall in 2020.
More: Rainbow Staircase on Street Art Utopia
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🚌 Totoro Bus Stop — Built by Grandparents in Takaharu, Japan 🇯🇵
This is the kind of roadside stop that makes the whole trip feel softer. In Takaharu, Miyazaki Prefecture, a couple in their seventies built the life-size Totoro scene for their grandchildren, shaping it with carpentry, plastering techniques, concrete, and brick before it became a small destination for fans. It feels like the place where a journey becomes a childhood memory.
💡 Nerd Fact: This bus stop is tied to one of Studio Ghibli’s most famous rainy moments. My Neighbor Totoro was produced in 1988 and directed by Hayao Miyazaki, and My Modern Met notes that the Takaharu grandparents even provide the signature red umbrella for visitors taking photos.
More: Grandparents Build Life-Size Totoro Bus Stop for Their Grandkids in Japan

🌊 By the Sea — By WD (Wild Drawing) on Tinos Island, Greece 🇬🇷
WD makes the concrete block feel like a quiet lookout point. In the artist’s own post for the Tinos work, he frames the illusion around the idea that all we need is the right point of view — and that is exactly how it lands: a painted balcony, a girl, and a cat opening the small structure toward the real sea. It feels like the moment on a trip when nobody says anything because the view already did.
💡 Nerd Fact: WD’s work carries a real cross-cultural biography. His Street Art Cities profile says he was born and raised in Bali, studied both Fine Arts and Applied Arts, started painting in the street in 2000, and is now based in Athens.
More: Beautiful 3D Art by WD
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🏖️ Wile E. Coyote — By PUFFERFISH in San Francisco, California 🇺🇸
PUFFERFISH brings cartoon chaos to a wide sunny beach. The PUFFERFISH Castles & Creatures gallery lists the piece as Wile E. Coyote in San Francisco, California, and the joke is perfectly temporary: a classic chase-scene failure carved directly into sand. It is a beach stop with a punchline.
💡 Nerd Fact: Wile E. Coyote’s failure loop has been running since 1949. Encyclopaedia Britannica traces the Road Runner and Coyote pairing to Chuck Jones’s short Fast and Furry-ous, the start of a routine built around elaborate plans that always backfire.
More: Wile E. Coyote sand sculpture
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⛵ Gabriel — By DJOELS in Ondarroa, Basque Country, Spain 🇪🇸
DJOELS gives the coastal stop a deeper memory. Street Art Cities identifies the mural as Gabriel, created in Ondarroa through the Kaminazpi Artist Residency; Gabriel is the retired fisherman shown building miniature boats after a life spent months at sea. The mural was also ranked in Street Art Cities’ 2023 Best Mural of the World selection, which fits the way it turns harbor history, waiting families, and maritime imagination into one wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: Kaminazpi is designed to make visiting artists listen before they paint. The residency description says artists spend two weeks getting to know Ondarroa, its people, and its history, then begin a mural in the third week inspired by that stay.
More: Life at Sea Mural by DJOELS in Basque Country
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☀️ A Swing in the Summer Light — By ATTORREP in Belsito, Italy 🇮🇹
ATTORREP turns a village wall into a breeze. Painted in Belsito for Gulìa Urbana, the Calabrian urban-art project that describes its work as transforming public spaces into open-air galleries, the girl on the swing seems to fly out toward mountains and rooftops, with summer light making everything softer. It is the kind of mural that feels like childhood appearing beside the road.
💡 Nerd Fact: This is not a lone “pretty wall” project. Gulìa Urbana’s own site says the initiative has created more than 400 works in different municipalities since 2012, using urban art to support cultural tourism and local microeconomies.
More: A Swing in the Summer Light by ATTORREP
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🌾 Great Wheat Sharks — By Anne Melady near Dublin, Ontario, Canada 🇨🇦
Anne Melady proves a road trip does not need a museum stop to become unforgettable. Farmtario reported that the fins were her idea in a wheat field outside Dublin, Ontario, after another field-shark sighting near Erin made her smile; her version did the same for passing drivers. A few shark fins and a handmade sign turn the field into a golden ocean.
💡 Nerd Fact: The sharks were secretly kinetic. According to Farmtario, Melady drew four fins on quarter-inch plywood, neighbors helped cut them out, and a bracket on the back let the fins turn in the wind.
More: Please Do Not Feed the Sharks!

🧌 Mama Mimi the Troll — By Thomas Dambo in Wilson, Wyoming, USA 🇺🇸
Thomas Dambo’s Mama Mimi is the kind of discovery that makes people pull off the road and stay longer than planned. Jackson Hole Public Art lists the 2021 work in Rendezvous Park as recycled wood, steel, and driftwood, produced by the organization and hosted at R Park; Dambo’s own Mama Mimi page also highlights the work. Resting by the water, she turns the park into a fairy-tale rest stop.
💡 Nerd Fact: Mama Mimi belongs to a much bigger troll mythology. Jackson Hole Public Art says she is the 80th addition to Dambo’s worldwide troll family and connects to his global fairytale, The Great Story of the Little People.
More: 10 Giant Trolls Hiding in Forests, Lakes and Ruins
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🌃 Night Taxi — By Dan Kitchener in Belfast, Northern Ireland 🇬🇧
Every good summer road trip has a final night-drive chapter. In Kitchener’s own post for the mural, the work appears as Night Taxi at Enfield Street / Woodvale Road; local mural archive Extramural Activity describes the scene as a West Belfast black taxi placed into a Tokyo-like street and also records the message/title You can go Anywhere. Headlights, wet reflections, umbrellas, and that taxi all push the piece toward the feeling of arriving somewhere new after dark and still wanting to keep going.
💡 Nerd Fact: Even the taxi’s plate has a local breadcrumb. Extramural Activity records that the plate “HWL 1970” nods to Hugh Linton, founder of the local butcher shop that sponsored the mural.
More: Night Taxi Mural by Dan Kitchener
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👻 Fantasmi di Vezio — Made with Visitors at Castle of Vezio in Varenna, Italy 🇮🇹
The perfect road-trip ending is a quiet lookout. The Castle of Vezio’s own site explains that the Fantasmi di Vezio are remade each summer with tourists who volunteer to pose under gauze and plaster; the sculptures remain at the castle until winter weather destroys them. Above Lake Como, that makes the figures feel like silent travelers who arrived before you.
💡 Nerd Fact: The ghost stop has a microclimate twist. The castle’s visitor guide says Lake Como’s moderating climate allows Mediterranean plants such as olives, agaves, rosemary, palms, and succulents to grow around the castle — a very sunny secret for such a haunted-looking place.
More: Haunting Ghost Sculptures!
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