Want To See Something Clever? Start Here (12 Photos)
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These works only make sense where they were made.
A concrete dome supplies a beetle’s shell. An underpass stages a fight. Real mountains carry a mural beyond the roofline. In all 12 works, the site supplies a part the artist could not create alone.
More: Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings

🪲 “Touching Earth” — By Odeith in Portugal 🇵🇹
Odeith shared this dome transformation as “Touching Earth”. The concrete dome already had the right shape. Odeith used its curve for the beetle’s striped shell, then carried the legs and antennae onto the surrounding walls. A person pushing against one antenna helps sell the scale.
More: Amazing 3D Illusions by Odeith (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Odeith on Instagram

🗼 Pisa Pole — Artist Unknown in Philadelphia, USA 🇺🇸
A leaning parking pole at 5th and Gaskill Streets was already doing most of the work. Philadelphia public-art journal Streets Dept traces the mural to a woman connected to a corner coffee shop in the mid-1990s, although her name remains unconfirmed. Rows of black-and-white arches make the tilt feel intentional rather than broken.
More: Leaning Tower of Pisa in Philadelphia

🐍 “The Golden Legend” — By SFHIR in Guarda, Portugal 🇵🇹
SFHIR makes the zigzagging stairways part of the snake. Street Art Cities lists “The Golden Legend” as a SFHIR work for SIAC2 2017 at R. 31 de Janeiro 75b in Guarda. Each landing hides and reveals another section of the body, so the reptile seems to wind through the concrete rather than sit on a flat wall.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Golden Legend is also the name of a widely read 13th-century collection of saints’ lives, including Saint George’s encounter with a dragon. Whether SFHIR intended that reference is not confirmed.
More: The Golden Legend by SFHIR
🔗 Follow SFHIR on Instagram

🔥❄️ Mortal Kombat Underpass — By Gnasher Murals & Nathan Murdoch in Peterborough, UK 🇬🇧
Gnasher Murals and Nathan Murdoch turn the underpass into a fighting arena. Scorpion burns across one sloping wall, Sub-Zero freezes the other, and the dark tunnel between them becomes the game’s stage. Nathan Murdoch identifies the matchup as Scorpion versus Sub-Zero, with Gnasher Murals painting Scorpion and Murdoch painting Sub-Zero.
🎮 Game Fact: The Strong National Museum of Play notes that Mortal Kombat was first conceived around Jean-Claude Van Damme before the developers created their own fighting-game universe.
🔗 Follow Gnasher Murals on Instagram and Nathan Murdoch on Instagram

♻️ The Bin With a Face — By Mentalgassi
Mentalgassi wrapped a black-and-white portrait around a rounded recycling container, a classic use of the Berlin collective’s photographic street interventions. A Völklinger Hütte artist text describes how their trompe l’oeil images are pasted onto everyday street furniture, including bottle banks, lampposts, and railings. Here, the curve becomes the man’s bald head, while the face and beard line up across the metal surface.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Mentalgassi” is German wordplay that roughly translates as “mental walkies”—the idea of letting your thoughts roam as freely as a dog on a long leash.
More: Street Art by Mentalgassi from Berlin
🔗 Visit Mentalgassi’s website

🌿 “Tara” (Ivy Portrait) — By Fauxreel in Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦
This portrait, titled “Tara,” appears in Fauxreel’s Face of the City series, a group of site-specific portraits built around the scars and textures of urban surfaces. On his official site, Dan Bergeron says the shape, texture, location, history, and uses of a site dictate the form and content of his projects. Here, the ivy does the rest: the leaves become the woman’s hair and keep changing the portrait as they grow.
More: Fauxreel’s Ivy Portrait in Toronto
🔗 Follow Fauxreel on Instagram

🪟 “La Sole era como una ONG” — By Jesús Mateos Brea in Salorino, Spain 🇪🇸
Jesús Mateos Brea turns the facade into a portrait that could not belong to another building. The real barred window sits inside Sole’s blue floral shirt, while the uneven roofline opens around her head and the painted fields. The building does not interrupt the portrait; it completes it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Mateos Brea says the phrase came from the son of a Salorino shepherd, who remembered Sole helping shepherds moving their flocks seasonally from the 1950s through the 1970s.
🔗 Follow Jesús Mateos Brea on Instagram

🙈 “Hide & Seek” — By SMOK in Antwerp, Belgium 🇧🇪
Street Art Cities identifies this trompe l’oeil as “Hide & Seek”, part of the Fake Views project at Grotesteenweg 55 in Antwerp. SMOK placed the boy around the building corner, with his hands cupped around his eyes beside a real window. The pose follows the architecture so closely that the figure seems to lean into the building.
More: Mural by SMOK in Antwerp
🔗 Visit SMOK’s website

🤖 “The Twins” — By Lara Hochreiter in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
Lara Hochreiter paints the old Barcelona doors as if they open into another world. An Atomic Heart post places “The Twins” on Carrer de la Séquia. The wooden panels, hinges, locks, and central seam remain visible, making the robotic figures feel built into the doors rather than painted over them.
💡 Nerd Fact: The characters are Left and Right, described by the official Atomic Heart site as Comrade Sechenov’s personal assistants and bodyguards.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 6
🔗 Follow Lara Hochreiter on Instagram and Atomic Heart on Instagram

🛶 “Spilt Milk” — By Slinkachu in Grottaglie, Italy 🇮🇹
Slinkachu posted this miniature intervention as “Spilt Milk” from Grottaglie, Italy. A tipped cup spills white liquid across the ground; two tiny kayakers turn it into rapids, and the mess does the rest.
💡 Nerd Fact: Slinkachu’s tiny cast is made from remodelled and hand-painted model-railway figures. He photographs each scene and then leaves the miniature installation on the street, where it may be found, moved, or simply disappear.
More: 7 Tiny Street Dramas by Slinkachu
🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram

🌳 The Floating Tree — By Daniel Siering & Mario Schuster (Mario Shu) in Potsdam, Germany 🇩🇪
Daniel Siering and Mario Schuster, also known as Mario Shu, wrapped part of the trunk in foil and spray-painted it to match the road and field behind it; TwistedSifter documented the process photos and noted that the trick works from the right viewpoint. From one angle, that section disappears and the upper tree seems to float above the stump. Move a little to the side and the illusion falls apart.
More: The Floating Tree in Potsdam

🏔️ “Infinite Patience” — By Smug in Jasper, Canada 🇨🇦
Smug places a resting climber beneath painted orange peaks, then lets the real Rocky Mountains continue the scene beyond the roofline. The figure looks toward the landscape, so the location supplies the final layer. UpLift! shared “Infinite Patience” as part of its Recovery in Colour project.
💡 Nerd Fact: Parks Canada notes that Jasper National Park is part of the UNESCO Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site.
🔗 Follow Smug on Instagram and UpLift! Mural Festival on Instagram
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