When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
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Where walls start to feel alive.
A bird breaks out of an old wall. Giant hands hold a living tree. Flowers, oceans, koi, jaguars, hawks, and an earth-shaped heart turn public art into small ecosystems.

🐦 “Bird Hole” — By Sergio Odeith
Sergio Odeith makes the wall feel like it has grown wings. In his 2020 video for Bird Hole, the giant bird leans out from an old wall, and the seated figure reaching for its beak makes the scale even stranger.
💡 Nerd Fact: Before the bird murals and mega-scale works, Odeith’s roots were old-school: his official bio says he was already experimenting with spray cans on neighborhood walls in Damaia, Portugal, in the mid-1980s.
More: 3D Art By Odeith (20 Photos)
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🌳 “Give” — By Lorenzo Quinn
Two enormous white hands rise from the grass and hold an olive tree. When Give was unveiled at the Uffizi Gardens in Florence, Halcyon Gallery described it as a work about giving back to nature, peace, and sustainability, made from resin and recycled materials.
💡 Nerd Fact: Quinn has used giant hands as environmental messengers before. His 2017 work Support showed child’s hands rising from Venice’s Grand Canal to warn about sea-level rise and the vulnerability of coastal cities.
More: When Nature Becomes Design (12 Photos)
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🌼 “Inner Peace” — By Studio Giftig in Saint Petersburg, Florida, USA 🇺🇸
Studio Giftig’s official portfolio lists this Reggae Rise Up mural as Inner Peace. A woman and her mirror reflection look out from behind a golden chrysanthemum, turning the black wall into a quiet study of self-reflection.
💡 Flower Fact: The chrysanthemum is not just a pretty hiding place here. Studio Giftig’s own notes say the golden flower was chosen for happiness, health, and loyalty, which makes the plant part of the mural’s meaning.
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🌊 “Mediterraneus” — By DULK in Valencia, Spain 🇪🇸
Mediterraneus was created with Fundació Oceanogràfic in El Cabanyal as part of the Arte por la Conservación program. DULK turns the building into a vertical Mediterranean spiral, with marine species arranged by conservation status, from vulnerable species to animals in critical danger.
💡 Ocean Fact: The Mediterranean is tiny in global-ocean terms but huge for wildlife: UNEP/MAP says it contains more than 17,000 marine species, with 20–30% found nowhere else.

🦅 Wildlife Around Her — By Machuca and Luz de Luna in Lima, Peru 🇵🇪
Machuca and Luz de Luna build a small ecosystem around the smiling portrait. A hawk, frog, bird, leaves, and flowers press in close, so the wall feels full without getting crowded.
💡 Biodiversity Fact: Peru is extraordinary for birdlife: BirdLife reports that the country has more than 1,800 bird species, including many found nowhere else on Earth.
🔗 Follow Machuca on Instagram and Luz de Luna on Instagram

🦋 “La Cabrera” — By Deltadec in La Cabrera, Spain 🇪🇸
The official Sierra Norte Madrid entry for La Cabrera connects the astronaut to exploration and the bird to the geology and wildlife of the Sierra de La Cabrera. At Av. de La Cabrera, 25, crystals, mountains, butterflies, and a glowing sky turn the wall into something part landscape, part daydream.
💡 Geology Fact: Those crystals are not random fantasy props. Spain’s geological inventory lists Sierra de La Cabrera as a site of geomorphological interest, with petrological and tectonic importance too.

🌱 “Quale futuro lasciamo ai nostri figli?” — By Chiara Abramo in Paternò, Italy 🇮🇹
Created for the Fondazione Federico II project Le strade da seguire… on Via Massa Carrara in Paternò, this mural asks what kind of future is being left to children. A boy holds an anatomical heart made of earth, where prickly pear grows as a symbol of Sicily and a ficus nods to the Falcone tree.
💡 Memory Fact: The ficus reference carries real civic weight: Italy’s Un albero per il futuro project says cuttings from the famous Falcone Tree in Palermo have been propagated as living anti-mafia memory.
🔗 Follow Chiara Abramo on Instagram

🐆 “TAYTAS” — By Zelva Uno in Sibundoy, Colombia 🇨🇴
TAYTAS was painted by Zelva Uno in Sibundoy for Minga Kamëntsá. Two jaguars frame the elder on both sides, while the feathered headdress, green background, and balanced layout give the mural a strong, protective presence.
💡 Cultural Fact: Sibundoy is not just a backdrop here. The Amazon Conservation Team describes the valley as a sacred place of origin for the Inga and Kamëntsá peoples, where rivers, forests, and mountains remain central to community memory: read more.
🔗 Follow Zelva Uno on Instagram

🐟 Koi in Motion — By AG PNT in Hialeah, Florida, USA 🇺🇸
AG PNT uses the dark wall like water in this koi piece for aWall Mural Projects at Madison Middle School in Hialeah. The artist shared the finished koi mural, where pink, orange, white, and black fish curve through the patterned background as if floating forward.
💡 Fish Fact: Koi are not a wild species of their own. The Smithsonian’s National Zoo describes them as colorful ornamental versions of common carp, with modern Japanese koi traced to rice farmers breeding bright carp in the early 1800s.
🔗 Follow AG PNT on Instagram

🦅 Red-Tailed Hawk — By Taylor Berman in Hastings, Minnesota, USA 🇺🇸
Taylor Berman’s archive identifies the bird as a red-tailed hawk and places the mural on Sibley Street in Hastings. In the artist’s mural notes, the hawk shares the building with prairie clover, lupine, black-eyed Susans, and small mammal tracks.
💡 Sound Fact: That classic “eagle scream” in movies is often a red-tailed hawk. The Missouri Department of Conservation notes that Hollywood editors use the hawk’s raspy call for eagles because it sounds more dramatic.
🔗 Follow Taylor Berman on Instagram

🐤 “Helmeted Honeyeater” — By Jimmy Dvate in Richmond, Australia 🇦🇺
Jimmy Dvate’s portfolio identifies this red-brick wall as Helmeted Honeyeater in Richmond, Victoria. The endangered yellow bird fills the narrow vertical space, with flowers and leaves tucked around it like a small urban habitat.
💡 Conservation Fact: This is Victoria’s bird emblem, but it is also in serious trouble: Zoos Victoria describes the Helmeted Honeyeater as a critically endangered, endemic subspecies of the Yellow-tufted Honeyeater.
🔗 Follow Jimmy Dvate on Instagram
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