50 Forgotten Street Art Gems
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Some street art photos stay famous forever. Others slip deep into the archives—but still have everything a great image needs.
They hold surprise, humor, scale, and strong color. They connect closely to the world around them. This collection brings back 50 older street art gems. Watch how the city itself becomes part of the artwork.
More: 100 of the Most Loved Photos on Street Art Utopia Right Now

😟 Utility Box Faces — By Adam Łokuciejewski and Szymon Czarnowski in Olsztyn, Poland 🇵🇱
Two plain utility boxes suddenly look like worried neighbors caught in the tall grass. Colossal identified the piece as a simple but sharp intervention by Adam Łokuciejewski and Szymon Czarnowski, made with only a small number of black spray-paint lines. It proves how little an artwork sometimes needs to change a place.
💡 Nerd Fact: Colossal counted the transformation at roughly 20 lines of black spray paint, a perfect reminder that some of the strongest street interventions are closer to editing the city than covering it.
More: Street Art in Olsztyn, Poland

👓 Snow Glasses — By P183 / Pasha 183 in Russia 🇷🇺
A snowy courtyard becomes a giant pair of glasses. A lamppost forms one arm while the rest is drawn in snow; RFE/RL later singled out this illusion among the works of P183, the Moscow street artist also known as Pasha 183. RFE/RL reported that his real name was rumored to be Pavel Pukhov. The piece is simple, temporary, and easy to miss unless you stand at the right angle.
💡 Nerd Fact: Shortly before his death, P183 had been hired to create sets for a rock musical, according to RFE/RL’s obituary. That theatrical link makes sense: many of his street works feel like tiny public stages.
More: Street Art by P183 / Pavel Pukhov

🎩 Primavera — By Sainer from Etam Cru in Łódź, Poland 🇵🇱
Sainer uses the whole side of the building like a vertical storybook page. The mural’s confirmed title is Primavera; Street Art Museum Łódź lists it as a 2012 work by Sainer on Uniwersytecka Street. The character feels oversized, strange, elegant, and completely at home in the city’s mural landscape.
💡 Nerd Fact: Łódź’s Urban Forms project was designed as a kind of permanent street-art exhibition in the city center, and Google Arts & Culture describes Urban Forms Gallery as exactly that: a permanent exhibition of street art in Łódź.
More: By Sainer from Etam Cru in Łódź

🧱 The Legend of Fred ILLE & Gwen VILAINE — By MTO in Rennes, France 🇫🇷
MTO makes the figure seem to push through the solid building. StreetArtNews documented the two Rennes murals as The Legend of Fred ILLE & Gwen VILAINE, painted around the COSMORAMA exhibition in 2012. The black-and-white style makes the 3D illusion feel even more cinematic.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title is a Rennes pun: the department around the city is Ille-et-Vilaine, named after two rivers, and Urban Shit Gallery explains that MTO turned that local geography into the family name of two fictional giants.
More: 3D Street Art by MTO in Rennes

🕳️ The Legend of Fred ILLE & Gwen VILAINE II — By MTO in Rennes, France 🇫🇷
This second Rennes piece plays with the same archive magic. The wall simply refuses to stay flat. Urban Shit Gallery’s edition notes connect the pair to the local name Ille-et-Vilaine and to two fictional giants, giving the illusion a clever Rennes-specific twist.
💡 Nerd Fact: MTO described the Rennes project as an all-aerosol work tied to a gallery photo installation; the making-of note on Vimeo says the street project was transcribed into photography for the gallery.
More: 3D Street Art by MTO in Rennes

🚲 Little Children on a Bicycle — By Ernest Zacharevic in George Town, Penang, Malaysia 🇲🇾
A real bicycle turns the painted children into a vivid street scene. Penang Travel Tips places the mural on Armenian Street and notes that Zacharevic painted it for the 2012 George Town Festival. The physical object, the wall, and the painted figures all need each other.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zacharevic later called the 2012 George Town Festival collaboration his first constructive public art project. That festival commission helped turn Penang’s old lanes into one of Southeast Asia’s best-known street-art walks.
More: Bicycle in Penang, Malaysia
🔗 Visit Ernest Zacharevic’s website

🦖 Little Boy with Pet Dinosaur — By Ernest Zacharevic in George Town, Penang, Malaysia 🇲🇾
This piece feels like a childhood memory escaping into the street. Penang Travel Tips identifies it as Little Boy with Pet Dinosaur on Ah Quee Street, another Zacharevic mural made for George Town’s 2012 street art moment. The dinosaur looks like a child’s drawing come alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Penang works sat under a project often called Mirrors George Town; Feel Desain’s overview notes that the murals celebrated everyday life in the inner city rather than simply decorating blank walls.
More: Bicycle in Penang, Malaysia
🔗 Visit Ernest Zacharevic’s website

💋 V-J Day in Color — By Eduardo Kobra in Chelsea, New York City 🇺🇸
Kobra transforms a famous black-and-white image into a bold burst of color. StreetArtNYC documented the Chelsea mural as a High Line-visible homage to Alfred Eisenstaedt’s well-known V-J Day in Times Square photograph. It feels rooted in history but fresh on the wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: The mural was not just a remix of “an old kiss photo”; StreetArtNYC notes that Kobra was paying homage to New York’s history as seen from the High Line, turning a remembered news image into a neighborhood landmark.
More: Mural by Eduardo Kobra in NYC

💥 Paint War — By Unknown Artist in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
This Berlin piece is a colorful battlefield. It is playful, chaotic, and full of instant energy. It is exactly the kind of archive image that still works years later.
💡 Nerd Fact: Berlin’s street-art reputation is not only about the East Side Gallery; visitBerlin traces spraying and tagging in the city back to the 1970s, when graffiti was tied to youth protest before becoming a major urban art scene.
More: Paint War in Berlin

👀 Green-Haired Eyes — By JustCobe in Runzmattenweg, Freiburg, Germany 🇩🇪
The sharp eyes and vivid green hair pull the whole wall into a strange portrait. JustCobe’s own biography identifies him as Freiburg painter Fred Naujoks, with the human figure as a central theme. That makes the rough wall and strip of greenery feel intentionally folded into the portrait.
💡 Nerd Fact: JustCobe’s bio includes a review describing how he uses body parts as emotional symbols; the same artist page connects hands, heads, torsos, and ballerina feet to ideas like strength, reflection, loneliness, and balance.
More: Street Art by JustCobe in Freiburg

⛔ Dinner Table Sign — By Unknown Artist in Poitiers, France 🇫🇷
A standard traffic sign becomes the center of a funny little visual joke. The old archive places the piece in Poitiers and credits the photo to Valentin Robert, but the artist credit is still unconfirmed. The charm lies in how naturally the street object slips into the scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: The joke works because road signs are an international visual language. The UNECE’s road-sign conventions helped standardize symbols across countries, so an artist can hijack one small sign and instantly reach a wide audience.
More: Street Art in Poitiers, France

🥊 Muhammad Ali vs. Street Fighter — By Combo in Rue Saint-Denis, Paris 🇫🇷
Combo turns the famous Ali/Liston victory pose into a retro arcade fight, swapping Sonny Liston for Ryu from Street Fighter. Sneak-art’s profile of Combo points to this Paris collage as part of the artist’s culture-kidnapping pop vocabulary. It is bold, funny, and instantly readable from the sidewalk.
💡 Nerd Fact: Combo’s “Culture Kidnapper” tag is not just branding. Sneak-art calls out this Ali/Street Fighter paste-up as one of his best-known image détournements, where pop culture gets kidnapped and sent back with a new meaning.
More: Street Fighter Muhammad Ali in Paris

🌸 Manik Mia Avenue Alpona — Collective Bengali New Year Street Painting in Dhaka, Bangladesh 🇧🇩
The entire road becomes a flowing pattern of bright color and tradition. This was not a single-artist mural but a collective Alpona for Pohela Boishakh; Rowanberry Studio documented the 2012 Manik Mia Avenue work as the world’s largest Alpona, painted for Bengali New Year. It transforms the street from something you cross into something you stop to admire.
💡 Nerd Fact: Bengali New Year public art is tied to a bigger civic ritual: UNESCO recognizes Mangal Shobhajatra on Pahela Baishakh as intangible cultural heritage, organized through Dhaka University’s Faculty of Fine Art and open to the public.
More: Alpona Street Art in Dhaka

🏛️ Pisa Pole — Artist Unknown in Philadelphia, USA 🇺🇸
A leaning parking pole becomes the key to a famous architectural illusion. Streets Dept traces the beloved “Pisa Pole” to the corner of 5th and Gaskill Streets off South Street and notes that its exact authorship remains a neighborhood mystery. The artwork does not fight the street furniture. It celebrates it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Streets Dept called the Pisa Pole “a meme before there were memes”. Long before social feeds made visual jokes travel fast, this tiny pole already worked like shareable street humor.
More: Leaning Tower of Pisa in Philadelphia

🔌 Giant On/Off Switch — By Escif in Katowice, Poland 🇵🇱
Escif has a sharp way of making walls feel like tools, symbols, and jokes all at once. Laughing Squid documented this giant switch as Escif’s contribution to the 2012 Katowice Street Art Festival. You almost want to reach out and press it.
💡 Nerd Fact: The mural had a very specific address: StreetArtNews placed Escif’s Katowice work at ul. Mikusińskiego 5. That kind of exact location turns an image archive back into a map.
More: Escif in Poland
🔗 Follow Escif on Facebook

🪜 Painted Stair Story — By Unknown Artist in Valparaíso, Chile 🇨🇱
The staircase becomes more than a path up or down. The archive places the work in Valparaíso and credits the photo to Terie Stephens, but no confirmed artist credit is attached. The artwork and the architecture are locked together, turning the climb into a full painted scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: Valparaíso’s outdoor mural culture has deep roots: GoNOMAD traces the Museo a Cielo Abierto to art students painting large murals in 1969, before the open-air museum officially opened in 1992.
More: Street Art in Valparaíso, Chile

🐕 Street Dog Heart — By Unknown Artist in Leipzig, Germany 🇩🇪
A broken patch of wall becomes the body of a little dog. The few drawn lines do almost nothing and somehow everything. The rough wall texture gives the character extra life, while the tiny heart above the nose makes the whole repair-like intervention feel sweet.
💡 Nerd Fact: Leipzig’s street art is not only about massive walls. Street Art Cities tracks Leipzig as a city with active and historic works, showing how tiny wall jokes can sit inside a much larger urban-art ecosystem.
More: Street Art in Leipzig, Germany

🚂 The Magician — By Martín Ron and Martín Worich in Caseros, Buenos Aires, Argentina 🇦🇷
This huge wall feels like a machine and a story panel at the same time. Buenos Aires Street Art documented El Mago / The Magician as a 65-metre mural by Martín Ron and Martín Worich in Tres de Febrero. The longer you look, the more small details start to move around in the composition.
💡 Nerd Fact: The wall was not only long; it was tall too. Buenos Aires Street Art measured it at 65 metres long and four metres high, giving the artists a moving panorama rather than a normal mural panel.
More: Street Art in Caseros, Buenos Aires

🎭 Character Lineup — By David Choe in Denver, Colorado 🇺🇸
A whole cast of wild characters takes over the wall. The original archive credits the piece to David Choe in Denver and thanks Elizabeth Perry for the photo. It is bright, busy, and built to make you look twice.
💡 Nerd Fact: David Choe moves between street art, illustration, comics, and media; Artnet describes him as a contemporary American artist working in street art and illustration, which helps explain why this wall feels so character-driven.
More: By David Choe in Denver, Colorado

🌸 Pink Tree — By PakOne in Brest, France 🇫🇷
This pink form grows across the wall like a tree made of flowing paint. Brest’s tourism office describes PakOne as one of the city’s street art pioneers and points to his dreamlike cherry blossom trees. The soft organic shape sits beautifully on a hard urban surface.
💡 Nerd Fact: Brest’s own tourism office treats street art as an urban exploration route, and its guide names PakOne alongside other local pioneers, making this pink tree part of a wider city identity rather than a one-off decoration.
More: By the French Artist PakOne
🔗 Follow PakOne on Facebook

🚧 Bollard Characters — Likely by Le CyKlop in Paris District 13, France 🇫🇷
The boring street bollards suddenly stop being background objects. The exact photo archive does not give a confirmed credit, but the one-eyed bollard language strongly matches Le CyKlop, the French artist known for turning anti-parking posts into small characters. It is the kind of street intervention that makes an ordinary sidewalk feel alive.
💡 Nerd Fact: Le CyKlop’s bollard creatures began as a night-time game in Paris’s 11th arrondissement in 2007; Urbaneez’s interview says he later expanded from cyclops faces to Lego characters, animals, and studio pieces.
More: Street Art in Paris District 13

💍 Gollum Breakthrough — By SmugOne in the UK 🇬🇧
SmugOne brings a beloved fantasy character straight into the real world. Beyond Walls identifies Smug as Sam Bates, an Australian-born, Glasgow-based artist known for photorealistic murals. This wall-breaking illusion shows why his detail work became so widely loved.
💡 Nerd Fact: Smug’s technique is more demanding than it looks in a still photo: Beyond Walls says he works freehand using aerosol cans alone, achieving photorealistic results without the usual safety net of stencils.
More: Street Art by SmugOne
🔗 Follow Smug on Facebook

🔎 Honey, I Shrunk the Kids — By Smug in Glasgow, Scotland 🇬🇧
Smug turns the huge wall into a clear optical trick. Glasgow’s City Centre Mural Trail lists the piece as Honey, I Shrunk The Kids on Mitchell Street and credits it to Smug, also known as Sam Bates. Stand in the right place and the girl really does seem to pick people off the street.
💡 Nerd Fact: Glasgow’s mural scene is also civic regeneration: Colossal notes that the City Centre Mural Trail began in 2008 to help rejuvenate the downtown area through public art.
More: By Smug in Glasgow, Scotland
🔗 Follow Smug on Facebook

🧽 Show biz ruined me — By Pao in Rome, Italy 🇮🇹
Pao makes a normal street object feel like a tired cartoon character. Pao’s own archive identifies the work as Show biz ruined me, a 2012 SpongeBob painted on an electric cabinet in Rome. The humor is immediate, sad, and easy to love.
💡 Nerd Fact: Pao has been turning public objects into pop-culture jokes for years: his studio archive lists “Campbell’s Penguin Soup” from 2002, painted on a public toilet in Milan and inspired by Andy Warhol.
More: Street Art by Pao in Rome
🔗 Follow Pao on Facebook

🖤 Shadow Figure — By Borondo in Spain 🇪🇸
This painted figure looks fragile and powerful at the same time. Borondo’s official biography describes Gonzalo Borondo as a Spanish artist whose work began in public muralism and often revolves around memory, heritage, and the characteristics of place. That fits the ghostlike way the rough wall becomes part of the body here.
💡 Nerd Fact: Borondo’s current practice has moved far beyond walls, but the core idea stayed the same: his official bio says his research focuses on memory, heritage, and the historical character of spaces.
More: Street Art by Borondo from Spain

🏚️ Window Figure — By Borondo in Spain 🇪🇸
This piece feels like a distant memory caught on the outside of a building. URBAN NATION describes Borondo’s murals as sweeping and expressive, and that energy is what makes the surrounding architecture feel like more than a frame. It becomes part of the mood.
💡 Nerd Fact: Borondo’s public works often feel site-specific because he treats place as material. METALOCUS notes that his public-space work tries to break down barriers between art and life while responding to the cultural heritage of context.
More: Street Art by Borondo from Spain

🏢 Tiny Concrete City — By Evol in Farringdon, London 🇬🇧
Evol turns small concrete surfaces into an entire miniature city. Brooklyn Street Art described the London project as concrete blocks turned into miniature apartment blocks, a tiny housing estate beside the Crossrail works. Suddenly, the plain sidewalk feels like a towering skyline.
💡 Nerd Fact: These were not art plinths waiting for a mural. Londonist reported that the blocks were bollards around the Crossrail construction site, which makes Evol’s miniature housing estate a direct comment on the city being rebuilt around it.
More: Evol in Farringdon, London

🎬 Walking Characters — By Nina Milosavljević and Luka Stoisavljević in Kragujevac, Serbia 🇷🇸
The small figures move across the wall like frames from a street animation. The original archive credits the work to Nina Milosavljević and Luka Stoisavljević in Kragujevac. It is simple, stylish, and full of motion.
💡 Nerd Fact: For older street-art archives, a specific artist credit can be as valuable as the image itself. Street Art Utopia’s 2012 post preserves both names and the city, which keeps this small Serbian wall from becoming another anonymous repost.
More: By Nina Milosavljević and Luka Stoisavljević in Kragujevac

🌀 Pavement Illusion — By Eduardo Relero in Spain 🇪🇸
Relero’s pavement illusion turns the hard ground into a dramatic scene. Eduardo Relero’s official site places his practice directly in 3D street art, pavement art, and anamorphosis. You feel like you could fall right into it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Relero was born in Rosario, Argentina, and his public works have traveled globally; VukovArt notes that his interactive street works have appeared from New York and Rome to Mexico and Tokyo.
More: Street Art by Eduardo Relero

📡 Satellite Telescopes — By graffiti4hire in Digbeth, Birmingham, UK 🇬🇧
The plain wall fixtures become the center of the design. BuzzFeed’s Birmingham street art guide credits the nearby work to graffiti4hire and describes these little figures as looking through telescopes whose lenses are satellite dishes. The wall clutter is no longer clutter. It becomes the whole joke.
💡 Nerd Fact: This was part of a bigger Digbeth scene: BuzzFeed’s guide also points readers to a giant orange octopus nearby at the Custard Factory, showing how one car park could become a mini street-art trail.
More: Street Art in Digbeth, Birmingham

🐘 Electric Elephant — By Steve Locatelli in Brussels, Belgium 🇧🇪
This elephant feels alive with color and movement. StreetArtNews documented Locatelli’s 2012 Brussels mural as a Kosmopolite Art Tour work at rue Georges Leclercq. It is big, bright, and built to grab your attention from down the street.
💡 Nerd Fact: The elephant took four days to complete, according to StreetArtNews, and was painted during the Kosmopolite Art Tour 2012 organized by Urbana.
More: Street Art by Steve Locatelli in Brussels

💃 Red Wall Figure — By Unknown Artist in Valencia, Spain 🇪🇸
The bright red figure gives the dull wall a dramatic pulse. The archive credits the location as Valencia and the photo to Barbara Schmid, but does not confirm the artist. The bold composition works without many elements, which keeps the whole piece clean and strong.
💡 Nerd Fact: Valencia’s urban art predates easy phone-camera archiving. Visit Valencia notes that local artists were already going out at night to paint before mobile phones with cameras became common.
More: Street Art in Valencia, Spain

🌌 Star Wars Geometry — Original Illustration by Liam Brazier, Painted by East in Denver, Colorado 🇺🇸
Classic Star Wars imagery meets a sharp graphic street style. The archive credit is important here: the original geometric illustration is by Liam Brazier, while the wall was painted by East and photographed by miahsix in Denver. The result is nostalgic, clean, and well suited to mural scale.
💡 Nerd Fact: Liam Brazier later turned Star Wars portraiture into a long-running project: his “Star Draws” page explains that he set himself the challenge of completing one character portrait every week until The Force Awakens arrived.
More: Star Wars by East in Denver

🚨 Cartoon Lineup — By Unknown Artist in Chambéry, France 🇫🇷
A group of familiar cartoon characters gets staged like a police crime lineup. The archive places the piece in Chambéry and credits the photo to Gaël Desmoucelles, but no artist credit is confirmed. The joke is immediately understandable and very hard not to smile at.
💡 Nerd Fact: This is a classic case of street-art archaeology: the 2012 archive preserves the city and photographer, but not the artist, so the image survives as a shared internet memory more than a fully documented artwork.
More: Cartoon Characters in Crime in Chambéry

🎨 Shutter Portrait — By David Walker in SOHO, New York 🇺🇸
The ordinary metal shutter becomes a portrait canvas. URBAN NATION describes David Walker as a London-based artist known for vividly colored portraits made with spray paint. The archive places this one in SOHO, with a photo by Seano Hfboyz, and the closed storefront gives the face a temporary street rhythm.
💡 Nerd Fact: David Walker’s portraits are made without brushes or stencils; URBAN NATION notes that he builds those vivid faces with spray paint, blending colors through drips and layers.
More: David Walker in SOHO, New York

💙 Blue Breakthrough — By Chemis in Copenhagen, Denmark 🇩🇰
Chemis makes the solid wall feel like an open door. Chemis’s own biography describes a street artist born in Kazakhstan and based in the Czech Republic, specializing in 3D murals and interactive street art. The blue tones give this piece a sharp, surreal atmosphere.
💡 Nerd Fact: Chemis’s work often carries activist weight too. His own bio says he has collaborated with Doctors Without Borders, Amnesty International, and UNHCR on murals in communities around the world.
More: Street Art by Chemis in Copenhagen

🚆 Trackside Figures — By Herakut in Germany 🇩🇪
These characters carry emotion even in a rough trackside setting. URBAN NATION identifies Herakut as the German duo Hera and Akut, who merged their names and styles in 2004. The artwork feels like a quiet story left behind beside the roaring rails.
💡 Nerd Fact: Herakut’s name is literally a collaboration: URBAN NATION explains that Hera and Akut merged both their names and styles in 2004, with a shared aim to bring humane, positive signs into darker city spaces.
More: Street Art by Herakut in Germany

🚶 Crossing the Crossing Sign — By Pabi A in Lund, Sweden 🇸🇪
The crossing sign becomes more than a standard warning symbol. It becomes the artwork’s main character. Design Observer discussed this Pabi A intervention as part of a wider look at street works that transform overlooked urban infrastructure. The tiny intervention has a big visual payoff.
💡 Nerd Fact: This kind of sign-hacking works because signs are public instructions, not neutral decoration. Design Observer grouped Pabi A’s Lund piece with interventions that make ordinary street systems feel suddenly personal.
More: Street Art by Pabi A in Lund, Sweden

🧱 Another Brick in the Wall — By Unknown Artist in Gorzów, Poland 🇵🇱
The archive places it in Gorzów and thanks Aga Sawala Doberschuetz for the photo, but the artist credit is not confirmed. The visual idea fits the surface perfectly and feels built straight into the place.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title nods to Pink Floyd’s The Wall, where the wall was more than metaphor. Britannica notes that the band’s tour for the 1979 album literally built a brick wall between performers and audience.
More: Another Brick in the Wall in Gorzów

🎵 Fête de la Musique Wall — By Unknown Artist in Brest, France 🇫🇷
The huge wall feels loud in the best way. The archive labels this image Fête de la Musique in Brest and credits the photo to Michele Quemeneur, but does not confirm the artist. It looks as if music has become pure color and shape.
💡 Nerd Fact: Fête de la Musique was launched in 1982 by France’s Ministry of Culture to bring musicians into the streets, and the ministry notes that it is celebrated on June 21 and open to amateurs and professionals alike.
More: Street Art from Brest, France

⛔ Runner on the Sign — By Tobias Batik in Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹
The bright sign becomes a tiny stage for a quick action scene. The archive credits the piece to Tobias Batik in Vienna, and the idea still feels fresh: the artwork does not cover up the street object. It activates it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Tobias Batik later moved into data visualization: Complexity Science Hub Vienna describes him as a specialist interested in computational geometry, human perception, and interactive visualizations of large datasets.
More: Street Art by Tobias Batik in Vienna

🐍 Snake Wall — By ROA in Mexico City 🇲🇽
This animal work carries a stark anatomical force. StreetArtNews documented ROA’s Mexico City mural at República de Paraguay 42 and noted the snake’s deep symbolic place in Mexican mythology. The busy city suddenly transforms into a wild habitat.
💡 Nerd Fact: ROA’s animal choice was especially loaded in Mexico: StreetArtNews connects the snake to veneration, power, resurrection, and rebirth in Mexican mythology, adding a cultural layer beyond the animal study.
More: Street Art by ROA in Mexico City

🧗 Pipe Balance — By Ibon Mainar in San Sebastián, Basque Country, Spain 🇪🇸
The existing wall pipes give the tiny figure something to interact with. The archive credits the piece and photo to Ibon Mainar in San Sebastián. It is a small scene powered by a strong idea, and every pipe suddenly feels intentional.
💡 Nerd Fact: Ibon Mainar often treats the setting as a collaborator. Designboom described his outside works as interventions that engage in conversation with their environments.
More: Street Art by Ibon Mainar in San Sebastián

🌈 Paint Up V.3 | Pixels — By Dihzahyners Project in Beirut, Lebanon 🇱🇧
The plain staircase becomes a burst of color and pattern. The project’s Behance archive identifies this Paint Up volume as V.3 | Pixels, painted on 73 steps on Mar Mikhael Street by a team of designers from Dihzahyners. It turns a practical piece of the city into something joyful.
💡 Nerd Fact: The speed is part of the story: Dihzahyners’ Behance post says the 73-step staircase was completed in seven hours by about a dozen designers.
More: Painted Steps by Dihzahyners Project

🛏️ Building as Bedroom — By Collective IMVG in Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain 🇪🇸
The huge exterior façade becomes an impossible interior scene. The archive credits Collective IMVG and thanks Begoña Gómez García for the photo. Vitoria-Gasteiz’s city page describes IMVG as a public and community expression project, which fits the architectural energy here.
💡 Nerd Fact: IMVG was founded in 2007 by Christina Werckmeister, Verónica Werckmeister, and Brenan Duarte; the city says the initiative has created 19 large-scale public mural workshops.
More: Street Art by Collective IMVG in Vitoria-Gasteiz

💀 Neon Skull — By Txemy Basualto in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
This wall packs the punch of a graphic poster. Txemy’s official biography identifies him as Txemy Basualto, an artist based in Barcelona whose work is rooted in color. This skull makes that point instantly. The sharp shape and bright palette make it hard to scroll past.
💡 Nerd Fact: Txemy’s roots are more international than the Barcelona wall suggests: his official bio identifies him as a Chile-Canary Island artist, born in 1981, based in Barcelona from 2001, and painting since 1994.
More: Street Art by Txemy in Barcelona

🔺 Paint Up V.4 | Triangular — By Dihzahyners Project in Beirut, Lebanon 🇱🇧
Another dull staircase becomes a full-color experience. StepFeed’s overview of Dihzahyners’ Paint Up projects identifies this one as Paint Up V.4 | Triangular. The geometry turns every step into part of a larger rhythm, making the climb feel like a mural you can walk through.
💡 Nerd Fact: Dihzahyners was built as a color-driven civic project, not just a staircase trend. The Anna Lindh Foundation profile says the team aimed to make Beirut brighter and more beautiful through color.
More: Dihzahyners in Beirut, Lebanon

🛸 Use the Force — By JPS in the UK 🇬🇧
A small pop-culture reference becomes a sharp street joke. JPS’s official website confirms the artist behind the initials, and this quick stencil shows his gift for compact visual humor. It is clear, fast, and perfectly placed to make you smile.
💡 Nerd Fact: JPS is not just a mysterious tag: URBAN NATION identifies him as Jamie Paul Scanlon, born in Weston-super-Mare near Bristol, which is why so much of his work is rooted in the UK street-art scene.
More: Use the Force by JPS

🧩 Madrid Wall Figure — By Sfhir Ogt Lcsiete in Barrio Arganzuela, Madrid, Spain 🇪🇸
The original archive credits the artist as Sfhir Ogt Lcsiete and the photo to Diana Guido, placing the mural in Barrio Arganzuela on calle de la Batalla del Belchite. The rough wall becomes a natural part of the body and the scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: Sfhir’s technique is unusually broad: Street Art Cities says the Madrid-born artist began in graffiti in 1995 and combines tools such as airbrushes, spray guns, brushes, and rollers.
More: Mural by Sfhir Ogt Lcsiete in Madrid, photo by Diana Guido

🕊️ Blue Wall Breath — By C215 in Oslo, Norway 🇳🇴
This stencil work gives the wall a strong human presence. StreetArtNews documented C215’s 2012 Oslo visit, noting the vibrant, intricate stencils he left for pedestrians. The blue surface and delicate details make the image quiet but memorable.
💡 Nerd Fact: C215 is the street name of Christian Guémy, and his portraits often focus on people who are overlooked. In a quoted artist statement, C215 says he tries to turn anonymous people in the city into icons.
More: Street Art by C215 in Oslo
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Only in America: 27 Street Art Finds From the Street Art Utopia Archive
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Absolutely Beautiful i love this so much
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Great idea but scary
Simple but funny i love it
[…] 50 Forgotten Street Art Gems […]
Funny!
Really witty!
Amazing
😍
Brilliant but scary!
Brilliant
Sooooo beautiful 😍
Simple but really funny!