What Artist See (8 Photos)
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These street artists let the city finish the joke.
A stain, a bollard, a crosswalk stripe, a chain, a crack, and a small plant all become part of the artwork. Each piece works because it belongs exactly where it was made.
More: This Is Clever: 75 Photos of Street Art That Feels Made for the Spot

🐸 “RIBBIT” — By Tom Bob at Pier-2 Art Center, Kaohsiung, Taiwan 🇹🇼
Tom Bob’s post names the piece “RIBBIT”: a frog/bollard intervention at Pier-2 in Kaohsiung. The heavy waterfront object stays visible, but the eyes, tongue, and green paint turn it into a character.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pier-2 was not originally an art destination. Taiwan’s Ministry of Culture describes Pier-2 as port warehouses built in 1973, later abandoned, rediscovered around the 2000 National Day fireworks, and eventually transformed into a creative hub. This frog sits in a place that already had its own second life.
More: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob
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🏭 “The Factory” — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
A damaged wall becomes a tiny industrial landscape. Oakoak’s own street-art archive lists the work as “The factory by Oakoak — France 2012,” and the flaking gray patch above the black silhouette reads as smoke. The wall does most of the work.
More: Factory by Oakoak on Street Art Utopia
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🌿 “Planté là” — By Levalet in Paris, France 🇫🇷
Levalet’s post identifies the piece as “Planté là — Paris XXème,” and Mazel Galerie translates the print title as “Plant here (Planté là).” The figure seems caught between falling and standing still, while the plant-shaped shadow and real leaves tie it to that exact Paris corner. Move it to another wall and the point goes with it.
💡 Wordplay Fact: The title is doing extra work in French. Planté là can suggest “planted there,” while Collins gives planter là as “to ditch” in informal French and translates Ne reste pas planté là! as “Don’t just stand there!”
More: “Planté là” by Levalet in Paris, France
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🚸 Pedestrian Crossing vs. Obelix — By Oakoak in Auchel, France 🇫🇷
Street Art Utopia’s original post identifies this as “Pedestrian crossing vs. Obelix,” made by Oakoak at Festival Les Petits Bonheurs in Auchel, France.
💡 Comic Fact: This lands because Obelix is not just strong; menhirs are literally his job. In the official album Obelix and Co., Asterix’s official site says his menhir trade turns into a booming market before the whole thing collapses.
More: From Homer Simpson to Obelix: Oakoak’s Genius Street Art
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🧵 Road Zipper — By Roadsworth
Roadsworth treats the street like fabric. His early street archive includes the zipper images among the 2001–2005 works, and his official print store later lists the image as “Road Zipper.” The lane markings become teeth; the asphalt seems ready to open.
💡 Street Politics Fact: Roadsworth’s road-painting did not begin as decoration alone. Quartier des Spectacles notes that he began painting Montreal streets in 2001, first motivated by a wish for more bike paths and a challenge to car culture. The playful road-line jokes also carry a public-space argument.
More: Roadsworth: The Visionary Street Artist
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🛶 Crack-River Canoe — By David Zinn
David Zinn gets a lot out of pavement cracks. Here, a thin line in the sidewalk becomes water wide enough for two tiny mice in a red canoe. It fits Zinn’s own description of sidewalk chalk as temporary work that cannot really be saved, but can cheer up whoever looks down at the right moment.
More: David Zinn’s Magical Chalk Art
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🌱 Crack Gardener — By JPS
A small plant in a wall crack becomes the crown of a tree. JPS adds a trunk and a tiny figure at the base, shifting the scale without adding much else. A wild plant gets promoted, and it fits JPS’s own description of a practice built around funny wordplay, perfect placement, and tiny micro stencils.
💡 Stencil Fact: JPS’s route into street art began after a 2009 stencil exhibition. Urban Nation says his first works were made with a rusty scalpel, old books from a charity shop, and spray paint from a hardware store. That DIY origin fits the tiny “nothing wasted” feel of turning a plant into a tree.
More: 40 Stunning Photos of Street Art by Creative Genius JPS
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🎪 Tightrope Walker — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
The chain was already stretched like a circus wire. Oakoak adds only the performer and a pink umbrella, turning a piece of street hardware into a tiny high-wire act.
💡 Word Nerd Fact: A tightrope walker is also a funambulist. Merriam-Webster traces the word to Latin funis (“rope”) plus ambulare (“to walk”). The fancy word is longer than Oakoak’s actual intervention.
More: Wrong but Right: Art By Oakoak
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