10 Sculptures Blending with Nature
Content warning: Nature is the best canvas and these artists know exactly how to use it! These amazing sculptures show how art can live in perfect harmony with the trees and the ground. Get ready for some outdoor magic. From giant trolls in the woods to floating windows i
Nature is the best canvas and these artists know exactly how to use it! These amazing sculptures show how art can live in perfect harmony with the trees and the ground.
Get ready for some outdoor magic. From giant trolls in the woods to floating windows in a field, these pieces will make you look twice. It is wonderful to see how artists use wood, leaves, and stones to tell stories in the wild.
More: 14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
š 1. Sleeping Boy ā By El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador
Shhh! This little guy is having a very comfortable nap. He has a leafy blanket that grows right out of the wall. It is a beautiful way to mix painting with real plants.
š Follow El Decertor on Facebook
šø 2. The Sleeping Beauty ā By Made in Graffiti in Picardie, France
This girl found the biggest bed in the world on a grassy hill. Even the sheep come by to visit her while she dreams. It shows that the earth can be the perfect sketchbook for large art.
š Follow Made in Graffiti on Instagram
š 3. Fluentem Colos ā Land Art by Jon Foreman in Little Milford, UK
Jon Foreman is a master of organizing the forest floor. He made these leaves look like a colorful wave flowing through the trees. It is amazing what you can create with just natural materials and a lot of patience.
More!: 10 Spellbinding New Stone Sculptures by Jon Foreman
š Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
š¹ 4. Mama Mimi the Troll ā Trash Art by Thomas Dambo in Wyoming, USA
Meet Mama Mimi! She is a giant troll made from wood that people did not want anymore. She loves hanging out by the river and letting children explore her giant wooden hair. Thomas Dambo shows us that trash can become something truly magical.
More!: 10 Giant Trolls Hiding in Forests, Lakes and Ruins
š Follow Thomas Dambo on Instagram
š¬ļø 5. Stillness in Motion ā Sculpture by Olga Ziemska in Oronsko, Poland
This figure is made from many small branches. It looks like it is walking right through the wind. The way the wood is placed makes the whole sculpture feel like it is moving while standing still.
š Follow Olga Ziemska on Instagram
šļø 6. Reaching Hand ā Wood Sculpture by Simon OāRourke in Wales, UK
This was once the tallest tree in the UK. Now it is a giant hand reaching for the sky. The detail in the fingers and the skin is incredible for a piece carved from a stump.
More photos!: From Tallest Tree to Towering Sculpture: The Giant Hand of the UK
š¹ 7. The Archer ā Willow Sculpture by Anna & The Willow in the UK
Anna uses willow branches to weave stories in the forest. This archer looks ready to protect the woods. The flowing skirt looks like it is blowing in a real breeze.
š Follow Anna & The Willow on Instagram
šŖ 8. Window Ladder ā Sculpture by Leandro Erlich in Uruguay
This window is floating in the middle of nowhere! It looks like a dream brought to life in a field.
š Follow Leandro Erlich on Instagram
š 9. Grumpy Stone ā By David Zinn in Michigan, USA
Even stones can have a bad day! This little character looks very unimpressed with his surroundings. David Zinn always knows how to find the fun in small places.
More!: Happy Art by David Zinn (10 Photos)
š Follow David Zinn on Instagram
š¤ 10. The Caring Hand ā By Eva Oertli and Beat Huber in Glarus, Switzerland
This massive hand looks like it is coming straight out of the earth to give the tree a hug. It is a beautiful symbol of how we should care for our planet. Nature and art really do belong together.
More photos: The Caring Hand ā Sculpture in Glarus, Switzerland by Eva Oertli and Beat Huber
Art like this reminds us that the world is full of surprises. We hope these pieces made you smile today!
More!: 20 Street Art Pieces That Hit the Right Note
Which one is your favorite?
14 Street Art Masterpieces That Will Make You Fall in Love with Books Again
Books usually live on shelvesāuntil street artists turn them into ladders, lamps, benches, walls, shelters, and tiny public libraries.
A child climbs a painted bookshelf in Brazil. An apartment block in Russia becomes a neighborhood bookcase. On a bookstore wall in France, a fox gives simple advice: open a book.Together, these works bring reading into public space, using school walls, old trunks, benches, and small street interventions to make books visible from the sidewalk.
š” Library Nerd Fact: Tiny public book exchanges are newer than they feel: according to Little Free Library, the first Little Free Library book-sharing box was built in Hudson, Wisconsin in 2009, and the network has grown to more than 200,000 registered volunteer-led libraries in 128 countries.
More: 11 Public Book Spots We Love (Do it Yourself?)
ColĆ©gio Ser Library Mural ā Eduardo Kobra in Sorocaba, SĆ£o Paulo, Brazil
The painted shelves cover the building like a library wall. On Kobraās project page for ColĆ©gio Ser, the artist says he asked people to suggest Brazilian books before painting it. About 4,000 suggestions came in, and the 150 most suggested titles appear on the mural. The child on the ladder keeps the list from feeling abstract. It becomes a reading list you can climb.š” Nerd Fact: Kobra tied this wall to Brazilās reading habits. On his ColĆ©gio Ser page, he quotes the Retratos da Leitura survey, saying Brazil had lost 4.6 million readers in four years and that only 52% of the population had the habit of reading.
š Follow Eduardo Kobra on Instagram
From Russia with Love ā JanIsDeMan in Solnechnodolsk, Russia
JanIsDeMan turns a flat faƧade into a three-story bookcase, with Russian-language titles, a small cathedral, and a Matryoshka doll tucked between the shelves. On the artistās project page, he notes that the books were selected together with local residents and that the 2021 mural was made in collaboration with UMG / Urban Morphogenesis Festival and Emdee. The building stops looking blank; it starts to look like a shelf the neighborhood helped fill.š” Nerd Fact: This is not a random shelf of āRussian classics.ā JanIsDeManās own note says the titles were chosen with local residents while sharing local drinks and dishes, turning the mural into a neighborhood dinner conversation disguised as a reading list.
š Follow JanIsDeMan on Instagram
I HAVE A DREAM ā BANE & Pest in Chur, Switzerland
On the outer wall of Schulhaus Lachen, a glowing book opens, letters scatter, and a huge bird carries a child into the air. Porta Cultura Graubünden documents I HAVE A DREAM as a 2015 work by Fabian āBANEā Florin at the elementary school, close to the neighborhood where he grew up. The idea is simple and easy to read from a distance: a story can lift you away from the concrete for a moment.š” Nerd Fact: The title carries two school-friendly echoes at once: Porta Cultura Graubünden connects it to Martin Luther King Jr.ās 1963 āI Have a Dreamā speech and to ABBAās song of the same name, which used a choir of schoolchildren.
š Follow BANE on Instagram
Enlighten ā TAKERONE in Razgrad, Bulgaria
This book does not sit still. A bright lightbulb rises from the pages, with flying sheets and white splashes around it. TAKERONEās portfolio lists the work as Enlighten, a freehand spray-paint mural about 5 by 12 meters, painted on the side of a school in Razgrad in November 2023. On a school wall, the message is hard to miss: books can switch the lights on.š” Nerd Fact: The mural was not just a school commission; TAKERONE notes that it was funded by the Liszt Hungarian Institute Sofia, with logistics from Sofia Graffiti Tour, making a Hungarian artistās book mural part of a Bulgarian cultural exchange.
š Follow TAKERONE on Instagram
Escape Through a Book ā HERA in Vincennes, France
HERAās fox curls around the reading child, close enough to feel protective. A local write-up of the Vincennes piece, Le renard qui lit, places it on the Millepages bookstore faƧade and gives the French text: the children ask the fox how to escape daily life, and the answer is simpleāopen a book. The bookstore wall does exactly what it should: it points people back to books.š” Nerd Fact: HERA is Jasmin Siddiqui, a Frankfurt-born German-Pakistani painter; Nuart Aberdeen notes that she has been painting large-scale murals worldwide since 2001, both solo and as part of HERAKUT.
š Follow HERA on Instagram
Le Monde Ć lāenvers ā Zabou in MoĆ»tiers, France
Zabou lets the building do part of the work. On her own page for the Eternelles Crapules festival, she explains that Le Monde Ć lāenvers uses the triangular roof of MoĆ»tiersā book and media library as the cover of the book. The upside-down surface becomes grass and dandelions; the reader stays still, but the world tilts.š” Nerd Fact: This was part of the second edition of the Eternelles Crapules festival: Zabou writes that about 15 artists came to MoĆ»tiers for large-scale murals and graffiti pieces, so the library wall was one chapter in a wider city festival.
š Follow Zabou on Instagram
Life Is an Open Book ā Brad Spencer in Charlotte, North Carolina, US
Brad Spencerās brick sculpture makes the book a wall to climb. Children help each other over the red brick pages, and their bodies are made from the same material as the structure. CLTureās Charlotte public-art guide notes that Life Is an Open Book was commissioned by the Brick Association of the Carolinas and dedicated at The Green in 2002. It suits The Green: brick, books, and kids climbing over things.š” Nerd Fact: Spencerās path into brick sculpture began after a friend from a local brick company showed him brochures of brick sculpture in the late 1980s; in a Brick Architecture interview, he says Boren Brick then set up a studio for him at the plant.
š Visit Brad Spencerās website
Intensification of Contrast ā Andrey Syaylev at Samara Public Library, Samara, Russia
This intervention is almost too literal, which is why it works. Andrey Syaylevās own page identifies Intensification of Contrast as a 2013 site-specific installation made with books and cement, with books used like bricks in a ruined fragment of a library faƧade. Russian local coverage places the work at the Public Library on Kuibyshev Street in Samara. Real books appear where bricks should be, making the repair look as if the library is held together by its own shelves.š” Nerd Fact: Syaylev later said the library ārepairā lasted only a couple of days, as he had planned; in a Volga News interview, he explained that the gesture pushed people to ask whether the damaged library could simply be left that way.
An Evening of Adventure ā David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, US
A real terra cotta flowerpot becomes the lampshade, the pavement becomes a tiny room, and Nadine gets a quiet evening with a book. David Zinnās own print page for An Evening of Adventure identifies it as a temporary Ann Arbor installation made with chalk, charcoal, and an inverted flowerpot on June 8, 2021. More by David Zinn: Happy Art by David Zinn (10 Photos).š” Nerd Fact: Zinnās work is usually built to vanish, but this tiny reading scene got a second life: his official print page sells it as a hand-signed giclĆ©e reproduction, preserving a street moment made from chalk, charcoal, and one inverted flowerpot.
š Follow David Zinn on Instagram
Designer Book Benches ā OverHertz in Bulgaria
These Bulgarian book benches make reading visible and usable. OverHertz describes the series as fiberglass designer book benches for outdoor urban spaces, schools, museums, and libraries, while Anadoluās verification places the widely shared photo in Bulgaria, not EskiÅehir, Turkey. The curved white pages and printed lines tell you what they are, but the scale keeps them practical: public design you can sit on.š” Nerd Fact: OverHertz treated the bench surface like a changeable page: its product page says the fiberglass benches could be customized with printed foil and UV protection, rather than being a single fixed text.
De (B)ruilboom ā RenĆ© Bruns in Ruurlo, Netherlands
The trunk keeps its rough, old shape, with small glass-fronted shelves fitted into the sides. RenĆ© Brunsā project page describes De (B)ruilboom as a 2012 commission for the De Bruil neighborhood association, made from a 350- to 400-year-old sweet chestnut and fitted with ten glass-fronted book cabinets. No giant wall, no optical trick. Just books where you expected only wood.š” Nerd Fact: The book tree has its own borrowing rules: RenĆ© Bruns writes that the books are āproperty of the tree,ā can be borrowed for a maximum of one month, and new books are handed in through the neighborhood association.
Dystopia Bowl ā George Orwellās 1984 as a Halloween Treat
This one is closer to a street intervention than a mural: a black Halloween bowl filled with copies of George Orwellās 1984, with a āOne Copy of 1984 Per Childā sign instead of candy instructions. The porch setup makes the joke clear fast. Then the question lingers: which book would you hand out?š” Dystopia Nerd Fact: Orwell almost gave the book a very different name: History Today notes that his working title for Nineteen Eighty-Four was The Last Man in Europe. That would make the Halloween sign feel less like candy rules and more like an emergency broadcast.
Holding Up the World ā Darion Fleming in Brooklyn, New York, US
WXLLSPACEās project page lists the mural as DaFlemingo for 108 St. Edwards, a Brooklyn project for Westhab, with Darion Fleming, also known as DaFlemingo, as lead artist. A young girl stands with school supplies beside books that hold up a globe. The graduation-cap teddy bear and pigeon keep it local and a little funny, while titles like āUnity Makes Strengthā and āThe Womanās Hourā make the education theme specific, not generic.š” Nerd Fact: This is painted on a building with a very specific social job: Westhab says the Fort Greene Family Center opened in 2025 as a $73 million, 105-unit transitional housing facility for families with children. The education imagery lands differently when you know the wall belongs to a place built to help families move toward permanent housing.
š Follow Darion Fleming on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
Westhab Opens New Family Center in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, Providing 105 Units of Transitional Housing for Vulnerable Families | Westhab
Westhab announces the opening of the Fort Greene Family Center in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. The 11-story, 105-unit facility provides transitional housing for some of New York's most vulnerable families with children.Leah Richardson (Westhab)
Decertor
Decertor, Lima. 41Ā 637 ember kedveli Ā· 1 ember beszĆ©l errÅl. Muralista y pintor de Lima, PerĆŗ.www.facebook.com