Made You Smile (10 Photos)
Trusted by 1.7M+ on Facebook ↗Most liked mode is active for this post: images are ranked by community likes.

The best detail was already there.
A barrier becomes a kiss. A plant becomes a commute. A bronze statue gets an unexpected dog.

🐍 “KISS” — By Tom Bob at Pier-2 Art Center, Kaohsiung, Taiwan 🇹🇼
Tom Bob posted this work as “KISS” from Kaohsiung’s Pier-2 Art Center. The curves do most of the work: two metal sidewalk barriers become snakes, with bright bands, faces, and a red heart making the rails look as if they were waiting for this.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pier-2 is a fitting habitat for object-hacking. The art center began as ordinary port warehouses built in 1973, was later abandoned, and was pushed toward an art future after local artists formed the Pier-2 Artistic Development Association in 2001, according to Taiwan’s Arts Residency Network Taiwan. Tom Bob is adding another reuse layer to a place already built around reuse.
More: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

🕸️ “Hilandera” — By Pejac in Salamanca, Spain 🇪🇸
Pejac identified this Salamanca piece as “Hilandera”. A clothesline becomes a spider web. The blank wall stays quiet, which makes the trick sharper. Pejac adds a silhouette, the web lines, and a small bird. The rest is the wall doing its job.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title carries a double meaning in Spanish. The Real Academia Española gives hilar as making thread from textile fibers, and also as the verb for a spider forming its web; see the RAE entry for “hilar”. That means Pejac’s title does more than name a spinner: it quietly joins textile labor and spider labor in one word.
More: Street Art by Pejac — A Collection
🔗 Visit Pejac on Facebook

🐕 Tug of Dog — A Public Sculpture Moment in South Korea 🇰🇷
The bronze scene already has motion. Then a real dog steps into the scene and goes straight for the statue dog’s tail. That is enough. Public art gets a guest performer, whether it asked for one or not.
💡 Nerd Fact: Bronze sculptures can keep a visible record of touch. Getty’s technical guidelines for bronze sculpture note that repeated touching of raised areas can remove patina and expose bare metal; see the Getty guide. So when people keep reaching for the same public sculpture, the surface can slowly become a map of everyone’s favorite contact points.
More: Clever Dog Art on Street Art Utopia

🌱 “Nadine and the Vertical Commute” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan 🇺🇸
David Zinn posted this chalk piece as “Nadine and the Vertical Commute”. With one sidewalk plant and a cracked slab, Nadine gets a whole commute. The chalk hole gives her a sky-blue drop below, and the real plant becomes the route up.
More: Cute Art By David Zinn (16 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

👂 “Ear Brick” — By Michael Beitz in Brooklyn, New York, USA 🇺🇸
Often shared online as “The Walls Have Ears,” this piece is better documented as “Ear Brick,” a 2001 street intervention by Michael Beitz in Brooklyn. In a note about his Brick Pieces, Beitz described replacing missing bricks with handmade ones containing small casts of body parts. The old saying stops being a saying; the wall looks as if it has been listening for years.
💡 Nerd Fact: Beitz was not just making a wall pun. In his own explanation of the Brick Pieces, quoted by Boing Boing, he said the body-part bricks were intended to make us reflect on our bodies as part of the city’s structure. That turns the brick wall from background architecture into something almost biological.
More: Ear Brick by Michael Beitz
🔗 Follow Michael Beitz on Instagram

🍟 “French Fry Girl” — By Tom Bob in New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA 🇺🇸
Tom Bob’s own post places “French Fry Girl” at 1637 Acushnet Ave. in New Bedford. The yellow parking wheel stops were already fry-colored. He adds the girl, the fork, and the bite. Now a bare wall and a few curb blocks read as a plate of fries. Simple, goofy, done.
💡 Nerd Fact: Tom Bob’s real “studio” is often the city’s least glamorous hardware. In an ABC7 profile, he described looking for unique objects like manhole covers, fire hydrants, and pipes, then turning them into whimsical creatures. That is why a parking stop can matter as much as the painted character: the object sets up half the joke before the paint arrives.
More: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

➕ “Simple Maths” — By TRUST. iCON
TRUST. iCON keeps it small: 1 + 1 = heart. Global Street Art documented this version as “Simple Maths” with @trusticon. The bear draws the answer on a pale wall. It is sweet without needing a speech bubble or a huge mural.
💡 Nerd Fact: TRUST. iCON’s soft cartoon style is not accidental; it is part of a wider street-art language. An auction bio describes the anonymous Thamesmead artist as mixing cartoon and reality to deliver social commentary with humor; see this TRUST. iCON biography. In that context, the bear is not only cute — it is a soft delivery system for a tiny public message.
More: Simple Maths on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Visit TRUST. iCON’s website

🥬 “Crunchie” — By Helga Stentzel in London, UK 🇬🇧
Helga Stentzel’s official Edible Creatures series lists this lettuce dog as “Crunchie”. Made from lettuce and household objects, it turns a green bin into a small character: ears, paws, a tiny nose, and just enough trash-bin drama.
🔗 Follow Helga Stentzel on Instagram

🍇 “Gonfleurs de raisin / Inflaters” — By Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle (MiniMiam)
The official MiniMiam gallery lists this raisin-and-grape scene as “Gonfleurs de raisin. Inflaters.” It is by Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle, the duo behind MiniMiam. One tiny worker handles the pump while others haul raisins like heavy equipment. Very serious labor, very small stakes.
💡 Nerd Fact: MiniMiam began from a commission in 2002, when Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle developed the idea of using miniature train figurines to tell food stories, according to the official MiniMiam site. Their scenes often work like little two-step jokes: first the tiny drama, then the reveal that the whole “landscape” is edible.
🔗 Visit MiniMiam by Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle

📏 A Billboard That Wants to Be Taller
A huge blank billboard carries one tiny handwritten wish along the bottom. That is the whole joke. The empty space above it does the rest.
💡 Nerd Fact: That tiny line is a pop-culture breadcrumb. Billboard’s Hot 100 archive lists Skee-Lo’s “I Wish” with a peak position of No. 13 in 1995.
Which one is your favorite?
Keep exploring 👇
Drop into new walls weekly
No spam. Just the freshest city finds.

New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 9
New walls: 30 fresh street art finds with memory, folklore, satire, pop culture, and wild imagination.…