35 Street Art Gems From Brazil Full of Color and Imagination
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Brazilian street art can be massive, intimate, political, funny, and full of color. This collection gathers 35 photos from across the country — from São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro to Manaus, Belo Horizonte, Florianópolis, Petrolina, and beyond.
💡 Nerd Fact: São Paulo has its own street-writing universe called pichação, often stylized as pixação: a tall, angular style linked to protest, punk and heavy-metal lettering, and the city’s inequality. The Guardian’s deep dive explains why it is much more than “messy tags.”

🌆 City of Faces — By Eduardo Kobra for Sesc Minas in Belo Horizonte, Brazil 🇧🇷
That Kobra palette is hard to miss: geometric blocks, huge scale, and faces that carry the wall. Sesc Minas announced the mural as an approximately 1,000-square-meter work on the side of its Belo Horizonte headquarters, facing Avenida Olegário Maciel. Kobra dedicated the mural to workers and everyday people in the city.
💡 Nerd Fact: Belo Horizonte is not just another big Brazilian city: Britannica notes that it was planned and built in the late 19th century to replace Ouro Preto as the capital of Minas Gerais.
More: Eduardo Kobra in Belo Horizonte on Street Art Utopia
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🌙 Between Two Walls — By Davi DMS in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Davi DMS uses two neighboring walls like two panels of one story. The figures, fish, moon symbols, and water reflections make the courtyard feel private, as if the buildings are keeping the scene to themselves. The project post credits the work to Davi DMS in São Paulo for Projeto MAR / Museu de Arte de Rua, with photography by Clickairbh.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Museu de Arte de Rua angle matters here: according to the World Cities Culture Forum, São Paulo’s MAR program was created to democratize access to urban art and decentralize creative production across the city.
More: Davi DMS in São Paulo on Street Art Utopia
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🐓 Angry Chicken — By Wellington Galone in Santa Isabel, Brazil 🇧🇷
This one works immediately, even as a tiny thumbnail. Wellington Galone gives the chicken sharp eyes, wild feathers, and enough attitude to hold its own next to the red and yellow lettering.
More: 10 New Street Art Murals from Brazil You Should See
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😊 I Want to See You Smile — By Diego Nobre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 🇧🇷
Diego Nobre puts a huge smile on the corner. The blue wall, yellow Brazil shirt, spray can, and laughing face keep the mood simple and direct. The message reads “Quero te ver sorrir” — “I want to see you smile” — and the painting delivers it clearly.
More: 10 New Street Art Murals from Brazil You Should See
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🦚 “La Selva en carnaval” — By Julián Cruz Solano in Petrolina, Brazil 🇧🇷
Julián Cruz Solano pushes a jaguar into peacock territory. Street Art Cities lists the piece as “La Selva en carnaval.” It was created for BEIRA, with the wall at R. Escritor Ariano Suassuna, 316, Jardim São Paulo, Petrolina. The face keeps its feline stare, while teal and purple feathers fan out around it like a bright, strange crown.
💡 Nerd Fact: The address name is a literary breadcrumb: Ariano Suassuna was the Brazilian writer behind Auto da Compadecida and a key figure in the Northeastern “Armorial Movement,” as Britannica summarizes.
More: 10 New Street Art Murals from Brazil You Should See
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🦋 “Morphos” — By Filite in Taboão da Serra, Brazil 🇧🇷
Filite breaks the portrait into wings, smoke, and color. Streetartpedia’s post credits “Morphos” to Filite in Taboão da Serra for Graffiti Contra Enchente. The butterflies are not just decoration; they cut through the face and rebuild it, halfway between realism and a dream.
💡 Nerd Fact: Blue morpho butterflies are a science trick: their famous blue is structural color rather than blue pigment, created by microscopic structures that reflect and diffract light, as AskNature explains.
More: “Morphos” by Filite on Street Art Utopia
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🩺 Science and Faith — By Eduardo Kobra in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Kobra makes a simple gesture fill the whole wall. His project page for “Ciência e Fé” describes the mural as a 200-square-meter work on the façade of Hospital das Clínicas, made for São Paulo’s 468th anniversary and built around the idea that science and faith can stand together. The praying hands, stethoscope, and color blocks carry the message without needing much explanation.
💡 Nerd Fact: The hospital wall is loaded with context: FMUSP describes Hospital das Clínicas as part of the University of São Paulo and one of the largest hospital complexes in Latin America.
More: The Daily 10! – Graffiti and Street Art News #11
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🌿 Nature Taking Over — By Tito Ferrara in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Tito Ferrara lets the living plants do part of the portrait work. The greenery falls over the painted face like hair, shadow, and cover, so the mural feels rooted in the wall instead of placed on top of it. The work sits in Praça do Pôr do Sol, where the plants and the open-air setting are part of the piece.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Praça do Pôr do Sol” is the nickname most people use: the park’s own site explains that the official name is Praça Coronel Custódio Fernandes Pinheiros, in Alto de Pinheiros.
More: Nature Taking Over in São Paulo
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🎭 Vertical Imagination — By Jey77 in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Jey77 packs the building sides with faces, loops, creatures, and floating shapes. The lavender background keeps the rush of lines readable, even at this scale.
💡 Nerd Fact: The scale fits the city: Britannica describes São Paulo as the largest city in the Southern Hemisphere and one of the world’s largest conurbations.
More: The Daily 10! – Graffiti and Street Art News #11
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🚀 Are You Ready? — By Gardpam in Manaus, Brazil 🇧🇷
Gardpam gives the building a lift-off moment. The character shoots upward with headphones, space, and bright yellow energy under the shoes. It reads like a launchpad with personality. The work was painted at Mural Living for FAW 2021.
💡 Nerd Fact: Manaus is not a small jungle outpost; Britannica describes it as one of the Amazon basin’s largest urban centres, sitting deep in the rainforest on the Rio Negro.
More: Gardpam in Manaus on Street Art Utopia
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🐦 Mech Dove — By Denys Evol in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Denys Evol gives a city pigeon a sci-fi upgrade. The bird still feels familiar, but the metallic panels and mechanical body make it look ready for a cyberpunk alley.
💡 Nerd Fact: City pigeons have a surprisingly ancient human connection: Cornell’s All About Birds notes that cuneiform tablets and Egyptian hieroglyphics point to pigeons being domesticated more than 5,000 years ago.
More: Mech Dove by Denys Evol
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🐟 “CAI-A-MAR” — By Saulo Metria in Cajamar, Brazil 🇧🇷
Saulo Metria makes the wall feel fluid. In his own post, he describes “CAI-A-MAR” as a homage to Cajamar, created especially for SESI Cajamar. The profile, fish, flowers, and blue-orange ribbons all move upward together against the deep blue background.
💡 Nerd Fact: SESI is part of Brazil’s worker support and education network: the National Industry Confederation’s SESI page says the Social Service of Industry was created in 1946 to support education, health, safety, and quality of life for workers.
More: 106 Of The Most Beloved Street Art Photos – Year 2024
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🌊 “Iemanjá” — By Henrique Montanari / EDMX in Florianópolis, Brazil 🇧🇷
Henrique Montanari, also known as EDMX, wraps the building in waves, flowers, and a calm grayscale portrait. His official site lists the Florianópolis project as “Magic”, while his Instagram materials identify the interactive mural as “Iemanjá,” created for Magic Surfboards. The blues lean coastal, and the yellow flowers pull the eye back to the face.
💡 Nerd Fact: Iemanjá is the Brazilian form of the Yoruba deity Yemonja; Britannica describes Yemonja as a life-giving, motherly deity in the Yoruba pantheon, while Brazilian coastal festivals connect her strongly with the sea.
More: 106 Of The Most Beloved Street Art Photos – Year 2024
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🌺 “Conexão” / “Connection” — By Yanoe in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 🇧🇷
Yanoe treats the long wall like a wide scene. His own post names the mural “Conexão” and says it was painted in Rio de Janeiro for the G20 summit. Two faces look in different directions, flowers fill the foreground, and the dark city lights in the background give it a quiet sense of place.
💡 Nerd Fact: Rio was not just a backdrop for this mural: the official G20 Brazil documents place the 2024 Leaders’ Summit in Rio de Janeiro on November 18–19, under the motto “Building a fair world and a sustainable planet.”
More: New Street Art #1
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💙 Blue Bloom — By Clara Leff in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Clara Leff makes a narrow high wall feel soft and large. The blue portraits are calm and watchful, and the flowers around them make a loose frame. Street Art Cities records this 2025 Clara Leff wall at Alameda Glete, 1051, Campos Elíseos, São Paulo.
💡 Nerd Fact: Campos Elíseos carries old urban-planning DNA: this history of the neighborhood describes it as São Paulo’s first planned neighborhood, created around the railway boom of the late 19th century.
More: New Street Art #1
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🧺 Women of the Favela — By Megan Oldhues in Mongaguá, Brazil 🇧🇷
Megan Oldhues paints a daily task with care. Her own post for “Women of the Favela” explains the community focus behind the scene and notes that the wall faces a bus stop used by working women. The clothesline stretches across the wall like a small neighborhood moment, and the blue tones keep it quiet and close.
💡 Nerd Fact: The word “favela” has a specific origin story: Britannica traces it to Morro da Favela in Rio, where Canudos War soldiers settled while waiting for government payment.
More: Women of the Favela by Megan Oldhues
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💃 “Preta Solar” — By Veracidade in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Veracidade makes the whole corner join the mural. The artist identifies the work as “Preta Solar” at Solar da Marquesa de Santos, where it was part of Museu da Cidade de São Paulo’s “Intersecções” exhibition. The figure leans into laughter and movement, bringing the neighborhood into a historic downtown setting.
💡 Nerd Fact: Solar da Marquesa de Santos is not just a pretty location; Museu da Cidade de São Paulo says Domitila de Castro Canto e Melo, the Marquesa de Santos, owned the building from 1834 to 1867.
More: A Mural by Veracidade Celebrates Resilience and Joy
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🦋 Future Hope — By PRETO in Perus, São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
PRETO puts sci-fi armor beside flowers, butterflies, and a huge smile. The Gigantes das Ruaz project post places the work in Perus, on the northwest side of São Paulo. The contrast carries it: metal and nature, toughness and softness, all against a deep blue wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: Perus has a deep labor-history link: the Centro de Memória Queixadas preserves records of the long strike by workers at the Perus Portland cement factory, one of the neighborhood’s defining labor memories.
More: 9 New Street Art Highlights From Around the World
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🦇 Batman — By Raffa.Febre and Vinao in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
This wall goes full comic-book mode without losing the spray-painted texture. Street Art Cities records the work as “Batman” by Raffa Febre and Vinao Tattoo, created in 2025 at R. Gonçalo Afonso, 86, Jardim das Bandeiras, São Paulo. The masked figure rises over a purple and green city, with bats, smoke, and glow around it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Batman’s mural life is global now, but the character began in print: DC’s official character page lists his first appearance as Detective Comics #27 in 1939.
More: 9 New Street Art Highlights From Around the World
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🛵 Capybara Delivery — By Bruno Dhoar in Curitiba, Brazil 🇧🇷
Bruno Dhoar gives the capybara a side job. The animal sits on a bright pink scooter like it has done this route for years.
💡 Nerd Fact: The delivery driver is a heavyweight: Britannica identifies the capybara as the largest living rodent in the world, growing to about 1.3 meters long.
More: New Street Art #4

🦍 “YAOUNDÉ in Full Color” — By NOE TWO in Itaparica, Brazil 🇧🇷
NOE TWO’s own post names this Bahia de Todas as Cores mural “YAOUNDÉ in Full Color”, painted on Ilha de Itaparica. The gorilla has attitude and serious wall presence. The pinks, oranges, and purples push it into a loud graffiti world, closer to an album cover than a zoo sign.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title points far beyond Bahia: Yaoundé is Cameroon’s capital, and WWF notes that western lowland gorillas are found in Cameroon and several neighboring Central African countries.
More: 10 Stunning New Street Art Murals From Around the World
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🚋 Santa Teresa Tram — By André Kajaman in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 🇧🇷
André Kajaman makes good use of the sloped wall. The painted tram follows the angle like it is climbing the street, and the person standing on it finishes the illusion. The intervention plays with one of Santa Teresa’s icons near Rua André Cavalcanti in Santa Teresa.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Santa Teresa tram is protected heritage, not just a cute yellow ride: Riotur notes that the bondes were listed by Rio’s state heritage institute, Inepac, in 1988.
More: The Santa Teresa Tram by André Kajaman
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🌈 Employee of the Month — By Bip Apollo in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Bip Apollo turns the wall into a candy-colored billboard from another planet. His own artwork archive lists “Employee of the Month – São Paulo”, while StreetArtNews documented it as a 16-story façade project. Skeleton character, rainbow, clouds, gold details, pink background — it all clashes in the right way.
💡 Nerd Fact: Big façades in São Paulo have a special urban backstory: after the Clean City Law removed thousands of advertising signs, blank building surfaces became even more visible as potential civic canvases.
More: Bip Apollo in São Paulo on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Visit Bip Apollo’s artwork page

🐦 Abstract Flight — By L7m in Brazil 🇧🇷
L7m’s birds often sit somewhere between anatomy and pure motion. Hi-Fructose documented L7m’s abstract bird murals as a recurring language of avian forms fractured into color, movement, and sketch-like lines. Here, the bird breaks across the wall in bright flashes, smoky strokes, and sharp energy.
💡 Bird Nerd Fact: Brazil is a huge bird map: Avibase lists more than 1,900 bird species recorded in the country, which helps explain why avian imagery feels so at home in Brazilian mural culture.
More: Street Art in Brazil – By L7m
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🦸 Vision — By Edy Hp and Paulo Terra in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Edy Hp and Paulo Terra bring superhero gloss to the street with a clean, high-impact portrait of Vision. The metallic face, magenta tones, and bright circular background feel like a pop-art close-up made with spray cans.
💡 Nerd Fact: Vision’s comic-book origin is older than many people think: Marvel lists Avengers #57 from 1968 as the character’s first appearance.
More: Superhero Mural in São Paulo on Street Art Utopia
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👁️ Urban Explorations: Secret — By Filite in Minas Gerais, Brazil 🇧🇷
Filite’s second piece here is quieter, but the eye still catches you. The original Instagram source places the work in Filite’s “Urban Explorations” series in Minas Gerais. The face appears through rushing lines and soft color, like a memory left on an abandoned interior wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: Even the state name is a history clue: Britannica explains that “Minas Gerais” means “General Mines,” pointing to the region’s mineral wealth and colonial mining past.
More: Urban Explorations Secret by Filite
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🟣 Triple Gaze — By GELIN in Macaé, Brazil 🇧🇷
GELIN layers the portrait like a time-lapse. Painted for Kolirius Internacional, the repeated face, deep purples, orange flowers, and black background give the piece a strong graphic pulse.
💡 Nerd Fact: Macaé is tied to Brazil’s offshore-energy story: the city’s own site says the Campos Basin once supplied most of Brazil’s oil production, helping give Macaé the nickname “National Oil Capital”.
More: 106 Of The Most Beloved Street Art Photos – Year 2024

💧 Immersion — By Jennifer Erny in Peruíbe, São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Jennifer Erny turns the wall into deep water. Her Behance project identifies “Immersion” as created and executed for Espaço Salgado Art Residency in Peruíbe, and her Instagram post also places the mural at that residency. The floating body, rippled surface, and small plant keep the scene suspended between sinking and sleeping.
💡 Nerd Fact: Peruíbe sits near serious Atlantic Forest geography: São Paulo’s protected-areas guide describes Juréia-Itatins Ecological Station as 84,425 hectares and one of Brazil’s best-preserved Atlantic Forest stretches.
More: 6 New Discoveries: Street Art Gems
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😎 Cool Cat — By Vrartes in Indaiatuba, Brazil 🇧🇷
Vrartes keeps it simple and funny. The cat’s giant sunglasses turn the windows into part of the face, while the pink wall and real tree make the corner feel like a neighborhood mascot.
More: Graffiti and Street Art News #3

🌸 Garden Bird — By Subor Azteka in Novo Hamburgo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Subor Azteka makes the wall feel like a small garden stop. The blue and red bird stands out against the warm background, and the painted flowers meet the real plants below. The mural was painted for Sítio Pé na Terra in Novo Hamburgo.
💡 Nerd Fact: Novo Hamburgo has a very different kind of craft history: Britannica notes that the city was founded by Germans, named after Hamburg, and became known for shoes, hides, and leather.
More: New Street Art #1

🐦 Pixel Birds — By Kelvin Koubik in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Kelvin Koubik mixes birds and plants with a digital-looking graphic world. His post places the mural in Pinheiros, São Paulo, and describes a process built from multiple techniques and a planned layout. Pixels and bold color blocks cut through the nature shapes, giving the building a glitchy tropical feel.
More: New Street Art #5
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🤖 Cyber Punk Nature — By Pedro Benjamim in Passo Fundo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Pedro Benjamim imagines machinery with roots. His post for “Cyber Punk Nature” frames the mural around technology and nature for Frost Walls Festival in Passo Fundo. The glowing green eyes, metal face, circuit shapes, and plant-like forms inside the head make the sci-fi idea feel oddly organic.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Cyberpunk” is a literary word with 1980s roots: Britannica notes that the movement took off with William Gibson’s Neuromancer in 1984, long before the term became a common visual aesthetic.
More: New Street Art #5
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😁 Colorful Laugh — By Leo Barbosa in Porto Alegre, Brazil 🇧🇷
Leo Barbosa paints a laugh at full wall size. His post describes the mural as a 9-by-6-meter work in Cidade Baixa, Porto Alegre, made with Anita Encantado. The giant smile, bright headwrap, and warm shadows carry the energy, while the person standing nearby shows the scale.
More: New Street Art #5

🎈 Dreaming Upward — By William Mophos / William Amaro Costa in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
William Mophos turns the wall into a small dream about escape. The child rests below a thought bubble where a tiny figure floats away with balloons. The result is simple, tender, and a little sad.
More: William Mophos / William Amaro Costa in São Paulo on Street Art Utopia
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🔴 Vidigal Colors — By NOE TWO in Vidigal, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 🇧🇷
This older NOE TWO piece still holds up. The profile, patterned fabric, warm red background, and layered colors give it both softness and graphic force — a strong closing wall from Rio de Janeiro.
💡 Nerd Fact: Vidigal is tied to one of Rio’s great viewpoints: Riotur says the Morro Dois Irmãos trail begins in the Vidigal community and ends at the top of the “older brother,” with wide views across Rio’s South Zone.
More: NOE TWO in Favela Vidigal on Street Art Utopia
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