New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 8 (30 Photos)
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New walls: 30 street art finds from murals, festivals, public art, sculpture, and city corners around the world.
Here are 30 new street art finds from walls, festivals, public spaces, and city corners. Expect glowing portraits, giant fish, botanical facades, quiet doves, comic-book rain, family memory, wooden trolls, mythic horses, and graffiti thunder. Some are monumental, some are small, and all of them give the street a reason to pause.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 7 (30 Photos)

🌺 Flower Voltage — By Paul Garson
Paul Garson gives this portrait its own light. Orange hair burns against the dark wall. Pink flowers sit like a neon crown, and blue shadows pull the face into a sci-fi glow. The tiny bunny smile on the shoulder keeps it from taking itself too seriously.
💡 Nerd Fact: Garson shared the finished wall in May 2026. The tiny bunny mark works like an embedded artist signature, tucked into the image instead of sitting outside it.
Follow Paul Garson on Instagram

📦 “Soraya” — By Adventis in Bourgoin-Jallieu, France 🇫🇷
Adventis turns crumpled brown paper into the main event. The folds spread across the wall like a sculptural dress, heavy in places and delicate in others. The calm portrait in the middle keeps it all from floating away.
💡 Nerd Fact: Painted for Peinture Fraîche Festival 2026; Galerie Jumble documented “Soraya” as a 6 m by 8 m mural made in Bourgoin-Jallieu from 8 to 10 May 2026. Photo by Jeris Castelbou.
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🌿 Green Dream — By Cero Catorce in Panchimalco, El Salvador 🇸🇻
Cero Catorce works the wall in layers of green. The face looks up toward the plants, while the hair breaks into water, leaves, and small points of light. The windows, cables, roofline, and street edge keep the dream tied to the neighborhood.
💡 Nerd Fact: Panchimalco is not just a backdrop here. The town is often described as one of El Salvador’s important Indigenous heritage centers, with deep Pipil/Nahua roots; Wanderlust notes its cobblestone streets and living cultural traditions. Cero Catorce shared the mural as his intervention for Pigmentrip Festival 2026.
Follow Cero Catorce on Instagram and Pigmentrip Festival

🐠 Hagerfest Goldfish — By Christian Stanley in Hagerstown, Maryland, USA 🇺🇸
Christian Stanley turns a parking garage into a vertical aquarium. Three bright goldfish climb the green wall, with fins bending around the elevator shaft and brick edges. They look playful and oddly monumental, as if they outgrew the bowl and claimed the building.
💡 Nerd Fact: Painted for Hagerfest Music & Art Festival 2026; Stanley posted the finished Hagerstown wall and noted the project was completed alongside the National Mural Awards.
Follow Christian Stanley on Instagram

🐟 Big Catch — By Edi Bruzaca & Bruno Níkson in São Luís, Brazil 🇧🇷
This wall feels rooted in São Luís. A fisherman holds a huge fish in front of him, while sails, water, sunset bands, and nearby architecture open around the scene. It is part portrait, part place, with sea air built into the composition.
💡 Nerd Fact: São Luís is a city with serious wall history beyond this mural: UNESCO lists its historic center as an outstanding Portuguese colonial town adapted to equatorial South America. This piece was painted for Coisa Nossa.
Follow Edi Bruzaca and Bruno Níkson on Instagram

🌧️ Masked Kiss & Graffiti Rain — By Elfy & SLIDER in Glasgow, UK 🇬🇧
Elfy and SLIDER go big on mood here. Sharp graffiti letters cut through a rainy city scene; beside them, two masked comic-book figures lean into a near-kiss. Glossy, dramatic, and made for people who love characters and letters.
💡 Nerd Fact: SWG3 describes Yardworks 2026 as the festival’s 10th anniversary edition, with live painting, large-scale murals, workshops, and music across the Glasgow venue.
SLIDER / Elfy shared the finished wall from Yardworks Festival 2026. Photo by Ikul.
Follow SLIDER / Elfy on Instagram and Yardworks Glasgow

🌼 “زهر البرتقال” — By Guillem Font in Rabat, Morocco 🇲🇦
Guillem Font treats the facade like a botanical plate. Cream-colored orange blossoms spread over dark leaves, a spotted lizard slips through, and the apartment windows sit inside the foliage instead of breaking it up. From far away it is clean and delicate. Up close it is all texture.
💡 Nerd Fact: JIDAR’s final-shot post lists “زهر البرتقال” at 14.35 m × 11 m.
Painted for JIDAR Rabat Street Art Festival 2026. Photo by Chadi Ilias.
Follow Guillem Font on Instagram and JIDAR

🔥 “Semillas de luz” — By JCOPE in Albán, Colombia 🇨🇴
JCOPE lets the scene run low and long across the wall. A figure rests beside a spiral shell, hands hold a small flame, and white flowers gather at the edge. Quiet, grounded, and very present.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Semillas de luz” means “seeds of light.” JCOPE used the title and connected the work to a new beginning on fertile ground. Painted for Festival Guasabara Panche 2026.
Follow JCOPE on Instagram and Guasabara Panche

🌸 “À travers les pétales” — By Koga One in Pontarlier, France 🇫🇷
Koga One paints a tall, soft-focus wall where a face looks out from inside the flowers. Pink blossoms blur in front of it, while turquoise and red fragments drift across the facade. Tender, a little strange, and scaled well for the building at 2 rue des Déportés.
💡 Nerd Fact: Ville de Pontarlier identifies the mural as “À travers les pétales,” says it was made for Pontarlier Festival Couleur Urbaine 2026, and notes that the face model was generated with AI while the composition, colors, and textures were painted by hand in acrylic.
Painted for Festival Couleur Urbaine.
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🌾 Cornflower Guardian — By Konstantin Pakhomchik in Ostrovets, Belarus 🇧🇾
Konstantin Pakhomchik covers the side of the building with a calm field scene. A woman stands with blue cornflowers in her hands and a matching crown, surrounded by wheat and blossoms. It has the stillness of a folk portrait and the scale of a landmark.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pakhomchik shared the Ostrovets mural from his own account; the wall has also been listed around Aerodromnaya Street.
Follow Konstantin Pakhomchik on Instagram

🥔 “Saberes y semillas” — By Louisa Prada in Puerres, Nariño, Colombia 🇨🇴
Louisa Prada paints the wall like a table, a family memory, and a landscape. Purple and blue shapes wrap around hands, potatoes, corn, and the small figure at the center. The mountains make the scene feel carried by the place.
💡 Nerd Fact: Prada identifies the mural as “Saberes y semillas,” made in Puerres, Nariño, to remember and make visible the importance of food sovereignty and native seeds.
Painted for Resistencias y Reexistencias with Colectivo artístico Morada al Sur.
Follow Louisa Prada on Instagram and Morada al Sur

🕯️ “Malleus Maleficarum” — By Magia Negra, Mesin VersuS & Alejandro Cortés in Nezahualcóyotl, Mexico 🇲🇽
This collaboration moves straight to the darker end of the spray-can shelf. A distorted grin, razor-edged letters, and a pale occult figure push into each other in red, black, pink, and steel blue. Horror-graffiti with bite.
💡 Nerd Fact: The artists shared this as a fragment of the larger “Malleus Maleficarum” production for PEC’s anniversary in Nezahualcóyotl.
Painted for Aniversario PEC.
Follow Magia Negra, Mesin VersuS and Alejandro Cortés on Instagram

🕊️ Dove on Masonic and Piedmont — By Mel Waters in San Francisco, USA 🇺🇸
Mel Waters fits a white dove into the building instead of painting over it near Piedmont Street and Masonic Avenue. Its wings wrap around windows. Its body sits between the frames. The gray facade becomes a quiet sky, with enough scale to still hold the street.
💡 Nerd Fact: Waters’ official site lists the 2026 work as an untitled mural at Piedmont and Masonic, and the artist’s own post identifies the medium as acrylic on stucco.
Follow Mel Waters on Instagram

🎻 School of Imagination — By Ricardo Diogo aka FATE in Constância, Portugal 🇵🇹
Ricardo Diogo, aka FATE, packs a small inner world into one walking figure. A violin, teddy bear, backpack, floating book, and abstract ribbons move around her on the turquoise wall. Childhood, music, and school, all traveling together.
Follow FATE Lisbon on Instagram

🐕 “The Start of Things” — By Rosalie de Graaf in Houston, Texas, USA 🇺🇸
Rosalie de Graaf keeps this Houston wall close and human. The man’s smile, the dog beside him, the birds in his hands, and the small shelter at the bottom pull the mural toward care rather than spectacle. It is huge, but it still feels personal.
💡 Nerd Fact: De Graaf titled the work “The Start of Things” and painted it in Downtown Houston for Street Art for Mankind. Photo by Derek.
Follow Rosalie de Graaf / RoosArt on Instagram and Street Art for Mankind

🐍 “Mi eterno pecado” — By SEPC in Manizales, Colombia 🇨🇴
SEPC paints a portrait with one foot in sci-fi and one in ritual. The face is deep blue, the orange markings cut across it like signals, and the snake at the bottom coils around the scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: In his own post, SEPC calls the 2026 Semana Santa wall “Mi eterno pecado” — “my eternal sin.”
Follow SEPC on Instagram

💨 Three Dogs Running — By Sidok & REVES ONE in Glasgow, UK 🇬🇧
Sidok and REVES ONE catch the dogs at full speed. The blue-and-pink dogs pull the eye outward; the grayscale dog in the middle holds everything together. Behind them, purple graffiti gives the wall its Yardworks punch.
💡 Nerd Fact: REVES ONE shared the collaboration as a massive Yardworks wall by Sidok and REVES ONE. Painted for Yardworks Festival 2026. Photo by Craig Kirk.
Follow Sidok, REVES ONE and Yardworks Glasgow on Instagram

🧊 “Hors cadre” — By Sweo & Nikita in Le Mans, France 🇫🇷
Sweo and Nikita turn the apartment block into an impossible aquarium. A giant goldfish pushes out of a turquoise cube, with small cubes and white ribbons floating across the facade. The windows and balconies become part of the scene instead of interruptions.
💡 Nerd Fact: Of Course Le Mans places this mural at 7 allée Schubert and says Sweo and Nikita worked from themes of celebration, movement, and play proposed for the neighborhood project.
Painted for Of Course Le Mans.
Follow Sweo, Nikita and Of Course Le Mans on Instagram

😤 Distorted Portrait — By Zion Graffiti in Curitiba, Brazil 🇧🇷
Zion Graffiti skips the calm beauty portrait. The face is pulled tight, teeth clenched, hand reaching forward. The blue graffiti background adds more pressure. Funny, tense, and sharp.
💡 Nerd Fact: Painted for Festival Street of Styles 2026 in Curitiba; the wall has been listed at R. Davi Xavier da Silva.
Follow Zion Graffiti on Instagram and Festival Street of Styles

🏔️ “Ecosistemi Urbani” — By Edoardo Ongarato in Gubbio, Italy 🇮🇹
Edoardo Ongarato uses the bridge’s underside as a layered landscape. Mountains, a fractured face, and a misty forest slide into one another. Neon green cuts through the grayscale, and the hanging vines make the title feel less like a metaphor.
💡 Nerd Fact: Informagiovani Gubbio lists “Ecosistemi Urbani” as part of TAG 2025, at the underpass of Via Perugina / Cavalcavia S.S. 219.
Photo by Street Art Umbria.
Follow Edoardo Ongarato on Instagram

🌼 “La Acogida” — By Serpientesal in Reque, Peru 🇵🇪
Serpientesal stretches one embrace across a long street wall. The reclining body becomes landscape and shelter, while the sleeping child and yellow flowers keep the scene quiet and protective. This is the kind of mural that slows down the sidewalk.
💡 Nerd Fact: Serpientesal’s own post places “La Acogida” in Reque on Peru’s northern coast, where the mural turns local landscape and migration into an image of shelter.
Painted for #MiradaMigrante / Espacio Ancestras.
Follow Serpientesal on Instagram and Espacio Ancestras

🐑 “La Sole era como una ONG” — By Jesús Mateos Brea in Salorino, Spain 🇪🇸
Jesús Mateos Brea turns the facade into a memory table. An older woman holds a black-and-white photograph, framed by sheep, yellow flowers, and warm rural light. The real window becomes part of her clothing, so the building looks like it is carrying the story too.
💡 Nerd Fact: Mateos Brea’s own caption says the phrase came from the son of a Salorino shepherd who remembered Sole helping transhumant sheep herders in the 1950s–70s.
Painted for Ayuntamiento de Salorino.
Follow Jesús Mateos Brea on Instagram

🌙 “Moon After Moon” — By Anna Kathrine Trads in Slagelse, Denmark 🇩🇰
Anna Kathrine Trads lets the portrait rise out of blue petals and pale moon shapes. The figure is half human, half flower, with hands floating nearby. Against the pink wall, the blues hit harder. Quiet, but not small.
💡 Nerd Fact: The festival’s own page gives the Danish title as “Måne efter Måne” and says the work grew from the experience of watching people move into new life phases. Slagelse Street Art Festival documents the mural here, and Trads shared it as “Moon After Moon.”
Follow Anna Kathrine Trads on Instagram and Slagelse Streetart Festival

🦋 “Mr. Manly” — By Naomi Haverland in South Salt Lake, Utah, USA 🇺🇸
Naomi Haverland gives masculinity a soft landing. A bearded man rests in orange flowers, fully focused on a butterfly near his face. The mural is funny, gentle, and warm without needing to shout about it.
Haverland titled it “Mr. Manly” as her contribution to Mural Fest SSL 2026.
💡 Nerd Fact: Mural Fest’s 2026 post places the mural on the side of Element Ring Co. at 2890 S Main St, South Salt Lake.
Follow Naomi Haverland on Instagram and Mural Fest

🎂 “Ni Cumpleaños Ni Bautismos” — By Tomaz Major in Tenancingo, Mexico 🇲🇽
Tomaz Major paints a party scene like a memory that keeps slipping. Children gather around a cake, balloons float across the wall, and the shadows matter as much as the faces. The title adds the edge: there is celebration here, but not only celebration.
💡 Nerd Fact: Tomaz Major’s own post gives the title as “Ni Cumpleaños Ni Bautismos” and tags the series as “Fantasías.”
Follow Tomaz Major on Instagram

🧢 “Origin” — By Mr.Oreo in Düsseldorf, Germany 🇩🇪
Mr.Oreo builds the wall from fragments: eyes, caps, flowers, white letters, teal haze, and one big orange stroke across the lower half. “Origin” sits inside the piece like a signal, but the mural does not explain itself. Graphic, layered, and good for a double-take.
💡 Nerd Fact: Mr.Oreo describes “Origin” as the beginning of something new, painted at 0211studio during Düsseldorfer Nacht der Künste.
Painted at 0211studio for Düsseldorfer Nacht der Künste.
Follow Mr.Oreo on Instagram, 0211studio and Nacht der Künste Düsseldorf

🐦 “Silent Reflection” — By Studio Giftig in Lommel, Belgium 🇧🇪
Studio Giftig paints the wall like a photo seen through leaves and reflected light. A woman holds a small bird; her other hand makes a careful gesture. Pale blossoms drift across the scene like reflections on glass. Quiet and very alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: Street Art Cities documents the mural on the sports hall wall of ’t Stekske primary school in Lommel’s Kolonie parish, created with SAGA, the town of Lommel, and input from local residents.
Painted for SAGA Street Art Festival 2026.
Follow Studio Giftig on Instagram and SAGA

🌳 Helmut from “The Tree Thieves” — By Thomas Dambo in Clinton, Iowa, USA 🇺🇸
Thomas Dambo’s wooden troll Helmut looks as if it wandered out of a forest story and got practical. It carries a living tree like something precious, tying reclaimed wood, public space, and folklore into one gentle giant. Big smile. Bigger pause.
💡 Nerd Fact: Dambo introduced the tree-carrying troll as Helmut. Grow Clinton describes The Tree Thieves as a storytelling experience with three troll brothers — Warren, Marvin, and Helmut — plus one hidden creature, tied to Clinton’s lumber history. Eastern Iowa Community Colleges adds that the Clinton project was built with reclaimed/local materials and community volunteers.
Follow Thomas Dambo on Instagram

🐎 “VENUS TACARIGUA” — By Cris Herrera in Valencia, Venezuela 🇻🇪
Cris Herrera gives the wall a ceremonial stillness. A woman rides a pale horse beneath a red veil, framed by dark green mountains and ancestral symbols. Pink tones make the horse glow, while the rider’s steady gaze holds the facade.
💡 Nerd Fact: Herrera describes “VENUS TACARIGUA” as a Tacarigua woman transforming a symbol of conquest rather than obeying it. Painted for Ciudad Mural.
Follow Cris Herrera on Instagram and Ciudad Mural

🪽 “Vidas Pasadas” — By Julián Cruz Solano in Pisco, Peru 🇵🇪
Julián Cruz Solano sends past lives across the wall as birds, bones, smoke, and dragon-like movement. A huge pink bird skull opens the left side. The right side breaks into turquoise forms, wings, and floating creatures. Ancient, futuristic, and not in a rush to explain itself.
💡 Nerd Fact: Julián Cruz Solano’s own post gives the caption line “Hay algo de la sabiduría que vuela en el tiempo” — there is something of wisdom that flies through time.
Painted for Arte Urbano.
Follow Julián Cruz Solano on Instagram and LiberArte Pisco
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