This one is for the people who stop for every dog (12 Photos)
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For anyone who slows down for every dog, stick, shadow, and odd little sidewalk surprise, this collection is a treat.
A stick library, a chalk dog who dug too far, and wall-sized pups turn ordinary walks into small public-art moments.
More: Only for Dog Lovers (10 Photos)

🐕 Take a Stick, Leave a Smile — Dog Stick Library
Not a mural, no. Still pure street-art energy. Someone turned the small joy of a dog finding a stick into a public stop: a few branches, a white rack, and suddenly the walk has a tiny library.
💡 Nerd Fact: Dogs do not grab sticks only because they are comedians with paws. The ASPCA notes that chewing is normal canine behavior for fun, stimulation, and stress relief, while the Blue Cross warns that real sticks can splinter, cause choking, or injure a dog’s mouth, eyes, or body. Cute idea, but real-stick play is safest when supervised.
More: Dog Library: Take Stick, Leave a Stick

🕳️ Lucius the Overachiever — By David Zinn
Lucius looks like a dog who dug first and thought second. David Zinn captioned the piece: “Lucius has come to the realization that he might be a hole-digging overachiever.” One sidewalk crack carries the whole story: big plans, instant regret, and the face of a pup who may need a hand getting out.
More: Street Art by Happiness Maker David Zinn (21 Photos)
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🌊 “Onderwaterhond” / “The House Hippo” — By Smates in Mechelen, Belgium 🇧🇪
Smates gives the dog a full building to swim through: eyes wide, paws paddling under blue water, bubbles lifting around the body. Visit Mechelen lists the mural as “Onderwaterhond”, and Street Art Cities maps it at De Langhestraat 47. The wall feels less like a wall and more like someone paused a pool scene mid-splash.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Onderwaterhond” is simply Dutch for “underwater dog.” Visit Mechelen adds that Bart “Smates” Smeets is known for photographic work in streetscapes and his skill with spray cans. Translation: a wall-sized pool dog, no brush needed.
More: “The House Hippo” by Smates in Mechelen, Belgium
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💛 Olivia’s Yellow Circle — By Clara Leff in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
Clara Leff’s tribute to Olivia gives the dog the full hero treatment at R. Cipriano Jucá, 61, Vila Madalena: a calm face, a bright yellow circle, and all attention on the dog. The real Olivia sitting beside the wall makes it better. The model showed up for quality control.
💡 Nerd Fact: Olivia is in Vila Madalena, the same São Paulo neighborhood associated with Beco do Batman, one of the city’s best-known open-air graffiti spots. São Paulo’s tourism office says the alley got its name in the 1980s from a Batman graffiti that is no longer there. The link is simple: this dog portrait sits in a neighborhood already used to treating walls as public art. Source: Prefeitura de São Paulo.
More: A tribute to my Olivia, partner of my life
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🐟 “Khaleesi” — By Nina Valkhoff in Cheltenham, UK 🇬🇧
Nina Valkhoff’s own postcard listing names this Cheltenham mural “Khaleesi,” and Street Art Cities maps it at 2 Newton Road. A spotted dog, big flowers, and a floating goldfish share one wall, turning the building into a gentle urban wildlife scene.
💡 Nerd Fact: Valkhoff’s animal walls are not just cute urban-nature wallpaper. In a Mural Makers interview, she says her murals center on flora and fauna and often highlight endangered or lesser-known species, a hopeful approach she calls “subtile artivism.” That makes this dog-and-fish pairing feel connected to a bigger mission: bringing nature into everyday city life.
More: Love Lives Here: Animal Murals That Bring Streets to Life
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🏘️ “Pequeño Vecino / Little Neighbour” — By Megan Oldhues in Cancún, Mexico 🇲🇽
The dog sits there like it knows every neighbor. Street Art Cities’ artist-added marker describes “Pequeño Vecino / Little Neighbour” as an acrylic mural in Villas Otoch Paraíso. Oldhues keeps it mostly black and white, so the whole wall reads like a large charcoal drawing left outside on purpose.
💡 Nerd Fact: The “neighbour” part is not just a sweet title. Street Art Cities writes that Oldhues saw the animals of Villas Otoch Paraíso as part of the social fabric, fed by residents and woven into children’s daily life. Even the texture fits the story: many strokes were made with a broom head, a street-level tool turned into a painting tool.
More: Simply Breathtaking (8 Photos)
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🐶 Berlin Dogs — By One Truth Bros in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
One dog would have been enough. One Truth Bros went with a whole pack. One Truth’s own archive documents “Berlin Dogs” as a freehand mural for Berlin Muralfest 2021, and a Wikimedia Commons record also places it at Friedelstraße 23 in Berlin. The wall is full of cartoon dogs, each doing its own little thing, like the dog park spilled onto the building.
💡 Nerd Fact: This pack has a production flex hidden inside it. One Truth’s own project archive says “Berlin Dogs” is a 10 × 20 m mural painted freehand with spray cans and no electronic tools for Berlin Mural Street Art Fest 2021. That is basically a whole dog park drawn at building scale without a digital leash.
More: Berlin Dogs — Mural By One Truth Bros in Berlin, Germany
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🖤 “Cerbero” — By Trepo Parker for Black Dog in Mexico City, Mexico 🇲🇽
Trepo Parker gives these three dogs serious weight. In the artist’s linked post, the mural is titled “Cerbero” and made for Black Dog Mexico. The three heads stretch across the wall like a watchful pack, each looking somewhere else. Clean lines, serious faces, full-alert energy.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Cerbero” is Spanish for Cerberus, the mythic watchdog of Hades. Britannica notes that Cerberus was usually described with three heads and guarded the underworld. That makes Trepo Parker’s three-dog lineup feel less like a cute pack and more like an ancient security system.
More: Dog mural by Trepo Parker in Mexico City for Black Dog
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🚧 Guard Dog — By ROO in Kingston upon Thames, UK 🇬🇧
The dog is small. The shadow is not. ROO gets the joke across with a red gate, a tiny guard dog, and one wildly ambitious shadow. Big bark, tiny body.
💡 Nerd Fact: Guard-dog warnings are ancient graphic design. The famous Pompeii “cave canem” warning means “beware of the dog,” and Planet Pompeii notes that a growling-dog mosaic with those words sits near the entrance of the House of the Tragic Poet. ROO’s tiny barker feels like the funny descendant of a Roman front-door warning.
More: Guard dog by ROO in Kingston upon Thames, UK
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🎩 Gentleman Dog
Sometimes public art just needs the right dog at the right hole in the fence. The painted suit and hat set up the joke. The real pup’s head completes the portrait, with a shadow that makes him look ready to give a speech.
💡 Nerd Fact: The gentleman-dog joke has a famous commercial-art ancestor. Artsy traces Cassius Marcellus Coolidge’s poker-playing dogs to cigar-box imagery and a 1903 Brown & Bigelow calendar series that put human habits on canine bodies. This fence portrait is less random than it looks: dogs in people clothes have been selling the gag for more than a century.
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New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 9
New walls: 30 fresh street art finds with memory, folklore, satire, pop culture, and wild imagination.…
My fav is Lucius the Overachiever — By David Zinn
I love David Zins innocent querkyness. He always makes me smile.
[…] Source: This one is for the people who stop for every dog (12 Photos) – STREET ART UTOPIA […]
The shadow is smaller than the dog. The dog’s ears go nearly all the way to the top of the fence, the shadow’s ears are vertically challenged in comparison.
Shadows are often smaller than the object. Trace a line from the assumed high position of the sun, past the dog’s ears and the resultant shadow would be lower.
Brilliant 👏🏻