When Nature Gets Through (15 Photos)
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Nature takes the lead here.
A bird sign turns one line into a habitat lesson. Beach stones become a sculpture only the tide gets to finish. Across these 15 works, city walls open to rivers, forests, gardens, birds, foxes, deer, dragonflies, lizards and flowers.
More: Nature Meets Art (22 Photos)

🐦 Plant Trees for Birdsong
One sentence, no fluff: if you want birdsong, make places where birds can live. The sign is blunt, a little funny, and hard to argue with. A cage gives you one bird. A tree gives birds a reason to stay.
💡 Nerd Fact: The strongest part of the sign is the tree, not the punchline. Audubon’s native-plant guide frames planting as a way to create bird-friendly habitat, while Max Planck researchers found that short birdsong soundscapes reduced anxiety and paranoia in a 2022 experiment. A “plant trees” poster is basically tiny urban planning.
More: 16 Stunning Bird-Inspired Street Art Murals from Around the World

🌊 “Direct” — By Jon Foreman in Poppit Sands, Wales 🇬🇧
Jon Foreman works with the beach, not against it. In his post for “Direct”, he notes that the 2025 piece was made at Poppit Sands from real stones placed by hand. White stones sweep across the wet sand in a wide circular current; then the sea, wind and tide take over.
💡 Nerd Fact: Foreman’s “Sculpt the World” practice has built-in disappearance: his own bio says the works are made mostly from natural materials and are nearly always short lived because sea, wind and rain take them back. The tide is not vandalism here; it is the closing credits.
More: We Are Diving Into the Breathtaking World of Jon Foreman Today (15 Photos)
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🌿 “Historiantes” — By Cero Catorce in Panchimalco, El Salvador 🇸🇻
Cero Catorce shared this wall as “Historiantes”, painted for Pigmentrip Festival in Panchimalco. Green and blue layers turn a face into water, leaves and small points of light, while the windows and cables keep the dream tied to the neighborhood.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Historiantes” is not just a poetic title. El Salvador’s Ministry of Culture names Los Historiantes and Los Chapetones among the traditional dances of Panchimalco’s Fiesta de las Flores y las Palmas, a celebration where Indigenous and Christian elements overlap. The word carries living street theatre inside it.
🔗 Follow Cero Catorce on Instagram and Pigmentrip Festival on Instagram

💧 “Beyond the Surface” — By Paul Watty in Goirle, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Street Art Cities documents “Beyond the Surface” at Melkweg 22 in Goirle, one of two Paul Watty murals built around De Leij, the small river that shaped the area. The dragonfly rests on a water lily, with windows cutting through the riverbank scene without breaking it.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title is extra literal if you know dragonflies. The British Dragonfly Society explains that dragonflies spend most of their lives in the larval stage underwater, often for one or two years, before the brief flying adult stage. The animal on the wall has a whole hidden river-life before it ever gets wings.
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🦎 “زهر البرتقال” — By Guillem Font in Rabat, Morocco 🇲🇦
Guillem Font treats the building like a huge botanical drawing. JIDAR’s final shots list the work at 14.35 m × 11 m and connect the orange blossom to small identity-related details that link culture, memory and place. Pale flowers cover the facade, dark leaves wrap around the windows, and a spotted lizard slips through the middle like it owns the place.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Arabic title means “orange blossom,” and in Morocco that flower is not just decoration. AP reported that orange-blossom water is distilled into a scent used in pastries, mint tea and religious ceremonies, while the Zahria Festival has helped revive the tradition. The mural’s flower is also a smell-memory.
🔗 Follow Guillem Font on Instagram and JIDAR on Instagram

🏔️ “Ecosistemi Urbani” — By Edoardo Ongarato in Gubbio, Italy 🇮🇹
Edoardo Ongarato uses the underside of a bridge as a sheltered landscape. The TAG 2025 listing from Informagiovani Gubbio places “Ecosistemi Urbani” at Sottopasso Via Perugina, Cavalcavia S.S. 219. Mountains, forest, vines and a grayscale face overlap under the concrete beams: heavy bridge above, quiet green below.
💡 Nerd Fact: Gubbio has been telling human-wildlife coexistence stories for centuries. The National Gallery’s note on Sassetta’s “Wolf of Gubbio” retells the local legend of Francis making peace with a wolf around 1220, after promising the animal would be fed if it stopped attacking the city. That makes “urban ecosystems” feel very Gubbio: not nature outside town, but a pact inside it.
🔗 Follow Edoardo Ongarato on Instagram

🌺 “Colibri des Caraïbes” — By Curtis Hylton in Fort-de-France, Martinique 🇲🇶
This hummingbird looks grown from the wall, not placed on top of it. Curtis Hylton wrote that he chose the hummingbird for its cultural and symbolic significance to Martinique, then built the bird’s bouquet from island flora. A small body, a full garden in flight.
💡 Nerd Fact: Martinique is tiny, but its hummingbirds are a whole chapter. Official Martinique tourism lists four hummingbird species on the island, including the blue-headed hummingbird, endemic to Martinique and Dominica and described there as the rarest. So “Colibri” here is not a generic tropical bird; it sits inside a very specific island bird map.
More: “Colibri des Caraïbes” by Curtis Hylton
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🕊️ “CE QUI NOUS LIE” — By Cédric Yelow in Fort-de-France, Martinique 🇲🇶
The title means “what binds us,” and the mural keeps that feeling loose and living. Yelow described it as an ArtMada work around the theme “lyannaj karaib,” while Street Art Cities lists the artist-added marker at 96 Rue Perrinon. A human figure, a white bird and tropical plants share the same wall — connection, but no cage.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Lyannaj” is doing work in the background. Fondation Lyannaj explains the Creole word as alliance, connection, union, association or link, while Kariculture glosses it as collaboration. So the title “what binds us” and the festival theme are speaking the same language before the image even starts.
More: “CE QUI NOUS LIE” by Cédric Yelow
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🐓 “Territori Potablava” — By Miquel Wert in El Prat de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
Miquel Wert paints the humble chicken with the seriousness of a family portrait. El Prat’s city news explains that the large mural on Carrer de Tossa de Mar, near Granja de la Ricarda, translates Xavi Mateo’s Potablava image into public space, realised by Wert with artist Albert Guasch and coordinated by Fundació Contorno Urbano. Nature does not always arrive as a majestic eagle. Sometimes it scratches around close to home.
💡 Nerd Fact: Potablava literally means “blue leg” in Catalan, and the bird is protected as local food heritage. Gastroteca notes that Pollastre i Capó del Prat carries the European Protected Geographical Indication seal and that each chicken for sale has a numbered label. That chicken is less “farmyard extra” and more civic emblem.
More: “Territori Potablava” by Miquel Wert
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🐦 “Vuelo y Respeto” — By KATO in Casablanca, Morocco 🇲🇦
KATO’s own site lists this Casablanca wall as “Vuelo y Respeto”, a 15 × 9 m mural. Street Art Cities gives the English title “Flight and Respect” and notes the swallows, almond blossoms and tile colors as a nod to migration, love and the nearby Hassan II Mosque. The wall feels lighter because the birds refuse to sit still.
💡 Nerd Fact: The birds can be read like travelers. The Swiss Ornithological Institute notes that European barn swallows spend the northern winter in Africa south of the Sahara, with routes that vary by breeding population. A swallow on a Casablanca wall is also a tiny border-crosser.
More: Cute Art By KATO (7 Photos)
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👑 Crowned Crane — By TUZQ in Mol, Belgium 🇧🇪
TUZQ gives this grey crowned crane the scale usually saved for kings, monuments and saints. The artist’s caption calls the wall “Crane (bird)” for Tunnelvisie Mol. The bird looks calm, proud and fully in charge of the wall — not decoration, but a presence you have to look up to.
💡 Nerd Fact: Grey crowned cranes are not just fancy-looking. The International Crane Foundation lists them as Endangered, with a decreasing population and threats including wetland loss, live capture, poisoning, power-line collisions and land development. A royal crown on the head, but a very un-royal conservation situation.
More: Crane Bird by TUZQ in Mol, Belgium
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♻️ Parrot — By Bordalo II in Lisbon, Portugal 🇵🇹
Bordalo II makes a bird out of trash, which sharpens the message. The parrot is bright and alive-looking, but it is built from the kind of waste that harms the natural world. Beautiful, funny, and a little uncomfortable.
💡 Trash Fact: Bordalo II’s official “Big Trash Animals” page says the series is about the contrast between the animal and the waste materials used to create it, because those materials are often responsible for destroying habitats. The parrot is made from the crime scene.
More: A Collection of Street Art by Bordalo II
🔗 Visit Bordalo II’s website

🦊 “Stadsnatuur” — By Nina Valkhoff in Rotterdam, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Art Office Rotterdam lists the work as “Stadsnatuur” in Doelstraat by Hofplein, and Valkhoff says the fox celebrates a real piece of Rotterdam wildlife. The mural sits near Hofplein. The wild is not somewhere else. It is still in the city.
💡 Fox Fact: Rotterdam’s urban wildlife gets gloriously weird. The Natural History Museum Rotterdam’s “Pure Resilience” exhibition used specimens from the Rotterdam-Rijnmond area to show how nature adapts to city life, including a city-fox stomach full of shoarma kebab. That fox is local enough to have a takeaway order.
More: Enchanting Street Art by Nina Valkhoff
🔗 Visit Nina Valkhoff’s website

🦌 Woodland Deer — By Bmore Sketchy in Houston, Scotland 🇬🇧
This mural reads like a woodland opening on a public wall. Bmore Sketchy shared it as a completed project on the side of a house in Houston, Renfrewshire. Deer rest by a stream, a butterfly moves through the scene, and a child watches quietly; the wall does not disappear, but it softens.
💡 Deer Fact: Renfrewshire’s deer are not decorative folklore. NatureScot’s Renfrewshire deer statement says roe deer are the main deer species regularly present in the area, and roe deer are one of Scotland’s two native deer species. So the woodland scene is grounded in an actual local mammal list.
More: Wildlife on Walls (8 Photos)
🔗 Follow Bmore Sketchy on Instagram

🦋 “Alive” — By ZABOU in Walthamstow, London, UK 🇬🇧
ZABOU keeps the mural lush and a little haunted. In her own post, she describes “Alive” as a 9 × 4 m Walthamstow mural at PureMuscle Gym, organized by Blank Walls and part of a series responding to the theme “Strength.” A grayscale face and skull sit among red and pink flowers, while a monarch butterfly pulls the eye back to life.
💡 Monarch Fact: The monarch butterfly is a powerful choice next to death imagery. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service says monarchs routinely migrate up to 3,000 miles between Mexico and eastern North America, while Smithsonian Folklife notes that in central Mexican Indigenous traditions monarchs have been linked to souls of ancestors returning from the afterlife. The insect is a survival story and a ghost story at once.
🔗 Follow ZABOU on Instagram
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Made Me Feel (10 Photos)
When the material does the storytelling. In these 10 works, the material is not hidden behind…
It is awaresomeand is presenting the nature’s beauty
It’s cool
WOW! Exquisite & majestic. Strength & tenderness. Harmonious.
😍
What a lovely gift to have presented to every passer-by’s eye and soul.
Very cool
He’s just brilliant!
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