97 Most Loved Photos on Street Art Utopia Right Now
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A fresh snapshot from the ongoing Top Images page
This post turns the live Top Images leaderboard into an edited collection, with artwork details, context, and artist links where available. If the same artwork appeared more than once, it appears only once here.

🐕 Tug of Dog — A Public Sculpture Moment in South Korea 🇰🇷
A bronze sculpture already full of movement gets the perfect real-life guest. The white dog steps into the scene, and the statue dog becomes part of a joke happening right there on the pavement.
💡 Nerd Fact: When a public-art photo has no reliable artist credit, it is better to leave it unattributed than invent one. Viral statue-interaction images often travel much faster than their original plaques.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)

🥬 “Crunchie” — By Helga Stentzel in London, UK 🇬🇧
Helga Stentzel’s official print page identifies this lettuce dog as Crunchie. A green bin, a black trash bag, and leafy ears become a small dog with a lot of personality. Nothing really stops being ordinary — it is still lettuce, still a bin, still a bag — but the character appears instantly.
💡 Nerd Fact: Stentzel’s own print page turns this lettuce-bin joke into a fine-art giclée edition, which is a playful jump: an everyday food gag becomes a collectible image on archival paper.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Helga Stentzel on Instagram

🏖️ Wile E. Coyote — Sand Sculpture by PUFFERFISH in San Francisco, USA 🇺🇸
PUFFERFISH’s own portfolio lists this beach piece as Wile E. Coyote in San Francisco. The flattened figure reads like the final frame of a chase scene, with the tide waiting offscreen to erase the evidence.
💡 Nerd Fact: PUFFERFISH files works like this under “Castles and Creatures”, which says a lot about sand sculpture: the making, the photograph, and the disappearance are all part of the artwork’s life.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow PUFFERFISH on Instagram

🌱 “Nadine and the Vertical Commute” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan 🇺🇸
David Zinn posted this work as Nadine and the Vertical Commute. The real stem becomes Nadine’s commute, the pavement crack becomes a world, and the tiny chalk character makes the corner look secretly busy.
💡 Nerd Fact: David Zinn’s official bio says his temporary street drawings are improvised on location with chalk, charcoal, and found objects. In other words, the street usually suggests the story before the character arrives.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

📖 Book-Shaped Benches — By OverHertz in Bulgaria 🇧🇬
These benches turn reading into public furniture. The curved white forms look like open pages, and the printed text makes the walkway feel like a small outdoor library you can sit on.
💡 Nerd Fact: OverHertz works in the space between product design and public art. That matters here because these are not only “book sculptures” — they are usable urban furniture.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit OverHertz

🕳️ “Mélancolie” — By Albert György, Documented in Geneva, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Albert György gives emptiness a body. This 2012 bronze has been documented at Geneva’s Rotonde du Mont-Blanc, though reports about its current display location vary. The seated figure is heavy and still, but the missing center is what stays with you: grief as a visible hole.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Wikimedia Commons record documents this as a 2012 bronze at Geneva’s Rotonde du Mont-Blanc. That source trail matters because the sculpture is often reposted online with vague or outdated location captions.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Visit Albert György’s website

🍇 “Gonfleurs de raisin / Inflaters” — By MiniMiam (Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle)
MiniMiam’s official gallery lists this photograph as Gonfleurs de raisin / Inflaters. A few miniature workers turn grapes and raisins into an entire job site: the fruit becomes heavy machinery, the raisins become a problem to solve, and the tiny figures make the scale shift funny.
💡 Nerd Fact: “MiniMiam” itself is a food pun: mini plus miam, the French equivalent of “yum.” Their official gallery keeps that French/English playfulness in the title Gonfleurs de raisin / Inflaters.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Visit MiniMiam by Akiko Ida and Pierre Javelle

🪨 Smiling Rock Hair — By Tom Bob in New York City, USA 🇺🇸
Tom Bob sees the haircut before anyone else. A garden rock becomes a smiling face, while the real grass above it turns into unruly green hair.
💡 Nerd Fact: Wide Open Walls describes Tom Bob as an artist who turns improbable urban objects into art. That is why the “canvas” is never neutral in his work — it is already part of the punchline.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

🪑 “Schleudersitz” — By Cornelia Konrads in Neustadt an der Donau, Germany 🇩🇪
A bench usually promises rest. The Sculpture Network entry for Schleudersitz places Cornelia Konrads’ slingshot bench in the 2010 Flying Objects exhibition in Neustadt an der Donau, where it looks loaded, stretched, and ready to launch the next sitter into the landscape.
💡 Nerd Fact: Schleudersitz can mean “ejector seat” in German. The Sculpture Network listing gives the bench a title that makes it sound like furniture, transport, and accident all at once.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit Cornelia Konrads’ website

🕊️ “Freedom” — By Zenos Frudakis in Philadelphia, USA 🇺🇸
At 16th and Vine Streets in Philadelphia, Zenos Frudakis’ Freedom reads like a timeline of struggle. One figure is still trapped, another tears loose, and the final body steps into open space.
💡 Nerd Fact: On Frudakis’ own page, Freedom is framed as a universal struggle to break free. That keeps the sculpture open-ended instead of tying it to one single historical event.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Zenos Frudakis on Instagram

💋 “KISS” — By Tom Bob at Pier-2 Art Center in Kaohsiung, Taiwan 🇹🇼
At Pier-2 Art Center in Kaohsiung, two plain U-shaped barriers become a love story. Tom Bob adds color, faces, and a floating red heart; the original metal curves do most of the acting.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pier-2 Art Center was once an abandoned warehouse area in Kaohsiung’s harbor. That background makes Tom Bob’s intervention feel especially at home: a reused industrial site hosting reused street shapes.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

🍌 Banc-Nana — By LeMonde Studio
A banana peel is usually the thing you avoid. On its official Banc-Nana page, LeMonde Studio describes the design as a playful anniversary piece. On the street, it flips the slapstick hazard into public furniture.
💡 Nerd Fact: The name Banc-Nana is a bilingual pun: banc means “bench” in French, and the banana supplies the rest. LeMonde Studio’s project page makes the joke part of the official title.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit LeMonde Studio

🛌 “Border” — By Murat Gök in Mardin, Turkey 🇹🇷
The Institute for Public Art case study documents Murat Gök’s Border as a 2010 intervention in Mardin, where a border fence was reworked into a hammock. A fence is supposed to divide, block, and intimidate; Gök bends that logic into an unexpected place of rest.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Institute for Public Art documents Border as a 2010 intervention in Mardin. The title is doing political work before the sculpture even gets described.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)

🕸️ “Hilandera” — By Pejac in Salamanca, Spain 🇪🇸
Pejac later revisited Hilandera, noting that the Salamanca piece was still there four years after it appeared. The wall stays quiet while one line becomes a whole world: a small silhouette appears to spin or hold a massive web, and the empty surface starts to feel fragile and alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: Hilandera means a woman who spins thread in Spanish. Pejac’s later post also shows how unusual street-art longevity can be: he was still tracking the piece years after it appeared.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Visit Pejac on Facebook

🍟 “French Fry Girl” — By Tom Bob in New Bedford, Massachusetts, USA 🇺🇸
Tom Bob posted this as French Fry Girl at 1637 Acushnet Avenue in New Bedford. The parking stops were already fry-colored; he adds the girl, the fork, and the appetite.
💡 Nerd Fact: Tom Bob’s own post gives this work a real street address. That is important: the piece is not just an image, it is a very specific parking-lot joke in New Bedford.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram

🐿️ Nathan Redefines “Squirrelly” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan 🇺🇸
David Zinn lets a wooden stair become the whole stage. Nathan lies there as if the step was built for this tiny moment of squirrel theater.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s official bio describes his street drawings as temporary and improvised on location. The photograph is not just documentation — it is often the only long-term home the chalk creature gets.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

🦌 “Oryx Going Ahead” — By Martín Ron in Doha, Qatar 🇶🇦
Martín Ron uses the building corner as part of the animal. The oryx seems to push through the architecture instead of sitting flat on it.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Arabian oryx is Qatar’s national animal. That makes Martín Ron’s subject more than a striking creature on a wall — it is a national symbol moving through Doha’s architecture.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Martín Ron on Instagram

👂 “Ear Brick” — By Michael Beitz in Brooklyn, New York, USA 🇺🇸
The old saying becomes literal. Saatchi Gallery documented Michael Beitz’s Ear Brick as a 2001 street intervention in Brooklyn: a missing brick is replaced by an ear, and the wall looks like it has been listening to the street for years.
💡 Nerd Fact: Saatchi Gallery’s caption dates Ear Brick to 2001. That makes it an early-2000s street intervention, long before tiny object-based urban jokes became a social-media staple.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Michael Beitz on Instagram

🐦 Bird Hole — By Sergio Odeith
Odeith documented Bird Hole as an anamorphic optical illusion painted in an abandoned place. He uses shadow, perspective, and the wall itself to create a bird that looks as if it has torn open the surface. It is not just painted there — it seems to happen to the wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: Odeith’s own video documentation matters because abandoned-site works often survive publicly through photos and clips, not through permanent access to the location itself.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Sergio Odeith on Instagram

📎 “Skin 2” — By Mehmet Ali Uysal, Originally in Chaudfontaine Park, Belgium 🇧🇪
Pi Artworks lists Skin 2 as a 2010 work in Chaudfontaine Park. The ground looks soft enough to pinch; Mehmet Ali Uysal turns a grassy mound into fabric, and the landscape starts to feel flexible and slightly alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pi Artworks lists Skin 2 as a 2010 work. The title is easy to miss, but it changes the read: the landscape is treated less like ground and more like a body surface.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Mehmet Ali Uysal on Instagram

🧺 “Cargando con todo” — By Asociación Cultural Octubre in Torrelavega, Spain 🇪🇸
Often reposted under invented titles, this work is documented in Spanish coverage as Cargando con todo, part of Asociación Cultural Octubre’s 2018 temporary street installation Deconstrucción in Torrelavega. The figure carries domestic labor, care, exhaustion, and responsibility as one impossible tower.
💡 Nerd Fact: El País reported that Deconstrucción was an ephemeral one-day artwork. That short lifespan made the street installation feel like a civic event, not a permanent monument.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)

🌳 “Give” — By Lorenzo Quinn
Halcyon Gallery documented Give when it was unveiled at the Uffizi Galleries’ Boboli Gardens in 2020. Two enormous hands hold a young tree with surprising gentleness. The message is big, but not complicated.
💡 Nerd Fact: Halcyon Gallery documented the 2020 unveiling at the Boboli Gardens, a historic garden setting. That location gives the tree-holding gesture an extra layer of art-and-landscape history.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Lorenzo Quinn on Instagram

🐦 The Duke of Wellington Pigeon — By The Rebel Bear in Glasgow, Scotland 🇬🇧
STV News reported that The Rebel Bear added this bronze pigeon beside Glasgow’s Duke of Wellington statue in November 2025. The bird reads the paper, wears its own cone, and joins the city’s long-running public joke.
💡 Nerd Fact: STV News reported that the bronze pigeon appeared in November 2025. It is a new artwork built on an old Glasgow ritual: the traffic cone on the Duke of Wellington.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow The Rebel Bear on Instagram

🌿 DO NOT DISTURB — By Oakoak in La Louvière, Belgium 🇧🇪
Street Art Cities maps this La Louvière piece as Oakoak’s Do Not Disturb. A patch of wall greenery becomes a hiding place, and the words make the tiny scene look like a private world accidentally exposed to the street.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Street Art Cities marker pins this tiny intervention to La Louvière. That kind of mapping is valuable because small street works are easy to lose, repaint, or miscaption.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram

🩰 “Bunnerina” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan 🇺🇸
David Zinn’s own print page identifies this Ann Arbor chalk piece as Bunnerina, made with chalk, charcoal, and weeds in 2021. One stubborn patch of sidewalk green becomes a ballet costume.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s print page lists the materials as chalk, charcoal, and weeds. “Weeds” being part of the material list is the whole nerdy joy of it.
More: Clever Use (8 Photos)
🔗 Visit David Zinn’s website

🎣 Darth Fisher — By Frankey in Amsterdam, the Netherlands 🇳🇱
Frankey makes the bridge architecture part of the joke. The Amsterdam Light Festival page places Darth Fisher on De Torontobrug over the Amstel, where a tiny dark figure fishes from the edge and turns infrastructure into a quiet canal-side gag.
💡 Nerd Fact: Frankey’s own site places his practice between art, architecture, street interventions, and inventions. Darth Fisher is exactly that hybrid: a tiny invention attached to real city infrastructure.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Frankey on Instagram

📚 Colégio Ser Library Mural — By Eduardo Kobra in Sorocaba, São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Eduardo Kobra’s official page documents the Colégio Ser mural in Sorocaba: an entire building becomes a library wall, and the child climbing the ladder makes the book list active, physical, and full of possibility.
💡 Nerd Fact: Kobra’s official project page places this mural at a school, not a bookshop or library façade. That makes the giant bookshelf a public-facing symbol of education.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow Eduardo Kobra on Instagram

❤️ “Simple Maths” — By TRUST. iCON
Global Street Art documented this as Simple Maths by TRUST. iCON. One plus one becomes a heart: small, soft, and direct, with a public message that does not need a speech bubble.
💡 Nerd Fact: Global Street Art credits the piece to TRUST. iCON. That attribution matters because viral stencil images often get shared as “cute street art” with the artist’s name removed.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
🔗 Visit TRUST. iCON’s website

🌳 Living Hair — By Nuxuno Xän in Fort-de-France, Martinique 🇲🇶
Nuxuno Xän lets the tree finish the portrait. The painted figure holds up a comb, and the real branches become the hair.
💡 Nerd Fact: Nuxuno Xän’s tree-hair idea is a living collaboration with climate and season. A painted portrait can stay still, but the tree keeps changing the work after the artist leaves.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Nuxuno Xän on Instagram

🐟 Koi Staircase — Formerly at Ihwa Mural Village in Seoul, South Korea 🇰🇷
The blue steps become water, and the koi seem to swim upward as people climb. A simple illusion turns walking into part of the mural.
💡 Nerd Fact: The famous fish stairs at Ihwa Mural Village were caught up in a real overtourism conflict: The Korea Times reported that residents painted over fish and flower stairs in 2016 after complaints about noise, litter, and crowds.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)

🪨 “Cairn” — By Celeste Roberge in Reno, Nevada, USA 🇺🇸
TAI Modern identifies the work as Cairn, created in 1998 for the Nevada Museum of Art. The body becomes a marker made of stones: heavy, human, and geological at the same time.
💡 Nerd Fact: TAI Modern identifies Cairn as a 1998 work for the Nevada Museum of Art. A cairn is a stone marker, so Roberge turns a landscape-sign into a body.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Celeste Roberge on Instagram

🧳 “Les Voyageurs” — By Bruno Catalano
The suitcase holds the figure together while the body disappears. Gallery documentation of Bruno Catalano’s Les Voyageurs series links the fragmented travelers to journeys, displacement, and the parts of ourselves carried or left behind.
💡 Nerd Fact: Catalano’s official biography traces his life from Morocco to Marseille and later to work at sea. That personal history makes the traveler theme more than a sculptural gimmick.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Bruno Catalano on Instagram

🔩 Steel Lace Sculptures — By Jean Martin in Saint Barth
Artists of St Barth describes Jean Martin’s “steel lace” figures as stainless-steel constructions that keep the individual nuts visible while becoming human silhouettes: strong, transparent, and full of light.
💡 Nerd Fact: Artists of St Barth calls Martin’s figures “steel lace”. That phrase is the clever part: it takes hardware language and pushes it toward textile language.
More: Clever Use (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Jean Martin on Instagram

🫂 “Absent” — By Innerfields in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
Innerfields connected Absent to their Kyiv mural Present, making the Berlin wall a counterpart about loss and people who do not choose war. The missing figure is painted the same color as the wall, but it becomes the loudest part of the mural.
💡 Nerd Fact: Innerfields connected Absent to their Kyiv mural Present. The Berlin wall is therefore not a standalone image; it is one half of a cross-city conversation about war and loss.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Innerfields on Instagram

📚 “From Russia with Love” — By JanIsDeMan in Solnechnodolsk, Russia 🇷🇺
JanIsDeMan’s official project page says the Solnechnodolsk book titles were chosen together with local residents. The flat façade becomes a neighborhood bookcase, and the building stops looking blank and starts looking shared.
💡 Nerd Fact: JanIsDeMan says the book titles were chosen together with local residents. The mural is not just about books; it is a neighborhood-curated bookshelf.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow JanIsDeMan on Instagram

👧 “Invisible” — Australian Childhood Foundation / JWT Melbourne in Melbourne, Australia 🇦🇺
Ads of the World lists Invisible as a 2009 JWT Melbourne campaign for the Australian Childhood Foundation. A child-sized figure hides behind a poster, with only the legs showing, so noticing the hidden child becomes part of the work.
💡 Nerd Fact: Ads of the World lists Invisible as a 2009 JWT Melbourne campaign. It sits in the strange overlap between street installation, social advertising, and child-protection messaging.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)

🙌 High Five — Likely at Biltmore Estate in Asheville, North Carolina 🇺🇸
The timing does all the work. A raised statue hand and one committed jump make the monument a partner in a midair high five.
💡 Nerd Fact: The caption stays cautious with “likely” for a reason. When a statue-photo location cannot be verified from a plaque or reliable source, uncertainty is better than a confident wrong tag.
More: Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

🐘 “Elephant” — By Villu Jaanisoo in Jyväskylä, Finland 🇫🇮
Villu Jaanisoo’s official page lists Elephant as a 2018 sculpture in Jyväskylä made from steel and recycled tyres. The tires become wrinkles, folds, legs, and a trunk — scrapyard material made massive, animal, and strangely elegant.
💡 Nerd Fact: Jaanisoo’s official page gives the work’s dimensions as 360 × 420 × 250 cm and lists the materials as steel and recycled tyres. That turns a viral animal image into a very specific public sculpture.
More: Clever Use (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Villu Jaanisoo on Instagram

❤️ Passing Heart — Artist Unknown
One figure lowers a red heart. Another reaches up from below. It is small, simple, and easy to understand before you have even stopped walking.
💡 Nerd Fact: Because the artist is unknown, the caption should stay simple. Uncredited street-art images often circulate for years, and inventing a name can erase the real artist even more.
More: Found Clever Street Art (8 Photos)

☔ LA4/ST3/Parasol Bench — By Art Metal
The lamp post behaves like a polite character. It leans over the bench with an umbrella, as if street furniture has learned manners.
💡 Nerd Fact: The product-code title LA4/ST3/Parasol Bench makes this feel closer to street-furniture design than a one-off sculpture. Art Metal sits in that useful grey zone between fabrication, design, and public art.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit Art Metal

🧷 “Corridor Pin, Blue” — By Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen in San Francisco, USA 🇺🇸
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco lists Corridor Pin, Blue in the de Young collection. A tiny domestic object becomes a blue landmark; the joke is all in the scale: something easy to lose in a drawer now owns the landscape.
💡 Nerd Fact: Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco lists Corridor Pin, Blue in the de Young collection. So even outdoors, it is also a museum collection object.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)

🧑🌾 Wheelbarrow Farmer — Artist Not Credited
A wheelbarrow body, tire head, gloves, shoes, and garden tools come together as a character. Every part is still recognizable, but the figure looks ready to say hello.
💡 Nerd Fact: This is a classic assemblage move: making a figure from already recognizable things. Tate defines assemblage as art made from “found” objects arranged together.
More: Funny Sculptures With a Clever Twist (12 Photos)

📏 A Billboard That Wants to Be Taller
The huge blank space above the tiny sentence does the whole joke. Almost nothing, and somehow enough.
💡 Nerd Fact: This joke is closer to conceptual text art than traditional muralism. The sentence does not decorate the billboard — it changes the role of the billboard itself.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)

🌿 Mud Maid — By Sue and Pete Hill at The Lost Gardens of Heligan, Cornwall, England 🇬🇧
At The Lost Gardens of Heligan, Sue and Pete Hill’s Mud Maid never looks exactly the same twice. Moss, plants, snow, and weather keep changing her hair and clothes; the garden keeps editing her.
💡 Nerd Fact: Sue and Pete Hill’s own account says the work was nearly a mermaid before “Mudmaid” stuck, and that spare timber from Heligan’s Jungle boardwalk helped form the hidden structure.
More: The Earth Is Dreaming (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit Sue and Pete Hill’s website

🐋 “Bonded” — By Jack Lack in Weston-super-Mare, United Kingdom 🇬🇧
Street Art Cities maps Bonded to 60 Knightstone Road in Weston-super-Mare. Jack Lack turns the seafront building into deep water, with white sound-like lines connecting the whales across distance.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title connects neatly to whale communication: NOAA notes that humpback songs are structured sequences, not random noise. That makes “Bonded” feel like a sound story, not just an ocean image.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Jack Lack on Instagram

🫶 You Are Never Weak When You Seek Help — By HERA in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
HERA gives a public-service message a protective wall. The figures stand beside the words like guardians: urgent, compassionate, and hard to miss.
💡 Nerd Fact: Hilfetelefon’s own page says HERA worked on a wall more than 17 meters high at Teufelsberg in May 2025, turning the mural into a public-service action as well as an artwork.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow HERA on Instagram

🕊️ I HAVE A DREAM — By BANE & Pest in Chur, Switzerland 🇨🇭
At Schoolhouse Lachen in Chur, BANE and Pest’s I HAVE A DREAM opens a glowing book, scatters letters, and lets a bird lift a child into the air. From far away, the idea is clear: a story can carry you somewhere else.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Porta Cultura story places the mural at Schoolhouse Lachen. That school context matters: the image is not only about reading, but about where young people meet books every day.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow BANE on Instagram

⭐ Dignity of Earth and Sky — By Dale Lamphere in Chamberlain, South Dakota, USA 🇺🇸
Travel South Dakota places Dignity of Earth and Sky at the Chamberlain Welcome Center. The 50-foot figure holds a star quilt beneath the open sky; the scale gives the sculpture presence, and the calm pose gives it dignity.
💡 Nerd Fact: Dale Lamphere’s studio says the star quilt is made of 128 diamonds in water-and-sky colors. That construction detail is easy to miss in a single photo.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)

🦊 Escape Through a Book — By HERA in Vincennes, France 🇫🇷
The fox curls around the child like a protective story. On a bookstore wall, the message is direct: open a book, and the wall becomes a doorway.
💡 Nerd Fact: Millepages means “a thousand pages” in French, which makes the bookstore wall an extra-perfect home for a reading mural. The name of the place is already part of the story.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow HERA on Instagram

💡 “Enlighten” — By TAKERONE in Razgrad, Bulgaria 🇧🇬
TAKERONE’s portfolio lists Enlighten in Razgrad. A book bursts open and a lightbulb rises from the pages, making the idea of learning visible from across the street.
💡 Nerd Fact: TAKERONE’s portfolio lists the title as Enlighten. The title does important work here: it turns a school-wall image into a compact argument for learning.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow TAKERONE on Instagram

📄 Paper Storm — Yamada Taro on Mizushima Shinji Manga Character Street, Niigata, Japan 🇯🇵
A statue swings, paper flies, and one office-jump turns the bronze batter into the cause of the chaos. It reads like the instant after a comic-book impact.
💡 Nerd Fact: Niigata travel reporting identifies the batter as Yamada Taro from Shinji Mizushima’s manga Dokaben. The photo joke is funnier when you know he is already a comic character in bronze.
More: Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

📘 “Le Monde à l’envers” — By Zabou in Moûtiers, France 🇫🇷
Zabou lets the building do part of the work. The wall flips into grass, the roofline joins the book, and the reader stays calm while the whole world tilts.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title Le Monde à l’envers means “The World Upside Down.” Even before you study the wall, Zabou has already given you the reading key in the name.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow Zabou on Instagram

💧 The Legend of Giants — By Natalia Rak in Białystok, Poland 🇵🇱
Colossal documented Natalia Rak’s mural as painted for the Folk on the Street festival in Białystok. It remains one of the clearest examples of a tree completing the artwork: a giant girl tips a watering can toward the real tree below, and the painted gesture lands in living branches.
💡 Nerd Fact: Colossal documented the mural as part of Białystok’s Folk on the Street festival. It was not a random tree-wall coincidence; it was made in a festival context.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Natalia Rak on Instagram

🐦 Plant Trees for Birdsong
The message is simple enough to read in one breath: if you want birdsong, do not buy cages — plant trees. Street wisdom, environmental message, and tiny poem all fit on one sign.
💡 Nerd Fact: The line is good environmental advice, not just a cute slogan: Audubon encourages native planting as a way to create bird-friendly habitat in yards, windowsills, and public spaces.
More: When Nature Gets Through (15 Photos)

🌼 “Inner Peace” — By Studio Giftig in Saint Petersburg, Florida, USA 🇺🇸
Studio Giftig’s project page for Inner Peace places the mural in Saint Petersburg, Florida, for Reggae Rise Up. The portrait is hidden among golden chrysanthemums; the flowers do not just decorate the face, they become the atmosphere around it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Studio Giftig’s project page says the chrysanthemum was chosen for layered associations with happiness, health, and loyalty. The flower choice is symbolic, not only decorative.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Studio Giftig on Instagram

🧱 Life Is an Open Book — By Brad Spencer in Charlotte, North Carolina, USA 🇺🇸
In Charlotte’s The Green, Brad Spencer’s official site lists Life Is an Open Book as a book-shaped wall to climb. The children and the pages are made from the same brick, so reading becomes construction, play, and sculpture.
💡 Nerd Fact: Brad Spencer’s practice is unusual because brick is normally a building material first. His official site lists multiple brick sculptures, making the wall/body/book crossover part of a larger career.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Visit Brad Spencer’s website

🌲 “Torso” — Driftwood Sculptures by Nagato Iwasaki in Japan 🇯🇵
Nagato Iwasaki’s driftwood figures look as if they were assembled by the forest, not a studio. The branches stay rough and uneven, but together they become bodies moving through the trees.
💡 Nerd Fact: Nagato Iwasaki’s official works site shows the Torso figures as a series, not a one-off forest surprise. The repeated format is what turns found driftwood into a recognizable body of work.
More: Clever Use (8 Photos)
🔗 Visit Nagato Iwasaki’s official works site

♻️ “Burro de Miranda” — By Bordalo II in Vimioso, Portugal 🇵🇹
AEPGA documented Bordalo II’s two murals dedicated to the Burro de Miranda at Vimioso’s PINTA nature and adventure park. Discarded plastic, rope, and metal become the head of an endangered donkey breed; trash turns into a reminder of what gets ignored.
💡 Nerd Fact: AEPGA connects Bordalo II’s murals to the Burro de Miranda, a Portuguese donkey breed with conservation significance. The recycled trash animal is also a local-species portrait.
More: Clever Use (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Bordalo II on Instagram

🌊 “Direct” — By Jon Foreman at Poppit Sands, Wales 🇬🇧
Jon Foreman shared Direct as a 2025 stone work made at Poppit Sands. He arranges white stones into a clean sweep across wet sand. The beach is both canvas and timer, with the sea nearby.
💡 Nerd Fact: Foreman’s post titles this work Direct. His titles often read like instructions, movements, or formations, which makes the beach feel like a temporary drawing system.
More: When Nature Gets Through (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram

📚 “Intensification of Contrast” — By Andrey Syaylev at Samara Public Library, Russia 🇷🇺
The repair is almost too literal, which is why it works. Real books appear where bricks should be, as if the library is held together by its own shelves.
💡 Nerd Fact: Syaylev’s own page calls it a 2013 site-specific installation made from books and cement, and says the façade was later restored — so the repair afterlife became part of the story.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again

🐋 “Pay Heed” — By THOMAS TURNER in Strömstad, Sweden 🇸🇪
THOMAS TURNER’s project history lists Pay Heed for Artscape Festival in Strömstad. A blue whale becomes an island, a warning, and a coastal dream at once. The lighthouse detail makes the animal read as land, while the body keeps the sea alive underneath.
💡 Nerd Fact: THOMAS TURNER’s project history places Pay Heed at Artscape Festival in Strömstad. The title sounds like a warning, which makes the whale feel connected to environmental attention as much as ocean beauty.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow THOMAS TURNER on Instagram

📖 Story Time With Hans — Hans Christian Andersen Statue in Central Park, New York City 🇺🇸
At Conservatory Water in Central Park, visitors lean into the open book, and the storytelling statue does exactly what it was built to suggest: gather people around a story.
💡 Nerd Fact: Central Park Conservancy says storytelling has happened at this statue since 1957. The monument was not only made to be looked at — it became a real storytelling site.
More: Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

🐳 “The Messenger” — By LEHO in Ruifang District, Taiwan 🇹🇼
LEHO’s official page presents The Messenger as a dreamlike whale moving through clouds and paper planes. Sky and ocean trade places, and the mural becomes light, quiet, and full of distance.
💡 Nerd Fact: LEHO’s official page names the mural The Messenger. That title makes the whale a carrier of communication, not just a sea creature in a dreamlike scene.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Visit LEHO’s website

🪺 Mural de les Cigonyes — By Oriol Arumí in Lleida, Spain 🇪🇸
Local coverage in Segre places Oriol Arumí’s stork mural on the façade between Avinguda del Segre and Carrer Lluís Roca in Lleida. The building becomes a nest for storks and chicks, as if the façade was built to protect something small.
💡 Nerd Fact: Cigonyes is Catalan for storks. Segre’s local coverage anchors the mural in Lleida’s river environment and local language.
More: Being Human (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oriol Arumí on Instagram

🥤 Bench Chat With a Bronze Stranger
No stunt, no big pose — just the perfect empty space beside a statue that already looks ready to listen. A snack and a drink turn the bronze stranger into good company.
💡 Nerd Fact: This is the safest kind of statue play: no object needs to be placed on the artwork, and the statue does not need to be touched. The whole interaction lives in spacing, posture, and timing.
More: Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

🪜 HOPE — By The Martherapy in Montreal, Canada 🇨🇦
The word becomes a way upward. By turning the H into a ladder, The Martherapy makes hope feel less like a slogan and more like something to climb.
💡 Nerd Fact: Typographic street art can make letters act like tools. Here the important move is not only the word “HOPE,” but the way the H becomes a usable-looking structure.
More: Hope (16 Photos)
🔗 Follow The Martherapy on Instagram

🤗 Hugging the Tree
A painted child wraps their arms around the red pot, and the real tree completes the hug. Simple, sweet, and instantly readable.
💡 Nerd Fact: This kind of tree-and-paint intervention is extremely site-specific. If the tree, pot, or planter changes, the artwork becomes a record of a moment rather than a repeatable mural.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)

🤳 Founding Fathers Selfie — Signers’ Hall at the National Constitution Center, Philadelphia 🇺🇸
Put a phone in bronze Benjamin Franklin’s hand and history looks very online. Inside Signers’ Hall at the National Constitution Center, the whole room becomes a group photo more than two centuries late.
💡 Nerd Fact: The National Constitution Center says Signers’ Hall includes 42 life-size bronze figures from the Constitutional Convention scene of September 17, 1787. The selfie joke drops a modern object into a carefully staged historical room.
More: Playing With Statues (8 Photos)

🐠 “Mediterraneus” — By DULK in Valencia, Spain 🇪🇸
DULK’s project page and the Oceanogràfic Foundation present Mediterraneus as an art-and-conservation collaboration in Valencia. The tall wall becomes a Mediterranean ecosystem, with marine species spiraling like a living column of water.
💡 Nerd Fact: DULK’s project page presents Mediterraneus as a collaboration with Fundació Oceanogràfic. The wall is therefore part mural, part conservation communication.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow DULK on Instagram

🦈 “Under Pressure” — By Nuno Miles in Guarda, Portugal 🇵🇹
A rusted industrial object becomes a submerged vessel. The shark and blue atmosphere make the tank look as if it has sunk into another world.
💡 Nerd Fact: Guarda is an inland Portuguese city, which gives Under Pressure an extra geographic twist: ocean imagery appears where you do not expect a submerged world.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Nuno Miles on Instagram

🌺 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 nocturnal glow.
💡 Nerd Fact: Paul Garson’s tiny bunny mark works like a recurring artist signature or mascot. It rewards slow looking, because it is tucked inside the image rather than placed outside the mural.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 8 (30 Photos)
🔗 Follow Paul Garson on Instagram

😴 “The Trees Also Sleep” — By Dinho Bento in Debrecen, Hungary 🇭🇺
Dinho Bento shared The Trees Also Sleep from Debrecen’s Great Forest. The quiet faces sit inside tree hollows, with the bark left visible around each image like a natural frame.
💡 Nerd Fact: Dinho Bento’s own post and later descriptions note that the faces were painted on shaped wooden pieces rather than directly on the tree, making the intervention removable and gentler on the living trunk.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Visit Dinho Bento’s website and follow Dinho Bento on Instagram

🐗 The Old Sow Between the Trees — By Hannelie Coetzee in Knislinge, Sweden 🇸🇪
Hannelie Coetzee’s project page names the work Old Sow between the trees. Branches and logs gather into a boar-like face among the trees. From one angle, the forest becomes a character; from another, it slips back into the woods.
💡 Nerd Fact: Coetzee’s project page names the work Old Sow between the trees. The title matters because the sculpture is not just in the forest — it is framed as something between the trees.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Hannelie Coetzee on Facebook

👶 When Statues Become Fathers — Arena Idé’s #Kvantitetstidspappan Campaign in Sweden 🇸🇪
Arena Idé’s #kvantitetstidspappan campaign dressed male statues around Sweden with baby slings and carriers on International Men’s Day. A white baby sling changes the whole read of a stern historical statue: the “great man” monument is carrying care work in public.
💡 Nerd Fact: Arena Idé used International Men’s Day to put baby carriers on male statues. It is a clever activist move: turn bronze “great men” into visible caregivers for one day.
More: When Statues Become Fathers

🧚 Tiny Flower Magic — Artist Unknown
A small purple fairy-like stencil pours stars beside a real sidewalk flower. The artist adds almost nothing, which is why the plant gets the spotlight.
💡 Nerd Fact: Because the artist is unknown, the best caption leaves it unknown. Tiny unsourced street pieces are especially vulnerable to wrong credits once they start circulating online.
More: When Artists Play With Nature (12 Photos)

🦅 Wildlife Around Her — By Machuca and Luz de Luna in Lima, Peru 🇵🇪
A smiling portrait sits inside a small burst of wildlife: hawk, frog, bird, leaves, flowers, and movement. The wall becomes a small ecosystem around one calm face.
💡 Nerd Fact: The dual credit matters. Linking Machuca and Luz de Luna keeps the collaboration visible instead of letting the mural become another anonymous “beautiful wall” repost.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Machuca and Luz de Luna on Instagram

🦈 Shark in the Ruins — By Blesea in Cherbourg-en-Cotentin, France 🇫🇷
An abandoned concrete structure becomes a sunken aquarium. Blesea lets the rough opening, shadows, and broken edges do half the work, so the shark seems to move through the ruin.
💡 Nerd Fact: Cherbourg-en-Cotentin is a port city on the English Channel, so a shark mural there carries extra maritime context. The subject fits the place more than a random inland wall would.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Blesea on Instagram

🎈 Girl with Balloon — By Banksy
A small girl reaches toward a red heart-shaped balloon drifting away. The image is simple, but the feeling is large: hope is in the reaching.
💡 Nerd Fact: Banksy Explained places the original 2002 version near Waterloo Bridge with the words “There is always hope.” That phrase became part of the artwork’s afterlife even when the wall version disappeared.
More: Hope (16 Photos)
🔗 Visit Banksy’s website and follow Banksy on Instagram

🚬 Curbside Diagnosis
The curb is already unwell before the doctor arrives. A bollard becomes a cigarette, painted smoke finishes the gag, and the street looks like it needs care.
💡 Nerd Fact: The cigarette is not only a prop: UNEP notes that cigarette butts are the most discarded waste item worldwide, giving the joke a sharper public-health and litter angle.
More: The Street Needs a Doctor (12 Photos)

📦 “Soraya” — By Adventis in Bourgoin-Jallieu, France 🇫🇷
Adventis shared Soraya from Peinture Fraîche Festival 2026 in Bourgoin-Jallieu. The crumpled brown paper becomes the main event, spreading across the wall like a sculptural dress, heavy in places and delicate in others.
💡 Nerd Fact: Adventis’ post ties Soraya to Peinture Fraîche Festival 2026. Festival context matters because a mural like this is part of a temporary city-wide art moment, not just a single painted wall.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 8 (30 Photos)
🔗 Follow Adventis on Instagram

🌕 “Clustermoon” — By Jon Foreman at Freshwater West, Wales 🇬🇧
Jon Foreman shared Clustermoon as a 2025 work created at Freshwater West over two days. The moon-like stone cluster is precise and fragile, like a small celestial object waiting for the beach to take it back.
💡 Nerd Fact: Foreman wrote that Clustermoon took two days at Freshwater West. That slow build is hidden in the final photo, where the work looks almost magically already there.
More: The Earth Is Dreaming (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram

👁️ Finding Hope — By JR in Paris, France 🇫🇷
TIME documented JR’s Finding Hope as a 15-by-21-foot street artwork made in Paris for its 2020 special report. A giant pasted eye meets a city crosswalk, and from the right angle the street looks back.
💡 Nerd Fact: TIME documented Finding Hope as a 15-by-21-foot Paris street artwork made for its 2020 special report. It functioned as both street paste-up and magazine-cover image.
More: Hope (16 Photos)
🔗 Follow JR on Instagram

🌿 UMI — By Daniel Popper
Daniel Popper’s official page describes Umi as “a woman, a tree, a womb, and a bower.” The open body lets people step inside rather than only look up at it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Daniel Popper’s official page links Umi to the Arabic word for mother. That turns the walk-in form into a sheltering, maternal space rather than only a giant figure.
More: When Artists Play With Nature (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Daniel Popper on Instagram

🪐 La Cabrera — By Deltadec in Spain 🇪🇸
Deltadec brings together bird, astronaut, crystals, mountains, and sunset colors in one strange landscape. The wall sits somewhere between nature, memory, and daydream.
💡 Nerd Fact: La Cabrera is not just scenery in the title; it is a real Spanish place. Deltadec’s mural uses the local place-name as the anchor for a wall that drifts into memory and fantasy.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Deltadec on Instagram

🌿 “Historiantes” — By Cero Catorce in Panchimalco, El Salvador 🇸🇻
Cero Catorce shared this intervention for Pigmentrip Festival 2026 in Panchimalco. The face looks up toward the plants, while the hair breaks into water, leaves, and small points of light.
💡 Nerd Fact: Cero Catorce shared the mural as part of Pigmentrip Festival 2026. That festival context makes the work part of a larger public-art route through Panchimalco.
More: When Nature Gets Through (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Cero Catorce on Instagram and Pigmentrip Festival

🍃 Four Seasons — Tribute to Kora — By Bruno Althamer in Warsaw, Poland 🇵🇱
Warsaw In Your Pocket identifies this as the 2019 Kora mural by Bruno Althamer, created for the Kobiety na mury project. A real chestnut tree becomes Kora’s changing hair, so spring, summer, autumn, and winter repaint the mural without touching the wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: Warsaw In Your Pocket identifies the mural as a tribute to Kora, singer of the band Maanam, created for Kobiety na mury. The living tree turns the memorial into something seasonal.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Bruno Althamer on Facebook

🕯️ Hope Dies Last — By Wild Drawing in Athens, Greece 🇬🇷
Street Art Cities maps Hope Dies Last to Katsikogianni 10 in Athens. Wild Drawing gives hope a worn, intense face: not cheerful in a simple way, but about the kind of hope that stays under pressure.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Street Art Cities marker places Hope Dies Last at Katsikogianni 10 in Athens. A precise street marker helps keep public art from becoming a context-free quote image.
More: Hope (16 Photos)
🔗 Visit Wild Drawing’s website

🍂 “Vortex” — By Jon Foreman in Little Milford Woods, Wales 🇬🇧
Jon Foreman shared this leaf work as Vortex of Colour at Little Milford. Fallen leaves become pixels in a spiral that climbs the bark and spills back onto the forest floor, making the tree the center of a temporary woodland current.
💡 Nerd Fact: Foreman titled the work Vortex of Colour. The material was already on the ground; the art is in sorting, placing, and briefly giving autumn a pattern.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram

🌱 “Cobija de plantas” — By El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador 🇪🇨
El Decertor’s own Instagram profile describes the work in Imbabura as cobija de plantas, with the little Manuela covered by the protective blanket of nature. The plants do not decorate the mural; they finish the bed.
💡 Nerd Fact: Cobija de plantas translates as “plant blanket.” El Decertor’s profile text connects the work to little Manuela being covered by nature’s protective blanket.
More: The Earth Is Dreaming (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow El Decertor on Facebook

🐭 “An Evening of Adventure” — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan 🇺🇸
David Zinn’s print page for An Evening of Adventure identifies it as a temporary Ann Arbor installation made with chalk, charcoal, and an inverted flowerpot on June 8, 2021. The pot becomes the lampshade, the pavement becomes a tiny room, and Nadine gets a quiet evening with a book.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s print page preserves a work made from chalk, charcoal, and an inverted flowerpot on June 8, 2021. A temporary sidewalk moment becomes a signed giclée print.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

🐠 Hagerfest Goldfish — By Christian Stanley in Hagerstown, Maryland, USA 🇺🇸
Street Art Cities lists Christian Stanley’s Goldfish at 35 Hays Alley in Hagerstown, painted for Hagerfest and the National Mural Awards 2026. The parking garage becomes a vertical aquarium.
💡 Nerd Fact: Street Art Cities lists the work for Hagerfest and the National Mural Awards 2026. That turns a parking-garage wall into part of a competitive mural map.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 8 (30 Photos)
🔗 Follow Christian Stanley on Instagram

🐟 Goldfish Anamorphosis — By Sébastien Sweo and Marlène Nikita in Calais, France 🇫🇷
A 5.7 Crew post identifies this as a SWEO & NIKITA 3D goldfish in Calais. From the right angle, the giant fish appears to push out of the wall and the building becomes water.
💡 Nerd Fact: The 5.7 Crew post credits SWEO and NIKITA together. That collaboration credit is important because large technical wall pieces are often remembered as images before they are remembered as teamwork.
More: Ocean Street Art That Feels Alive (15 Photos)
🔗 Follow Sébastien Sweo and Marlène Nikita on Instagram

😱 The Ultimate “How Dare You?” Moment
One pose does it. The statue brings the frozen drama, and the visitor’s reaction turns the monument into a slapstick scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: With no verified location or sculptor in the supplied material, this should stay a playful statue-interaction image. The nerdy rule: never let a funny pose tempt you into inventing an art-historical caption.
More: 100 Times People Stepped Into the Artwork

🌍 “Quale futuro lasciamo ai nostri figli?” — By Chiara Abramo in Paternò, Italy 🇮🇹
Il Fatto Siciliano reported that Chiara Abramo’s mural was part of Paternò’s Le strade da seguire urban-art project. A child holds an earth-like heart while plants rise around the figure; the title asks directly what future we are leaving our children.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title Quale futuro lasciamo ai nostri figli? means “What future are we leaving our children?” Il Fatto Siciliano links the mural to Paternò’s Le strade da seguire project.
More: When Nature Becomes Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Chiara Abramo on Instagram

✋ The Giant Hand of Vyrnwy — By Simon O’Rourke in Wales 🇬🇧
Simon O’Rourke’s own account explains that the work was carved from the storm-damaged remains of what had been the tallest tree in Wales. Loss becomes a hand reaching upward, and the old trunk keeps speaking through a new shape.
💡 Nerd Fact: Simon O’Rourke explains that the hand was carved from the storm-damaged remains of what had been the tallest tree in Wales. The sculpture is literally made from the lost landmark.
More: When Trees Become Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow Simon O’Rourke on Instagram

🕊️ Hope Is the Highest Form of Art — By TVBOY in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
TVBOY shared this Barcelona mural with the line “Hope is the highest form of art.” A girl paints HOPE across a blue and yellow wall, with a peace symbol becoming the O. The message stays unfinished in the best way: hope is still being made.
💡 Nerd Fact: TVBOY shared the Barcelona work with the line “Hope is the highest form of art.” The blue-and-yellow wall ties the hope message to Ukraine without needing a long caption.
More: Hope (16 Photos)
🔗 Follow TVBOY on Instagram

🎣 Big Catch — By Edi Bruzaca & Bruno Níkson in São Luís, Brazil 🇧🇷
Edi Bruzaca shared the São Luís work with Bruno Níkson for Coisa Nossa. A fisherman holds a huge fish while sails, water, sunset bands, and nearby architecture open around the scene: part portrait, part place, with coastal air in the composition.
💡 Nerd Fact: Edi Bruzaca’s post credits the São Luís work to both Edi Bruzaca and Bruno Níkson for Coisa Nossa. The collaboration and local project context are part of the piece, not footnotes.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 8 (30 Photos)
🔗 Follow Edi Bruzaca and Bruno Níkson on Instagram
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