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Items tagged with: funnyStreetArt
Too Cute (10 Photos)
Content warning: Discovering the Heart of the City: When Street Art Gets Wholesome and Cute Cities are often associated with towering skyscrapers, traffic, and endless expanses of gray concrete. But if you take a moment to look closely at the walls, doorways, and hidden c
Discovering the Heart of the City: When Street Art Gets Wholesome and Cute
Cities are often associated with towering skyscrapers, traffic, and endless expanses of gray concrete. But if you take a moment to look closely at the walls, doorways, and hidden corners, you will discover that the urban landscape has a remarkably soft side. Street artists around the globe are using their creativity to bring unexpected warmth, humor, and pure joy to our daily commutes.
From a tiny sleeping bat carefully protected outside a bookstore in Calgary to a colossal, playful kitten mural towering over the streets of London, these 10 street and urban art pieces prove that art can be wonderfully wholesome. Hidden in plain sight on ordinary streets, brick walls, and rusted drainpipes, each artwork is designed to make you pause, smile, and appreciate the little things in life.
Let’s take a journey through some of the most adorable and heart-melting public art installations. These pieces remind us that no matter how busy the city gets, there is always room for a little bit of magic.
More adorable finds: Cute Art (9 Photos)
1. The Peaceful Sleeping Bat
A Tiny Visitor in Calgary, Canada
In a beautiful display of everyday kindness, a small bat decided to take a nap right on the door of The Next Page Bookshop. Instead of shooing it away, the locals placed a handwritten note asking visitors to open the door carefully. It is a simple, that compassion can exist even in the most unexpected places. Small moments like this make the city feel like a shared home for all creatures.
Discover the full story: A Sleeping Bat at The Next Page Bookshop in Calgary Becomes an Unlikely Star
2. The Giant Escaping Kitten
Mr. Meana Brings Joy to London, England
A massive, curious ginger kitten painted by the talented Mr. Meana stretches across the side of a classic brick building near a “Cat Only Vets” clinic. The scale of the mural is breathtaking, making it feel as though a giant, playful feline is trying to break out into the real world.
Mr Meana shared his experience: “This one was fun to be fair. A cat vets wanted a big ginger kitten escaping from the side of the building. Battled some serious winds and rain showers but got it there. Painted with spray paint in one day. It seems to be the first piece of street art in the area, so let’s hope it gets people wanting more.”
🔗 Follow Mr. Meana on Instagram
3. Homer’s Electric Surprise
Oakoak’s Clever Humor in France
French street artist Oakoak is a master of integrating real-world objects into his playful illustrations. Here, he brings humor to an ordinary brick wall by painting Homer Simpson appearing to get an electric shock from a real utility box. His iconic surprised expression fits perfectly with the cables and setup around him, turning a boring utility feature into a daily laugh for pedestrians.
More clever art: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram
4. The Relaxing Squirrel
David Zinn’s Chalk Magic in Michigan, USA
“Nathan’s Life Goal” – David Zinn’s ephemeral chalk art is famous for its gentle whimsy. This piece features a tiny, contented squirrel named Nathan reclining comfortably on a wooden step, blending with his surroundings. His relaxed pose adds a gentle touch of humor and tranquility to an ordinary staircase, proving that street art can be soft, quiet, and deeply comforting.
More magical chalk art: Beautiful Autumn By David Zinn! (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
5. Nostalgic Plumbers in the Wild
Pappas Pärlor’s Pixel Art in Sweden
Bringing retro video games into the real world, two pixelated figures of Mario and Luigi appear to be swimming right out of a public drainpipe. Made entirely from Perler beads by Pappas Pärlor, the addition of a blue “water” line gives the scene motion. It transforms a mundane pipe into a brilliant nostalgic nod that brightens up the street.
Explore more pixel perfection: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces: Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover
🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
6. A Secret World in the Bricks
Ivan Sery’s Miniature Magic in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
Inside a missing chunk of a red brick wall, Ivan Sery built a fully detailed miniature room featuring a tiny figure peering out through a telescope. This hidden detail rewards those who pay close attention to their surroundings, turning a damaged, forgotten corner into a magical secret universe.
Dive into the details: A Tiny Universe: Meet Ivan Sery’s Little man in the brick wall
7. The Friendly Shadow Monster
Damon Belanger in California, USA
Damon Belanger paints playful “fake shadows” across the streets. In this brilliant example, the shadow of a standard public bench or rack transforms into a friendly, waving monster. His works make passersby look twice, offering a delightful surprise that breaks the monotony of walking down the sidewalk.
See more shadow fun: Funny Fake Shadows! (20 Photos)
🔗 Follow Damon Belanger on Instagram
8. The Electric Street Performers
The Tragic Trio by Pappas Pärlor in Sweden
Three drab electrical boxes have been ingeniously turned into a singing street trio — complete with an accordion, a guitar, and stylish bowler hats. Their wide-eyed expressions and colorful instruments bring life to an otherwise gray and easily ignored street corner.
🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
9. The Cartoon School Facade
Jace, Gouzou, CEET Fouad & Ador in Paris, France
This massive collaborative mural at École Jules Ferry turns a traditional school building into a lively cartoon world. Quirky characters peek from windows, hang laundry, and fill the wall with movement and humor. A chaotic mix of each artist’s unique style brought together into one spectacular piece.
See more photos of this wall: Collab with Jace Gouzou, CEET Fouad and Ador in Les Mureaux, Paris, France
🔗 Follow Jace Gouzou, CEET Fouad and Ador on Instagram
10. Nature and Art Combined
Flower Hair Girl by Robson Melancia in Brazil
Street artist Robson Melancia painted this beautiful girl with bright green eyes and pink lips right under a blooming tree. By positioning her perfectly, the natural pink flowers act as her hair. It is a clever, breathtaking blend of urban walls and natural beauty that feels alive and incredibly cheerful.
🔗 Follow Robson Melancia on Instagram
Keep Exploring the Cute Side of Art
If these artworks brightened your day, you will definitely want to check out this collection:
Which one is your favorite?
Did the sleeping bat warm your heart, or did the giant kitten make you smile? Drop your favorite in the comments below!
Cute Art (10 Photos)
From a sleeping kitten painted around a column in Lima to a hidden miniature observatory tucked into a crumbling Russian wall, this collection showcases street art that warms the heart. In this post, you’ll find murals of gentle animals, children caring for flowers, and even a squirrel enjoying a picnic. Each piece adds a playful or emotional moment to its urban setting, inviting passersby to pause and smile.
More: Happy Art by David Zinn! (15 Photos)
1. Drops of Life — Kato Art in Ronda, Spain
A mural of a young girl watering blooming pink flowers covers the side of a residential building. Dressed in a white dress with embroidered trim, she gently pours water from a turquoise watering can into a potted plant, symbolizing growth and care. More!: 6 Cute Murals By KATO: Bringing Walls to Life🔗 Follow Kato Art on Instagram
2. “E ‘Torre” — Giulio Masieri in Pordenone, Italy
A large-scale mural of a resting yellow dog spans the lower half of a tall concrete wall. With a calm gaze and folded front paws, the dog’s size dwarfs nearby pedestrians, creating an inviting and gentle atmosphere. The shadowing blends the figure into the wall surface, enhancing its photorealistic effect.🔗 Follow Giulio Masieri on Instagram
3. Electric Embrace — Adam Okuciejewski & Szymon Czarnowski in Olsztyn, Poland
Two utility boxes are transformed into affectionate cartoon characters with minimal black linework. One painted box has wide, sad eyes and wraps an arm around the smaller box beside it, which looks up with a shy expression. The scene turns functional street infrastructure into an emotional, story-driven moment.
4. Flowers for Sad Girl — N888K in Amsterdam, Netherlands
A spiky-haired punk boy offers a bouquet of colorful flowers to a sad girl. Painted on a purple wall, the stencil-style mural contrasts rough aesthetics with a gentle gesture.🔗 Follow N888K on Instagram
5. Leonard’s Motto — David Zinn in the United States
Drawn directly onto the sidewalk, David Zinn’s recurring character Leonard smiles with exaggerated tufts of grass forming his oversized mustache. The whimsical creature wears a brown suit and red tie, with a monocle on one eye. The grass growing from the pavement crack is cleverly incorporated into the character design. More by David Zinn here!🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
6. Sleeping Kitten — WA in Lima, Peru
A curled-up black and white kitten with pink paw pads appears to sleep at the base of a pillar. Its body wraps around the column, making the building part of the illusion.🔗 Follow WA on Instagram
7. Squirrel Picnic
A miniature wooden picnic table is mounted on a tree, where a squirrel sits eating snacks. Originally held in a hand, the table is later installed and enjoyed.More about it and photos!: Adorable Squirrel Picnic Table: A Delightful Backyard Attraction (9 Photos)
8. A Little Man in the Brick Wall — Ivan Sery in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
A small window in a damaged brick wall contains a diorama with a figure looking through a telescope. The scene, encased in glass, turns a crack into a tiny universe. More about it and photos: A Tiny Universe – Meet Ivan Sery’s Little man in the brick wall
9. Dove Of Peace — Hannah Bullen-Ryner
Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: In response the atrocities going on in Ukraine right now, my white Dove of peace made from white blossom flowers, small white feathers and wilted Crocus petals. May it fly on the breeze and reach those who so desperately need it.🔗 Follow Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art on Facebook
10. Butterfly and Cat — CHEONE in Nerviano, Italy
A photorealistic gray cat lies within a painted 3D frame, watching a butterfly hover above. The precision of shadows and the orange contrast create a striking trompe-l’œil effect. More: 23 Amazing 3D Murals by CHEONE!🔗 Follow CHEONE on Instagram
More: Amazing Murals (9 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Mr Meana Graffiti Streetart Muralist on Instagram: "This one was fun to be fair. A cat vets wanted a big ginger kitten escaping from the side of the building. Battled some serious winds and rain showers but got it there. Painted with spray paint in one da
293 likes, 72 comments - meanastreetart on October 25, 2021: "This one was fun to be fair. A cat vets wanted a big ginger kitten escaping from the side of the building. Battled some serious winds and rain showers but got it there.Instagram
Summer Fun (9 Photos)
Content warning: From vibrant walls in the Netherlands to cute creatures chalked onto sidewalks, these playful artworks scream summer! This collection brings together cheerful murals and incredible beach carvings. You will also find nature-sized sculptures and mind-bendin
From vibrant walls in the Netherlands to cute creatures chalked onto sidewalks, these playful artworks scream summer!
This collection brings together cheerful murals and incredible beach carvings. You will also find nature-sized sculptures and mind-bending surreal street art. We are traveling from Milan to Wyoming and beyond!
More: Clever Spring Signs (10 Photos)
💦 1. Joyful Explosion — By Rosalie de Graaf in Zwolle, Netherlands 🇳🇱
A massive mural of four laughing children covers the side of a residential high-rise. They are painted in vivid technicolor. Splashes of paint, bubbles, and sea creatures swirl around them. The whole scene bursts with joyful movement and energy.
💡 Nerd Fact: Rosalie called this her highest artwork so far: a 32-meter mural in a multicultural Zwolle neighborhood where each child is tied to a different color, meant to show cultures blending as they play. She is also the founder of the first street art school in the Netherlands.
🔗 Follow Rosalie de Graaf on Instagram
🏖️ 2. Wile E. Coyote — By PUFFERFISH on the Beach 🌍
This amazing artwork is carved directly into the sand. It shows Looney Tunes’ Wile E. Coyote flattened underground. The character is sculpted to perfectly mimic classic cartoon slapstick. It sits beautifully on a wide, empty beach under the bright summer sun.
💡 Nerd Fact: This sand joke comes with serious cartoon history: Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner debuted in 1949’s Fast and Furry-ous, and Chuck Jones later said the coyote was shaped by Mark Twain’s description of a hungry, unlucky western coyote. That makes PUFFERFISH’s “flattened” version feel like a love letter to one of animation’s oldest running gags.
🔗 Follow PUFFERFISH on Instagram
🌺 3. Flowers for West Town — By Ouizi (Louise Jones) in Chicago, USA 🇺🇸
Bright yellow daisies and pink peonies tower over a Chicago brick building. A red admiral butterfly joins the stunning floral mural. The artist painted it to look like flowers are growing straight from the sidewalk. It fills the entire wall with breathtaking color and texture.
💡 Nerd Fact: On her official mural page, Ouizi lists this wall as “West Town in Bloom”. Local coverage notes that she planned a bouquet of camellias, daisies, apple blossoms, and a peony, and intentionally left parts of the brick visible so the building itself stayed inside the composition.
🔗 Follow Ouizi (Louise Jones) on Instagram
🫙 4. Sluggo in a Jar — By David Zinn in Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn’s adorable character Sluggo is trapped in a transparent jar. The artist chalked the jar directly around a street manhole. Sluggo’s eyes peek out nervously while wearing cute little flippers. This clever 3D illusion perfectly uses the manhole cover as the jar’s lid. More: Happy Art by David Zinn! (15 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Sluggo was born by accident. Zinn says he first tried to draw a dancing child on a stain-marked sidewalk, but the head came out “eggplant-shaped,” so he finally put the eyes above the head and realized he had created Sluggo. On his own site, Zinn still calls Sluggo one of his most enduring characters.
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
👻 5. Ghost Sculpture — By Visitors in Varenna, Italy 🇮🇹
A spooky gauze ghost figure draped over a bench overlooks Lake Como. Visitors to the Castle of Vezio create these chalk-dusted specters by hand every single summer. They turn the beautiful grounds into a silent gathering of seated spirits. More photos and about the sculptures: Haunting Ghost Sculptures Overlook Lake Como at Castle of Vezio
💡 Nerd Fact: These white figures echo a much older local legend: tourism sources around Vezio say Queen Teodolinda’s ghost is said to roam the castle. Even better, the hilltop also hosts a falconry center and a Lariosaurus fossil display, so the site mixes medieval legend, live birds of prey, and prehistoric lake reptiles in one stop.
🧺 6. Laundry Day — By Golsa Golchini in Milan, Italy 🇮🇹
This tiny miniature mural shows a painted woman reaching out of a real window. She is hanging white laundry onto a peeling section of the wall. The peeling paint has been cleverly transformed into drying sheets. This street art beautifully blends reality and illusion. More by Golsa Golchini: You Might Walk Past These—But They’re Tiny Masterpieces in Disguise
💡 Nerd Fact: Golsa Golchini is an Iran-born, Milan-based visual artist trained at the Accademia di Brera. That cross-medium background—painting, photography, sculpture, even affresco—helps explain why her tiny wall scenes feel less like doodles and more like miniature stage sets.
🔗 Follow Golsa Golchini on Instagram
🧌 7. Mama Mimi the Troll — By Thomas Dambo in Wilson, USA 🇺🇸
This giant wooden troll reclines comfortably in the water at Rendezvous Park. She is crafted entirely from scrap wood. She rests her head on her hand and extends her massive legs across a bridge. This is part of Dambo’s amazing mission to build magical trolls in public spaces using recycled materials. More by Thomas Dambo: 10 Giant Trolls Hiding in Forests, Lakes and Ruins
💡 Nerd Fact: Jackson Hole Public Art says Mama Mimi was built from recycled wood, steel, and driftwood sourced locally, and she is the 80th troll in Thomas Dambo’s wider fairy-tale universe. Dambo’s own studio describes those trolls as works where folklore, environmentalism, and community participation all meet.
🔗 Follow Thomas Dambo on Instagram
👧 8. A Swing in the Summer Light — By ATTORREP in Belsito, Italy 🇮🇹
A girl in a white dress swings out from a beautifully painted window. The stunning mural sits right between two old buildings. Her view overlooks gorgeous mountains and rooftops. An older man even watches from another window above. This street art scene brilliantly plays with perspective and playful movement.
💡 Nerd Fact: ATTORREP did not frame this as a simple childhood scene. He wrote that the swing is “the best metaphor of life”, with the present pushing toward the future while the past shivers back into view. He is also the founder and artistic curator of the OSA Festival.
🔗 Follow Antonino Perrotta on Instagram
☀️ 9. Border Hammock — By Murat Gök in Mardin, Turkey 🇹🇷
A man lounges comfortably in a highly unusual hammock. It is actually fashioned from a section of chain-link border fence. The fence is stretched between two concrete posts in a dry open field. This conceptual street art cleverly subverts the idea of separation. It turns a harsh border into a peaceful symbol of rest and freedom under the summer sky.
💡 Nerd Fact: This image is often reposted with the wrong city, but the Institute for Public Art documents it as Murat Gök’s Border (2010), a performance photograph made in Mardin on the Turkey–Syria border. That context matters: the hammock is not only a visual joke, but a temporary act of rest carved directly into a militarized line.
Which one is your favorite?
Clever Spring Signs (10 Photos)
Spring has a way of announcing itself with clever little signals.
Sometimes it arrives as a wall full of flowers, sometimes as a handmade note beside free blooms, sometimes as a bird returning to a branch, and sometimes as a patch of “weeds” that turns out to be a feast for bees. These 10 photos capture the smartest, sweetest, and most imaginative clues that winter is over and the world is waking up again.More: Streets Into Gardens (14 photos)
🌺 “Alive” — By ZABOU in London, UK 🇬🇧
ZABOU turns spring into something deeper than decoration. The flowers are lush and bright, but the real power comes from the tension between the calm face, the skull, and the butterfly resting between them. It feels like the season’s oldest message painted at full scale: life keeps coming back.More photos: ALIVE
💡 Nerd Fact: This was not painted as a generic spring mural. Zabou made Alive for Blank Walls’ “Strength” series and described it as a work about resilience and “life stronger than death,” which makes the flowers feel less like decoration and more like a rebuttal to the skull.
🔗 Follow ZABOU on Instagram
🦋 Forest Butterflies — By Dege in Le Puy-en-Velay, France 🇫🇷
Some spring signs are quiet, and this one feels exactly like the first truly warm walk through the woods. Dege fills a parking wall with water, light, moss, and giant butterflies, turning a concrete space into something that suddenly feels cool, green, and alive again.💡 Nerd Fact: Le Puy-en-Velay is not just any French town: it is the best-known French starting point of the Via Podiensis route to Santiago de Compostela, a walking trail famous for crossing landscapes rich in flora and fauna. That gives this forest mural an extra layer: in a city built around setting off on foot, the wall feels like the journey has already begun.
🔗 Follow Dege on Instagram
🌱 Nadine and the Vertical Commute — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn makes one little sprig of growth feel like a full spring adventure. The crack in the pavement becomes sky, the plant becomes a ladder, and suddenly the season is not just arriving, it is climbing. Few artists make first-growth optimism feel this playful.More: They Look Alive (19 Photos Of Art by David Zinn)
💡 Nerd Fact: David Zinn’s own wonderfully over-the-top term for his sidewalk method is “ephemeral pareidolic anamorphosis”, meaning his drawings are temporary, improvised on site, and built from cracks, textures, and found objects. Nadine is also one of his long-running recurring characters, not a one-off mouse.
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
🌻 Flowers for West Town — By Ouizi in Chicago, USA 🇺🇸
Ouizi paints spring at building scale. The flowers climb the brick like they were always supposed to be there, and the butterfly near the top makes the whole wall feel mid-bloom. It is the kind of mural that can change the mood of an entire street corner.More: Flowers for West Town by Ouizi in Chicago
💡 Nerd Fact: Ouizi does not paint random bouquets. She has said that she tries to reflect the flowers actually found in each place and even consults horticulturists to get them right, which means this mural works almost like a neighborhood botany portrait, not just floral wallpaper.
🔗 Follow Ouizi on Instagram
☀️ A Little Bit of Sunshine — A Free Flower Sign
Nothing says spring quite like someone putting fresh yellow flowers out for strangers. The sign is simple, generous, and impossible not to smile at. It turns a tiny act of sharing into one of the season’s smartest reminders: warmth is something people can pass along.💡 Nerd Fact: A free flower table like this accidentally revives floriography — the 19th-century “language of flowers,” when people in Britain and America used bouquets as coded messages. So even a simple street-side bloom comes with a long history of saying something without words.
More: A little bit of Sunshine (12 Photos)
🐦 Plant Trees for Birdsong — A Clever Street Message
This one makes its point in a single glance. Instead of trapping beauty, it argues for making room for it. Spring is the season when birds start filling the air again, and this message captures that whole feeling in one smart, humane, unforgettable line.💡 Nerd Fact: The sign is ecologically spot-on: native trees do far more than give birds places to perch. They support the insects nestlings need for protein, and oaks are especially important because they host more butterfly and moth species than any other plant genus.
More: These Clever Signs Turn Streets Into A Comedy Club (9 Photos)
🐝 Pardon the Weeds — We Are Feeding the Bees
One of the cleverest spring signs of all is knowing when not to tidy anything up. Between the poppies and the buzzing logic of the message, this little sign reframes messy growth as care. Suddenly the wild patch looks less neglected and more like a public service.💡 Nerd Fact: The logic behind this sign lines up with current pollinator advice. Flowers people often dismiss as lawn “weeds” — like dandelions and white clover — can be important early food for bees, which is why low-mow campaigns focus on letting spring flowers bloom before cutting them down.
More: Bee Warning (8 Photos)
🌺 Bougainvillea Shades — Street Art in Pondicherry, India 🇮🇳
Sometimes the best spring artist is the plant itself. This Pondicherry wall is already playful, but the bougainvillea bursting above the painted sunglasses turns it into a perfect collaboration between mural and season. It feels styled by nature in real time.More: Street Art in Pondicherry, India
💡 Nerd Fact: In Puducherry’s White Town, bougainvillea-draped yellow walls are already part of the area’s signature look, so this wall is tapping into a real local streetscape. And botanically, the bright pink parts most people call the “flowers” are actually papery bracts, the true flowers are the small pale ones tucked in the center.
📸 Photo by Kanthan on Instagram
💙 Fairywren in Blossom — By Geoffrey Carran in Carlton North, Melbourne, Australia 🇦🇺
Bright bird, pink blossoms, dark wall — everything here is balanced perfectly. Geoffrey Carran captures that instant when spring feels crisp instead of soft, vivid instead of vague. The fairywren looks like it landed for a second and made the whole wall lighter.More: Male Fairy Wren by Geoffrey Carran Melbourne, Australia
💡 Nerd Fact: The likely real-life reference here is the superb fairy-wren, a common southeastern Australian “blue wren” whose males turn brilliant blue in breeding season. Even better, courting males are famous for carrying flower petals to potential mates, which makes the blossom setting extra fitting.
🔗 Follow Geoffrey Carran on Instagram
🔥 End of Winter — By Miguel Peralta in Castro Caldelas, Spain 🇪🇸
Not every spring sign is floral. Miguel Peralta goes for fire, procession, and ritual, showing the season as something earned and celebrated. It feels like winter being carried out in flames so the brighter months can finally take over.💡 Nerd Fact: This mural is basically a portrait of a real local ritual. Castro Caldelas celebrates the Festa dos Fachós every 19 January, when giant straw torches are carried through the village and thrown onto a bonfire, and Miguel Peralta’s mural was created specifically as a tribute to that tradition.
🔗 Follow Miguel Peralta on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
Chicago muralist Louise ‘Ouizi’ Jones: ‘If someone says they don’t like flowers, I think they’re lying’
As a child, Louise ‘Ouizi’ Jones learned to paint flowers using watercolors. Now, she paints murals filled with her signature giant bouquets around Chicago.Alec Karam (Chicago Sun-Times)
These Clever Signs Turn Streets Into A Comedy Club (9 Photos)
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
Ever feel like the street is trying to tell you something funny? These clever signs turn streets into a comedy club. We found these gems in cities around the world. Each one is a quick hit of humor. You will see a dog library, a Star Wars joke, and even a plea for a missing snail. This collection has everything from bees to Lionel Richie. Scroll through and enjoy the walk.
More!: Funny Signs (20 Photos)
🐝 1. “Pardon the Weeds”
This sign is the perfect excuse for not weeding your garden. You aren’t being lazy. You are just being a hero for the bees. These wild poppies look much better than a boring lawn anyway.
🇺🇸 2. “All Americans Must Be Accompanied”
A little friendly banter for our friends from across the ocean. This shop owner has a very specific rule for tourists. Safety first when you are exploring a new country.
🐕 3. “Dog Library”
Finally, a library where you are allowed to chew on the books. This is every dog’s dream come true. Take a stick and leave one for your furry friends. It is a very wholesome system.
🐌 4. “Gary, Come Home”
If you know this snail, you know the pain. This SpongeBob reference is a classic. We hope Gary saw the sign and found his way back to Bikini Bottom.
🌳 5. “Don’t Buy Cages. Plant Trees.”
This is a simple way to get more music in your life. You don’t need batteries or cages. Just plant a tree and wait for the show to start. Nature has the best playlist.
👑 6. “Empires, Kingdoms, Countries”
A clever bit of wordplay on how the world is run. Those pub signs always have the best logic. It makes you think while you wait for your drink.
🎤 7. “Hello? Is It Me…”
If you didn’t sing this in your head, you might be a robot. It is a pop culture classic. Taking a slip of paper has never felt more like a musical performance.
🌌 8. “Luke, I Am Your Father”
Proof that even a ventilation pipe can have a dark side. A simple sticker turns ordinary plumbing into a movie legend. The Force is definitely strong with this one.
☀️ 9. “Free! Take One”
A little bit of sunshine is always free. This is the best thing you can pick up on a morning walk. It is a great way to spread some smiles in the neighborhood.
More!: Funny Signs (12 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Funny Signs (20 Photos)
Some public signs tell you where to go or what to do. These ones? They play with expectations. From witty chalkboards and absurd flyers to poetic instructions and signs that lead nowhere, these 20 messages prove that a little humor or mystery goes a long way in urban spaces.
More: How Clever (8 Photos)
1. Take What You Need
A simple handwritten flyer reads “Love.” with an invitation: “(Take as much love as you need).” The tear-off tabs just say “LOVE.”
2. Lost My Brain
A satirical lost-and-found flyer features a red anatomical brain diagram and a caption: “Please don’t contact me, I’m happy.”
3. Bar Scene on a No Entry Sign
A creative modification of a no-entry traffic sign transforms the white bar into a bar counter. Three stick figures have been drawn onto the sign—one sitting on a bar stool holding a martini glass, chatting with two others standing beside the “counter.” This humorous intervention turns an ordinary traffic sign into a social vignette.
4. No King
5. Sleeping Bat Warning
Sign on a bookshop door says “Please open the door carefully as there is a bat sleeping on it,” with a real bat sleeping by the doorframe.About it: A Sleeping Bat at The Next Page Bookshop in Calgary Becomes an Unlikely Star
6. Showbiz Ruined Me — By Pao in Rome, Italy
A sculpture of SpongeBob looks heartbroken, sitting on the street with a cardboard sign: “Showbiz ruined me.”
7. Dog Library
A wooden sign beneath a tree offers: “Dog Library. Take a stick. Leave a stick.” The pile of branches says it all.
8. Have You Seen This Dog?
Two dog photos and the words: “Have you seen this dog?” Below: “Now you have. Have a GOOD day.” The tear-tabs? “Have a great day.”
9. Please Do Not Smile — New York City Subway, USA
Posted at 14th Street Station: “Please do not smile at strangers.” Whether real or a prank, it’s coldly hilarious.
10. Private Sign
Painted in bold white letters: “PRIVATE SIGN — DO NOT READ.” Naturally, it’s irresistible.
11. The Secret of Happiness
Painted across a long building, the message begins: “The secret of happiness is t—” and then the rest has peeled away.
12. Reboot Universe
At first glance, a standard pedestrian crossing button. But instead of “PUSH TO CROSS,” it reads: “REBOOT UNIVERSE.”
13. Beware of Smartphone Zombies
A modern caution sign warns: “BEWARE OF SMARTPHONE ZOMBIES,” with silhouettes of people walking while staring at their phones.
14. No Don Quixote
A traffic-style sign bans a rider on a horse with a lance—clearly referencing Don Quixote. Behind it: a real windmill.
15. Great Wheat Sharks — Anne Melady in Ontario, Canada
Shark fins appear to slice through a golden wheat field along Highway 8 west of Dublin, Ontario. Installed by 75-year-old landowner and retired nurse Anne Melady, the piece is titled Great Wheat Sharks. She created it to lighten the mood for drivers during the pandemic and continues the now-local tradition with humor and simplicity.More photos and about it: Please do not feed the Great Wheat Sharks
16. Is It Me You’re Looking For?
A flyer with the face of Lionel Richie and the lyrics from his hit song “Hello” is posted on a utility pole. The bottom of the flyer includes tear-off tabs, each printed with a different lyric fragment, playfully inviting passersby to take one. The setup mimics a typical “lost and found” poster but twists it into a street-level pun.
17. Kingdoms to Countries
On a pub chalkboard: “A long time ago we had Empires run by Emperors. Then we had Kingdoms run by Kings. Now we have Countries…”
18. Accompanied by an Adult
The sign boldly says: “All Americans must be accompanied by an adult.” No context. No problem.
19. Cigarette bin that doubles as a voting booth…
and a political roast all in one. People walk by, chuck in a butt, and suddenly it’s not just litter — it’s democracy with extra sass.
20. The Japanese text (ネコ飛出し注意) translates to “Watch out for jumping cats” or more literally “Caution: Cats dashing out”.
It’s a local road sign sometimes put up in Japanese neighborhoods where there are many stray or outdoor cats. The flying-cat graphics are just a playful way to show that cats might suddenly run across the street, so drivers should slow down and be careful.More: Urban Art Hacks (11 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Fixed It For You (10 Photos)
Content warning: Street art that turns cracks, signs, utility boxes, and forgotten corners into visual jokes. Here, utility boxes, cracked pavement, old walls, signs, and bus stops get unexpected upgrades. David Zinn turns a manhole cover into a waffle maker. DUUDOOR make
Street art that turns cracks, signs, utility boxes, and forgotten corners into visual jokes.
Here, utility boxes, cracked pavement, old walls, signs, and bus stops get unexpected upgrades. David Zinn turns a manhole cover into a waffle maker. DUUDOOR makes a broken bus stop into The Simpsons’ living room. Broken, boring, or ignored spots get a second life.
More: Unreal Moments (9 Photos)
🧩 Mosaic Street Repair — By Ememem in Lyon, France 🇫🇷
A damaged triangle of pavement beneath a street pole is filled with a careful mosaic of tiles, circles, and squares. Ememem calls this practice flacking, the art of repairing holes with ceramic tiles and color, and the broken patch now has color, shine, and a clean edge. More: Repairing Streets with Artful Mosaics (17 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: “Flacking” is not an old craft term — Ememem coined it from the French word flaque, meaning puddle, after the practice began on a damaged sidewalk in 2016.
Follow Ememem on Instagram
🚫 The Street Bar — By Clet Abraham (CLET) in France 🇫🇷
This modified “No Entry” sign is documented as The Street Bar by CLET. The white stripe becomes a counter, with two patrons and a bartender gathered around it. It fits Clet Abraham’s larger practice of turning road signs into small interventions that still leave the sign readable.
💡 Nerd Fact: Clet chose road signs partly because they already use a simple, near-universal visual language; in an interview he described them as a direct way to communicate with many people, while The Guardian notes that his additions are removable vinyl stickers.
More: Playful Street Art (12 Photos)
🧇 Waffle Maker — By David Zinn in the USA 🇺🇸
A chalk possum pours batter into a manhole cover, now treated as a waffle iron. A squirrel helps while the metal lid leans open like a kitchen appliance. Zinn shared the work with this caption: Later that day, Clem and Stuart’s new business venture hit a rough patch when they learned that waffle makers need to be plugged in.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s creatures are not studio drawings pasted onto the sidewalk: his own bio says the temporary works are made entirely from chalk, charcoal, and found objects, and are improvised on location.
Follow David Zinn on Instagram
🛋️ Simpsonized Bus Stop — By DUUDOOR in Campo Grande, Brazil 🇧🇷
DUUDOOR’s before-and-after post shows an abandoned bus stop painted as the living room from The Simpsons. Pink walls, a green floor, the orange couch, and the sailboat painting turn the waiting area into a cartoon set. More: Simpsons Bus Stop in Brazil
💡 Nerd Fact: That bus stop borrows from one of TV’s longest-lived living rooms: Guinness traces the Simpson family back to short animated bumpers on The Tracey Ullman Show in 1987, and Reuters reported that Fox renewed the series through seasons 37–40 in 2025.
Follow DUUDOOR on Instagram
👀 Tree with a Face — By Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria 🇧🇬
A tree squeezed between metal bars gets googly eyes and a branch-stump nose. The warped fence becomes a goofy little face grinning at passersby — exactly the kind of broken, twisted city detail that eyebombing was made for. More: Someone Gave the City Eyes (17 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Eyebombing has a tiny rulebook: the original project idea used only googly eyes, public urban space, and non-destructive, easily removable interventions — a simple setup explained by Kim Nielsen’s project history.
Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
⚡ Shocked Homer — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
Painted on a brick wall, Homer Simpson appears to be getting electrocuted by a real utility box and black cables. His panicked pose lines up with the wires, turning the hardware into the punchline. It fits Oakoak’s own description of his practice: diverting urban elements and ignored flaws into small scenes. More: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Homer is not a one-off in Oakoak’s universe: his official archive also lists Simpsons-related pieces featuring Bart, Milhouse, Moe, Grandpa Simpson, Sideshow Bob, Skinner, and more.
Follow Oakoak on Instagram
🧱 Dispatchwork Plastic Brick Repair — By Jan Vormann
A crumbling brick wall gets patched with multicolored plastic construction bricks. The repair is part of Jan Vormann’s Dispatchwork, an ongoing project that uses bright pieces to fill holes in broken walls and invites participation around the world. More: What If LEGO Could Repair the World? (12 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Dispatchwork began in 2007 at Venti Eventi in Bocchignano, Italy, and Vormann’s project page describes it as a worldwide participatory network rather than just one artist’s repairs.
Follow Jan Vormann on Instagram
📚 Intensification of Contrast — By Andrey Syaylev at Samara Public Library in Samara, Russia 🇷🇺
Intensification of Contrast is a 2013 site-specific installation by Andrey Syaylev, made with books and cement. At the Samara Public Library on Kuybysheva Street, 95, an eroded corner is filled with books as if the library were held together by its own shelves. Local Samara coverage later connected the viral book-filled breach to the building’s restoration.
💡 Nerd Fact: Syaylev’s own text says the installation became a “network meme,” and that the library façade was later restored — meaning the online reaction and the real repair became part of the artwork’s afterlife.
🩹 Bandage Crack Fix
A black-and-white image shows a child sitting on the ground, placing adhesive bandages across a long pavement crack. The artist and location are unconfirmed, so the image works best as a simple visual idea: the sidewalk gets treated like a scraped knee.
💡 Nerd Fact: BAND-AID® Brand began in 1920 when Johnson & Johnson employee Earle Dickson combined adhesive tape and gauze so his wife could apply a bandage herself; the first store version in 1921 was a 3-inch-wide, 18-inch-long strip that buyers cut to fit.
🚐 The Mystery Machine — By Oakoak in Southern France 🇫🇷
French street artist Oakoak turns an old, overgrown van into Scooby-Doo’s Mystery Machine. Vines still hang over the roof, but the blue-and-green paint job does the work; Oakoak’s official archive places the piece in southern France in February 2015. Pop culture meets a vehicle that has clearly seen things.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Mystery Machine is more than a color scheme: in 2022, Matthew Lillard hosted a licensed overnight recreation of the van, created with Warner Bros. Consumer Products for the live-action Scooby-Doo film’s 20th anniversary.
More: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Unreal Moments (9 Photos)
9 Unexpected illusions. Playful distortions. Familiar scenes reimagined. In this collection, artists from across the globe bend reality with paint, sculpture, and wit—placing a giraffe in a city block, turning bollards into Pac-Man, and handing Darth Vader a fishing pole. Scroll through eight moments that feel too unreal to be true, yet are all hiding in plain sight.
More: 12 Times I Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings
1. Giraffe Eating the Plants — Jan Is De Man in Utrecht, Netherlands
A hyperrealistic giraffe emerges from the side of a residential building to nibble on balcony plants. Painted with seamless depth, the mural merges nature with the urban landscape in a scene that feels entirely possible—until you blink. More!:8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man🔗 Follow Jan Is De Man on Instagram
2. Darth Fisher — Frankey in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Under a quiet bridge in Amsterdam, Darth Vader sits patiently fishing—with a glowing red lightsaber. This unexpected sculpture by Frankey turns the Star Wars villain into a calm waterside figure, lit eerily by the blade’s red reflection. More!: 6 pics – Darth Fisher (by Frankey in Amsterdam)🔗 Follow Frankey on Instagram
3. Surf and Sand Club — John Pugh in Hermosa Beach, California, USA
This large-scale mural splits open the side of a building to reveal a retro beach scene. The faux 3D illusion draws you into the architecture itself, transforming the wall into a cliffside resort. More photos!: ‘Here Yesterday’ – Amazing 3D Mural in Hermosa Beach, California!🔗 Follow John Pugh on Instagram
4. 3D Painted Turtle — Hebsart in Akumal, Mexico
Using both wall and floor space, this colorful sea turtle appears to float mid-air. The body is painted in striking blues, greens, and reds, enhanced by a realistic shadow that anchors the illusion. More!: 6 Walls Where Hebs Art Left Something You Can Still Feel🔗 Follow Hebsart on Instagram
5. A Photo Opportunity — WOSKerski in London, UK
A surreal mural of giant yellow pencils scattered in a greyscale mountain landscape. Tourists pose for pictures among the pencils, blending fantasy and street culture in this illusion created for SprayExhibition20. More!: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality🔗 Follow WOSKerski on Instagram
6. Tea Time Illusion — Yip Yew Chong in Singapore
A mural that spills out of itself—literally. Painted cups catch flowing tea from a teapot, while birds and laundry float between windows. The placement of shadows and spillage turns a flat wall into a dimensional scene. See it all!: Beautiful Street Art in Chinatown, Singapore (15 pics +video)🔗 Follow Yip Yew Chong on Instagram
7. Matryoshka Truck
A cement truck painted like a Russian nesting doll rolls down a street, turning industrial machinery into playful visual art. The result: a moving sculpture that breaks expectations in traffic.
8. Hungry Bollards — Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
Concrete sidewalk spheres in Bulgaria transformed into hungry Pac-Man characters with just a pair of googly eyes. Artist Vanyu Krastev is known for bringing humor to urban decay by giving broken infrastructure a personality. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
9. Flow of Life — Ty Mural Guy in Trail, BC, Canada
A 3D-style mural depicting interconnected hands catching and passing flowing water, symbolizing generosity and shared care. The composition bends perspective with cascading movement and geometric shapes that extend the illusion of space.🔗 Follow Ty Mural Guy on Instagram
More: 30 Sculptures You (probably) Didn’t Know Existed
Which one is your favorite?
Jump back to 2002 and join Matthew Lillard in Scooby Doo’s Mystery Machine
Camp out under the stars in Scooby Doo’s Mystery Machine, hosted by Matthew Lillard.Airbnb
Unreal Moments (9 Photos)
Content warning: 9 Unexpected illusions. Playful distortions. Familiar scenes reimagined. In this collection, artists from across the globe bend reality with paint, sculpture, and wit—placing a giraffe in a city block, turning bollards into Pac-Man, and handing Darth Vade
9 Unexpected illusions. Playful distortions. Familiar scenes reimagined. In this collection, artists from across the globe bend reality with paint, sculpture, and wit—placing a giraffe in a city block, turning bollards into Pac-Man, and handing Darth Vader a fishing pole. Scroll through eight moments that feel too unreal to be true, yet are all hiding in plain sight.
More: 12 Times I Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings
1. Giraffe Eating the Plants — Jan Is De Man in Utrecht, Netherlands
A hyperrealistic giraffe emerges from the side of a residential building to nibble on balcony plants. Painted with seamless depth, the mural merges nature with the urban landscape in a scene that feels entirely possible—until you blink. More!:8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man
🔗 Follow Jan Is De Man on Instagram
2. Darth Fisher — Frankey in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Under a quiet bridge in Amsterdam, Darth Vader sits patiently fishing—with a glowing red lightsaber. This unexpected sculpture by Frankey turns the Star Wars villain into a calm waterside figure, lit eerily by the blade’s red reflection. More!: 6 pics – Darth Fisher (by Frankey in Amsterdam)
🔗 Follow Frankey on Instagram
3. Surf and Sand Club — John Pugh in Hermosa Beach, California, USA
This large-scale mural splits open the side of a building to reveal a retro beach scene. The faux 3D illusion draws you into the architecture itself, transforming the wall into a cliffside resort. More photos!: ‘Here Yesterday’ – Amazing 3D Mural in Hermosa Beach, California!
🔗 Follow John Pugh on Instagram
4. 3D Painted Turtle — Hebsart in Akumal, Mexico
Using both wall and floor space, this colorful sea turtle appears to float mid-air. The body is painted in striking blues, greens, and reds, enhanced by a realistic shadow that anchors the illusion. More!: 6 Walls Where Hebs Art Left Something You Can Still Feel
🔗 Follow Hebsart on Instagram
5. A Photo Opportunity — WOSKerski in London, UK
A surreal mural of giant yellow pencils scattered in a greyscale mountain landscape. Tourists pose for pictures among the pencils, blending fantasy and street culture in this illusion created for SprayExhibition20. More!: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
🔗 Follow WOSKerski on Instagram
6. Tea Time Illusion — Yip Yew Chong in Singapore
A mural that spills out of itself—literally. Painted cups catch flowing tea from a teapot, while birds and laundry float between windows. The placement of shadows and spillage turns a flat wall into a dimensional scene. See it all!: Beautiful Street Art in Chinatown, Singapore (15 pics +video)
🔗 Follow Yip Yew Chong on Instagram
7. Matryoshka Truck
A cement truck painted like a Russian nesting doll rolls down a street, turning industrial machinery into playful visual art. The result: a moving sculpture that breaks expectations in traffic.
8. Hungry Bollards — Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
Concrete sidewalk spheres in Bulgaria transformed into hungry Pac-Man characters with just a pair of googly eyes. Artist Vanyu Krastev is known for bringing humor to urban decay by giving broken infrastructure a personality. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)
🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
9. Flow of Life — Ty Mural Guy in Trail, BC, Canada
A 3D-style mural depicting interconnected hands catching and passing flowing water, symbolizing generosity and shared care. The composition bends perspective with cascading movement and geometric shapes that extend the illusion of space.
🔗 Follow Ty Mural Guy on Instagram
More: 30 Sculptures You (probably) Didn’t Know Existed
Which one is your favorite?
11 Beautiful Artworks That Seem to Grow From Nature
Some artworks don’t just sit in nature—they become part of it. Around the world, artists are crafting sculptures and murals that seamlessly merge with their surroundings, using trees, vines, and landscapes as living elements of their work. These 11 pieces don’t fight against nature; they grow with it.
From giant figures emerging from forests to street art that transforms urban greenery into playful illusions, these eight stunning creations prove that art and nature can exist in perfect harmony.More: 8 Inspiring Sculptures Seamlessly Integrated with Nature
1. “Sleeping Child” by El Decertor (Imbabura, Ecuador)
A mural by El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador, depicting a young child sleeping against a concrete wall, with creeping ivy blending into the painting as a natural blanket.
2. “UMI” by Daniel Popper (Illinois, USA)
“UMI” by Daniel Popper at the outdoor tree museum The Morton Arboretum in Illinois, USA—an intricate wooden sculpture of a woman with tree roots weaving through her body, set in a green landscape.About and more photos: “UMI” Sculpture by Daniel Popper in Lisle, Illinois
3. Street Art by David Zinn (Ann Arbor, USA)
A street art piece by David Zinn in Ann Arbor, USA, featuring a small green character with a real grass mustache blending into the pavement.More!: Street Art by Happiness Maker David Zinn (21 Photos)
4. Flower Street Art by Fabio Gomes Trindade (Goiás, Brazil)
A mural by Fabio Gomes Trindade in Goiás, Brazil, featuring a girl’s face with a real tree forming her vibrant pink afro hairstyle.More by Fabio Gomes: How Fábio Gomes Turns Trees into Hair: Stunning Murals in Trindade
5. Sidewalk Flower Experiment
A beautiful example of accidental nature-inspired art—kindergarten children dropped seeds into sidewalk cracks, leading to a spontaneous floral pathway.More photos and about: Kindergarten children dropped seeds in the crack of the sidewalk to see what would happen
6. “Nature Rings” by Spencer Byles (Deep Forest, France)
A series of woven circular sculptures by Spencer Byles made from natural branches, blending seamlessly with the surrounding forest.
7. Willow Archer by Anna & The Willow (UK)
A woven willow sculpture of a female archer by Anna & The Willow, set against a wooded path.
8. Wire Mermaid by Martin Debenham (UK)
A wire sculpture by Martin Debenham of a mermaid sitting on a rock, with the intricate metalwork mimicking flowing water.
9. Snake in the Green — Hyères, France
A plain gray cinderblock wall in a hidden grove was completely transformed into a lifelike snake by street artist Rest4. The viper, rendered in vibrant greens, blues, and yellows, emerges from the shadows of the forest floor. The before-and-after framing reveals the power of imagination to awaken forgotten spaces.
10. Fluentem Colos — Little Milford, Wales
Land artist Jon Foreman created this delicate, wave-like gradient in a woodland clearing using carefully arranged leaves. Starting in green and fading to deep orange, the sculpture blends with the forest floor in color, shape, and motion—appearing to ripple like wind through grass. More by Jon Foreman: 9 Leaf Sculptures That Stir the Soul in the Forest (Art by Jon Foreman)
11. Florinda Camila — “WA” Marko Franco Domenak in Lima, Peru
This creative mural cleverly incorporates a real bougainvillea bush as the hair of a painted woman. A monarch butterfly completes the peaceful scene, adding movement to this blend of paint and nature.🔗 Follow WA on Instagram
More: When Street Art Meets Nature (40 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Never Avoid What Makes You Smile (8 Photos)
Content warning: This set brings together 8 pieces that use humor, surprise, and simple visual tricks to change ordinary spaces. A pigeon statue crowns the Duke of Wellington monument in Glasgow, a girl with bubbles rises across a tower in Long Beach, and a giant cat appe
This set brings together 8 pieces that use humor, surprise, and simple visual tricks to change ordinary spaces. A pigeon statue crowns the Duke of Wellington monument in Glasgow, a girl with bubbles rises across a tower in Long Beach, and a giant cat appears to crawl from under a brick arch in Cheltenham. Painted shadows, googly-eye interventions, a Janis Joplin portrait in Texas, a staged moment with a stone sculpture, and a snowman-shaped mailbox complete the selection.
More: Made You Smile (12 Photos)
1. What if you can chase dream as you chase bubbles — Brian Peterson in Long Beach, USA
A tall mural of a girl holding a bubble wand, surrounded by floating bubbles. The piece uses layered colors and light reflections to give depth to her face and hair.
🔗 Follow Brian Peterson on Instagram
2. Cat Under the Bridge — Andy Dice Davies in Cheltenham, UK
A large cat is painted beneath a brick archway, positioned as if emerging toward the viewer. The mural features wide eyes, detailed fur, and an extended paw reaching forward. The surrounding foliage and brickwork frame the illusion.
Andy Dice Davies: this is a painting of my actual cat and that’s my son in the picture! Its in Cheltenham at Little Herberts Nature Reserve. As soon as I saw the line of black bricks I had to paint this!
🔗 Follow Andy Dice Davies on Facebook
3. Monster Shadow — Damon Belanger in Redwood City, USA
Damon Belanger paints playful “fake shadows” across the streets, like this bench whose shadow transforms into a friendly monster. His works make passersby look twice and smile. More!: Funny Fake Shadows! (20 Photos)
🔗 Follow Damon Belanger on Instagram
4. Tree Face — Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
A tree squeezed between metal bars is given googly eyes and a stump nose, turning a natural deformity into a goofy, expressive character grinning at passersby. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)
🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
5. Janis Joplin — Paola Sire in San Antonio, Texas
A mural of Janis Joplin wearing round pink glasses and colorful accessories, with bright tones in her hair and clothing emphasizing her lively expression.
🔗 Follow Paola Sire on Instagram
6. The Duke of Wellington Pigeon — The Rebel Bear in Glasgow, Scotland
A bronze pigeon stands on top of the equestrian statue, holding a newspaper and wearing a small traffic cone. The added sculpture plays on the city’s long tradition of decorating the monument with cones.
🔗 Follow The Rebel Bear on Instagram
7. Playing with Statues
Caught mid-action, this classical statue seems to lash out at a woman reacting in mock pain, her hair and body frozen in dramatic motion. More: Playing With Statues (23 photos)
8. Snowmail — (Location Unknown)
A snow sculpture shaped around a mailbox, giving it the appearance of a shouting or surprised snowman with stick arms and painted facial features. More!: Snow is fun! (35 photos)
More: Made You Smile (11 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Made You Smile (12 Photos)
From cats playing with street lamps in Northern Ireland to a little girl joining bronze children in a park, these clever and playful works of public art were designed to make passersby smile. Here’s a collection of murals, interventions, and sculptures that brighten with imagination and humor.
More: Clever! (10 Photos)
1. Cats Mural — Woskerski in Larne, Northern Ireland
A mural of two ginger cats, one sitting and the other reaching up toward a real lamp post, painted on the side of Ruby’s Bodega. The artwork blends with the streetlight, turning it into a toy for the cats. More!: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality🔗 Follow Woskerski on Instagram
2. “E ‘Torre” — Giulio Masieri in Pordenone, Italy
A large mural of a reclining dog stretches across the wall of a building, its lifelike scale making the man standing nearby look small in comparison.🔗 Follow Giulio Masieri on Instagram
3. R2-D2 With Flowers — EFIX in France
A playful piece featuring R2-D2 holding flowers and a heart, placed next to a trash can as if giving it a gift. The design transforms the mundane into a humorous Star Wars-inspired scene.🔗 Follow EFIX on Instagram
4. Fake Shadows — Damon Belanger in Redwood City, California, USA
A shadow painted on the pavement shows a mailbox transformed into a dinosaur-like creature with teeth, reimagining the ordinary form in a surprising way. More!: Funny Fake Shadows! (20 Photos)🔗 Follow Damon Belanger on Instagram
5. Flashlight Beam — Golsa Golchini in Milan, Italy
A small painted figure of a child holding a flashlight appears to project a real beam of light across a wall corner, seamlessly blending painted and natural effects. More!: You Might Walk Past These—But They’re Tiny Masterpieces in Disguise🔗 Follow Golsa Golchini on Instagram
6. Googly-Eye Bollards — Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
Concrete street bollards with cracks and added googly eyes transformed into playful characters resembling Pac-Man figures along the sidewalk. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
7. Nadine and the Last Autumnal Swimmer — David Zinn in Ann Arbor, USA
A chalk drawing shows a small green creature swimming in a tiled pool hidden in a square of pavement among fallen autumn leaves, with a mouse perched on the ledge. More!: Beautiful Autumn By David Zinn! (9 Photos)🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
8. Playing With Statues
A child in a pink dress joins hands with bronze statues of children following a violinist, blending real life with sculpture in a park setting. More!: Playing With Statues (25 photos)
9. Pipe Shoes
Street pipes painted with chalk outlines of colorful shoes, turning the fittings into playful legs against the wall.
10. Flamingo Meter — Tom Bob in Massachusetts, USA
A gas meter and pipes are painted bright pink and transformed into a flamingo. The industrial hardware becomes part of a playful street art character. More by Tom Bob!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
11. Face in the Ruin — Nikita Nomerz
A derelict brick structure given large eyes and an open mouth painted around existing openings, turning the building into a character. More!: 17 Times Nikita Nomerz Brought Walls to Life
12. The Light Is All Around — Endo in Čačak, Serbia
Painted around a streetlamp, this mural shows an elderly man smiling and holding the lamp as if it’s a glowing staff. The golden light and warm tone enhance the friendly character’s presence. More photos here!More: Sculptures With True Creativity (10 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Feel Good Art! (10 Photos)
Content warning: These 10 artworks have been among the most popular on Street Art Utopia in the past months — from 3D illusions in Germany to surreal sculptures in Chicago and playful interventions on signs and buildings. We’ve gathered them here in one collection and now
These 10 artworks have been among the most popular on Street Art Utopia in the past months — from 3D illusions in Germany to surreal sculptures in Chicago and playful interventions on signs and buildings. We’ve gathered them here in one collection and now it’s your turn: which one is your favorite?
More: Absolutely Beautiful (8 Photos)
3D Horse — Neustadt, Germany
A realistic chalk painting by Nikolaj Arndt shows a horse rising from a pool of water, with perspective blending the artwork seamlessly into the pathway.
🔗 Follow Nikolaj Arndt on Instagram
UMI Sculpture — Chicago, USA
Daniel Popper’s monumental installation depicts a serene figure formed from wood-like structures, merging human form with organic roots and branches. More photos!: “UMI” Sculpture by Daniel Popper in Lisle, Illinois
🔗 Follow Daniel Popper on Instagram
Fishing Mural — Boissy-Saint-Léger, France
A mural by Louis Dupart shows a man and his dog fishing from a folding chair, painted high on a building wall with shadows adding depth.
Castle on a Van — Ireland
A temporary artwork drawn into dust on a van’s back doors transforms dirt into a detailed castle scene, complete with birds and a winding road. More!: Dirty Van Art (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow Dirty Van Art on Facebook
Tree Face — Bulgaria
Googly eyes attached to a tree highlight its natural growth, making it resemble a smiling face pressed against a metal fence. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)
🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
Have You Seen This Dog? — USA
A playful poster mimics a missing dog notice, but instead offers cheerful photos of a dog with tear-off tabs saying “Have a great day.”
Stacked House Mural — Düsseldorf, Germany
Klaus Klinger’s large mural covers a building with whimsical characters living in stacked, colorful houses, each window framing its own story.
Social Sign — Europe
A no-entry traffic sign has been reimagined with painted stick figures, turning the white stripe into a bar counter where people share drinks.
🔗 Follow Street Art Utopia on Instagram
Macaw Mural — Palenque, Mexico
Carlos Alberto GH painted a vivid 3D macaw in flight, extending its wings across the wall in bright red, blue, and yellow feathers. More photos!: By Carlos Alberto GH – In Chiapas, Mexico (6 photos)
🔗 Follow Carlos Alberto GH on Instagram
Unzipped Building — Milan, Italy
Alex Chinneck’s architectural intervention creates the illusion of a building unzipping at the corner, revealing fabric-like folds of its facade.
🔗 Follow Alex Chinneck on Instagram
More: Absolutely Fantastic (8 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Absolutely Beautiful (9 Photos)
From surreal sculptures set in lush landscapes to lifelike murals transforming city walls, these eight works capture the many ways public art can inspire. This collection takes you from vivid nature scenes to intimate portraits, with each piece offering a unique encounter in the open air. Featured are artists from Spain, Belgium, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Australia, and beyond.
1. True Nature — Sculpture by Daniel Popper in Cancun, Mexico
A monumental white sculpture of a figure holding its own face as a mask, with the head’s interior open to reveal dense tropical greenery. This work merges art with the natural environment, creating a striking visual link between human identity and the surrounding jungle.🔗 Follow Daniel Popper on Instagram
2. Mural by David Barrera — Fene, Spain
A vibrant building facade mural showing a young boy standing beside a white dog, facing a woman playing guitar. The central structure of the building separates the two figures but keeps them visually connected through color and composition.🔗 Follow David Barrera on Instagram
3. Mural by Wedo Goas — Salobreña, Spain
A portrait of a woman in a loose cream shirt, sitting with fruit and a glass of drink in front of her. The soft light and calm expression give the piece a classical, painting-like quality.🔗 Follow Wedo Goas on Instagram
4. Mural by Mona Caron — Le Locle, Switzerland
A towering mural of the Gentiana lutea plant painted along the full height of a tall concrete building. The bright yellow flowers and lush green leaves contrast sharply with the grey urban backdrop. More photos!: Flower mural by Mona Caron in Le Locle, Switzerland🔗 Follow Mona Caron on Instagram
5. Silo Art by SMUG — Lameroo, South Australia
A massive mural on grain silos showing a bearded man in a hat with clasped hands, overlaid with a golden rural sunset scene complete with a windmill and open fields. More by SMUG!: 24 Times SMUG Made Walls Look More Real Than Life🔗 Follow SMUG on Instagram
6. Mural by Megan Oldhues — Toronto, Canada
A soft-focus style mural of a woman in a white dress holding a red jug, standing in a lush garden with trees and flowers. The brushstroke style evokes a painted canvas.🔗 Follow Megan Oldhues on Instagram
7. Mural by Collin van der Sluijs — Maastricht, Netherlands
A richly detailed mural of a brown bird surrounded by flowers, leaves, and smaller birds, set against a colorful, patterned background. More!: Murals By Collin Van der Sluijs (7 Photos)🔗 Follow Collin van der Sluijs on Instagram
8. Mural by Adele Renault — Stavelot, Belgium
A mural covering the side of a building with the close-up face of a pigeon, its feathers shimmering with iridescent hues. More photos!: This Stunning Pigeon Mural in Belgium Is a Must-See🔗 Follow Adele Renault on Instagram
9. The Elder — Zion Graffiti in Bogotá, Colombia
This striking mural by Zion Graffiti, painted for Meeting Of Styles Colombia 2025, portrays the profile of an elderly man with flowing white hair and beard that merge seamlessly with the wall’s dark background.🔗 Follow Zion Graffiti on Instagram
More: Absolutely Stunning (8 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Made You Smile Again (8 Photos)
Content warning: Hidden creatures on brick walls, a snow-sculpted Batman on a city sidewalk, playful shadows in California and bright colors under a pedestrian tunnel. This collection brings together small surprises and lighthearted ideas from streets around the world. Mo
Hidden creatures on brick walls, a snow-sculpted Batman on a city sidewalk, playful shadows in California and bright colors under a pedestrian tunnel. This collection brings together small surprises and lighthearted ideas from streets around the world. More below.
More: Made You Smile (10 Photos)
1. Nadine Listens to the Grapevine — David Zinn in Michigan, USA
A small mouse peeks out from behind a green curtain painted directly onto a brick wall, surrounded by leaves and climbing vines. More!: This Is Amazing Art By David Zinn! (11 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
2. Batman Made of Snow — George Li in Chinatown, Boston, USA
A full-figure Batman sculpted entirely from packed snow stands on a city sidewalk, with the cape shaped as a wide mound behind him. Article about it here!
3. Bunny Line
A row of bronze rabbit sculptures stands in a line, with a small child interacting with the last rabbit near the edge of the platform. More!: Playing With Statues (21 Photos)
4. Fake Shadow — Damon Belanger in Redwood City, USA
The shadow of a transit sign is painted on the pavement as a stylized robot head, creating the illusion of a playful alternate shadow. More!: Funny Fake Shadows! (20 Photos)
🔗 Follow Damon Belanger on Instagram
5. Tunnel Binoculars — 3Steps Collective in Wetzlar, Germany
The entrance of a pedestrian tunnel is painted to resemble a person holding binoculars, with each tunnel opening forming a lens.
🔗 Follow 3Steps on Instagram
6. Have You Seen This Dog? — Artist Unknown in (Location Unknown)
A poster shows two photos of a friendly dog, with tear-off tabs at the bottom that each read “Have a great day.”
7. Bollard Octopus — Lumen Street Theatre in Limerick, Ireland
A street bollard is transformed into a bright blue octopus, with long painted tentacles extending across the surrounding pavement. More!: Painted Octopus on a bollard in Limerick, Ireland
🔗 Follow Lumen Street Theatre on Facebook
8. Rising Cat — 0331C in (Location Unknown)
A tall black cat is painted along the edge of a building, stretching from ground level up toward a balcony with a curved arched back. More!: Street Art by 0331C – A Collection
🔗 Follow 0331C on Instagram
More: Made You Smile (12 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Made You Smile Again (10 Photos)
From miniature rain scenes to creative statue interactions, these playful artworks bring humor and warmth to everyday spaces. You’ll find tiny worlds, clever visual twists, and charming public art that remind us how joy can appear in the most unexpected places.
More: Silly Street Art (8 Photos)
1. Tiny Umbrella Scene — By Slinkachu
A miniature couple stands close beneath a green bottle cap used as an umbrella. The scene captures a moment of quiet connection on a rainy day, turning ordinary litter into something poetic. More!: 7 Tiny Street Dramas by Slinkachu🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram
2. Nadine and the Chartreuse Respite — By David Zinn
A chalk drawing of a small animal reading under a plant-turned-tree. The real leaves form a canopy above the illustration, blending nature and imagination into one peaceful scene. More!: David Zinn’s Hidden Chalk Art (12 Photos)🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
3. Playing With Statues
A man joins a bronze circle of children in a park, perfectly blending into the sculpture’s movement. The spontaneous addition turns the artwork into a playful moment of shared joy. More!: Playing With Statues (11 Photos)
4. Statue on International Men’s Day
A historical statue is humorously transformed with the addition of a baby doll tied in a sling. The intervention highlights themes of modern parenthood and gender roles with a lighthearted touch.Read more about it here!: When Statues Become Fathers: Creative Street Art on Equal Parenting
5. Maggie Simpson — By EFIX
The metal ring on a wall becomes Maggie Simpson’s pacifier in this witty mural. The artist cleverly uses existing features of the surface to bring cartoon humor to the street. More!: EFIX’s Clever Art (9 Photos)🔗 Follow EFIX on Instagram
6. Painted Cottage — Anežka Kašpárková in Louka, Czech Republic
Anežka Kašpárková, a 90-year-old artist, decorates white village houses with intricate blue floral patterns inspired by traditional Moravian folk art. Each design is hand-painted and unique. More about it!: 90-Year-Old Artist Proves It’s Never Too Late to Pursue Your Passion
7. Streetlamp Couple Bench — Artist Unknown in Poland
Two bent streetlamps appear to lean affectionately toward each other above a bench, creating the illusion of a romantic embrace in the park. A small bronze cat adds to the story’s charm.
8. Tragic Trio — Pappas Pärlor in Sweden
Three small utility boxes are turned into a street band with faces, hats, and tiny instruments. The playful composition turns a dull wall into a lively concert scene. More!: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces – Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
9. Sleeping Fox — MALIK in Kölliken, Switzerland
A mural of a curled-up fox resting in the grass, painted with soft orange, white, and violet tones that highlight the animal’s calm expression.🔗 Follow MALIK on Instagram
10. Pearls & Tie — Art on the Deptford Landmark in London, UK
A playful piece turning two chimney tops into characters: one decorated with painted pearl necklaces, the other with a long blue polka-dot tie. Renovated by Participatory Muralism.More: Absolutely Gorgeous (9 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
In Chinatown, Batman rises up from the ice
George Li sculpted the Gotham City superhero in the snow outside of his Beech Street office to amuse his son and others.The Boston Globe
Bed intentions
Content warning: Street Artist Oakoak By Oakoak in France. More by Oakoak on Street Art Utopia.
Street Artist Oakoak
By Oakoak in France.
More by Oakoak on Street Art Utopia.
Street Art by Oakoak (6 photos)
Oakoak: www.oakoak.fr // Instagram // Facebook
More by Oakoak on Street Art Utopia.
oakoak (@oakoak_street_art) • Instagram photos and videos
124K Followers, 354 Following, 882 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from oakoak (@oakoak_street_art)www.instagram.com
Made You Smile Again (10 Photos)
Content warning: From miniature rain scenes to creative statue interactions, these playful artworks bring humor and warmth to everyday spaces. You’ll find tiny worlds, clever visual twists, and charming public art that remind us how joy can appear in the most unexpected p
From miniature rain scenes to creative statue interactions, these playful artworks bring humor and warmth to everyday spaces. You’ll find tiny worlds, clever visual twists, and charming public art that remind us how joy can appear in the most unexpected places.
More: Silly Street Art (8 Photos)
1. Tiny Umbrella Scene — By Slinkachu
A miniature couple stands close beneath a green bottle cap used as an umbrella. The scene captures a moment of quiet connection on a rainy day, turning ordinary litter into something poetic. More!: 7 Tiny Street Dramas by Slinkachu
🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram
2. Nadine and the Chartreuse Respite — By David Zinn
A chalk drawing of a small animal reading under a plant-turned-tree. The real leaves form a canopy above the illustration, blending nature and imagination into one peaceful scene. More!: David Zinn’s Hidden Chalk Art (12 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
3. Playing With Statues
A man joins a bronze circle of children in a park, perfectly blending into the sculpture’s movement. The spontaneous addition turns the artwork into a playful moment of shared joy. More!: Playing With Statues (11 Photos)
4. Statue on International Men’s Day
A historical statue is humorously transformed with the addition of a baby doll tied in a sling. The intervention highlights themes of modern parenthood and gender roles with a lighthearted touch.
Read more about it here!: When Statues Become Fathers: Creative Street Art on Equal Parenting
5. Maggie Simpson — By EFIX
The metal ring on a wall becomes Maggie Simpson’s pacifier in this witty mural. The artist cleverly uses existing features of the surface to bring cartoon humor to the street. More!: EFIX’s Clever Art (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow EFIX on Instagram
6. Painted Cottage — Anežka Kašpárková in Louka, Czech Republic
Anežka Kašpárková, a 90-year-old artist, decorates white village houses with intricate blue floral patterns inspired by traditional Moravian folk art. Each design is hand-painted and unique. More about it!: 90-Year-Old Artist Proves It’s Never Too Late to Pursue Your Passion
7. Streetlamp Couple Bench — Artist Unknown in Poland
Two bent streetlamps appear to lean affectionately toward each other above a bench, creating the illusion of a romantic embrace in the park. A small bronze cat adds to the story’s charm.
8. Tragic Trio — Pappas Pärlor in Sweden
Three small utility boxes are turned into a street band with faces, hats, and tiny instruments. The playful composition turns a dull wall into a lively concert scene. More!: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces – Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover
🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
9. Sleeping Fox — MALIK in Kölliken, Switzerland
A mural of a curled-up fox resting in the grass, painted with soft orange, white, and violet tones that highlight the animal’s calm expression.
🔗 Follow MALIK on Instagram
10. Pearls & Tie — Art on the Deptford Landmark in London, UK
A playful piece turning two chimney tops into characters: one decorated with painted pearl necklaces, the other with a long blue polka-dot tie. Renovated by Participatory Muralism.
More: Absolutely Gorgeous (9 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Silly Street Art (8 Photos)
Chalk leaf-raker in Michigan, a “Brickhenge” on a sidewalk, cat faces on bins, a tiny figure beside a soda can, a café façade in Taipei, pixel Mario in Sweden, a pipe turned into a mouth in New York, and a flip-flop gag in Copenhagen. Eight light, playful works from streets and sidewalks.
More: Clever Art! (10 Photos)
1. Leaf Raker — David Zinn in Michigan, USA
Chalk drawing of a small green character holding a rake, integrated with real autumn leaves on the pavement. More!: Happy Art by David Zinn (10 Photos)🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
2. Brickhenge — Artist Unknown in (Location Unknown)
Paving bricks arranged into a small ring with lintels, referencing Stonehenge on a street corner.
3. Cat Bins — Artist Unknown in (Location Unknown)
Two trash containers painted with cat faces; a real cat walks past, aligning with the scene.
4. Little People, Soda Can — Slinkachu in (Location Unknown)
Miniature figure facing a discarded soda can with a small cross added to the pull tab. More!: Art on a Tiny Scale (7 Photos)🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram
5. R9 Café Façade — In Taipei City, Taiwan
Mural of balcony scenes with characters pouring tea, playing saxophone, and interacting with window frames. See it all!: 4 photos – Mural at R9 Cafe in Taipei City, Taiwan
6. Super Mario Between Stones — Pappas Pärlor in Sweden
Perler-bead Mario embedded between cobblestones, appearing to pop up from the pavement. More: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces: Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
7. Pipe Face — Tom Bob in New York, USA
Wall pipe painted into a cartoon mouth with a hand beside it; before/after photos show the intervention. More by Tom Bob!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
8. Invisible Man With Flip-Flops — Artist Unknown in Copenhagen, Denmark
Street setup with a small table, a pair of flip-flops, and a sign inviting donations to an “invisible” performer.More: Funny Signs! (20 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
EFIX 🇫🇷 (@efixworld) • Instagram photos and videos
92K Followers, 2,892 Following, 298 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from EFIX 🇫🇷 (@efixworld)www.instagram.com
All So Beautiful! (9 Photos)
Content warning: From Argentina to Poland, Sardinia to the UK, these murals show the beauty of people, nature, and imagination painted on walls. This collection of 9 features reflections on identity, vibrant portraits, playful animals, cultural heritage, and surreal encou
From Argentina to Poland, Sardinia to the UK, these murals show the beauty of people, nature, and imagination painted on walls. This collection of 9 features reflections on identity, vibrant portraits, playful animals, cultural heritage, and surreal encounters with nature — each piece stopping passersby with its detail and emotion.
More!: Absolutely amazing (10 Photos)
1. Diversity Dream – Vinie in Chatou, France
A colorful mural of a seated girl with closed eyes and patterned leggings. More!: Vinie’s Stunning Murals (25 Photos)
🔗 Follow Vinie on Instagram
2. Silent Harmony- Poster One in Swindon, UK
A mural of a woman’s face painted in abstract, layered strokes. Blue and orange dominate the composition, with the eyes closed and the expression calm.
🔗 Follow Poster One on Instagram
3. Gentle Hands – JEKS in Chattanooga, Tennessee, USA
A monochrome mural of an elderly man with a white beard, carefully holding a cluster of pink flowers in his hands. More!: 9 Amazing Murals by JEKS ONE That Blur the Line Between Paint and Reality
🔗 Follow JEKS ONE on Instagram
4. Koi Embrace — Kitsune & Lobster Robin in Ghent, Belgium
A mural of a woman surrounded by luminous blue koi fish. The warm glow around her contrasts with the deep navy background and stylized fish.
🔗 Follow Kitsune and Lobster Robin on Instagram
5. Among the Grass — Krzysztof Bitka in Szczecin, Poland
This pastel-toned mural portrays a woman kneeling in a tall meadow, rendered with fine sketch-like lines and watercolor textures. It’s part of the Street Art Szczecin 2021 project. More!: 7 photos – Flower Mural by Krzysztof Bitka in Szczecin, Poland
6. Happy Pup — WOSKerski in London, UK
A humorous mural of a dog with big eyes and tongue sticking out, painted against a bright yellow circle on a brick wall. More!: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
🔗 Follow WOSKerski on Instagram
7. Daily Life in Zeddiani — Vanda Banti in Sardinia, Italy
Painted directly onto a residential facade, this mural blends seamlessly into the house’s real structure. It portrays a traditional Sardinian street scene with people, a donkey, and vivid historic clothing. More photos here!
8. Reflections — Martin Ron in San Nicolás de los Arroyos, Argentina
A striking mural showing a boy crouching down in a hooded jacket, reflected upside down in a mirrored surface. The reflection includes the same figure holding a purple flower. More!: 9 Martín Ron Murals That Redefine Urban Art
🔗 Follow Martin Ron on Instagram
9. Portrait with Feathered Headdress — Valérian in Paris, France
A striking portrait mural by Valérian painted at 5 Passage Sigaud in Paris. The artwork features a monochrome face adorned with a radiant headdress of multicolored feathers, blending fine stencil work with expressive paint drips and splashes. The contrast between vivid hues and the calm expression of the subject creates a powerful visual impact.
🔗 Follow Valérian on Instagram
More: Sculptures With True Creativity (10 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Vinie’s Stunning Murals (25 Photos)
Vinie grew up in Toulouse and loved drawing and painting from a young age. In high school, she started doing street art when she joined the “AH Crew” in 2001.
Back then, she mostly worked on graffiti lettering. Over time, she joined art events and worked on themed murals, which inspired her to create colorful characters and detailed scenes.In 2007, Vinie moved to Paris for a job as an Artistic Director. This move helped her focus on her own style of art. She began painting her now-famous female character on Paris walls. These characters are easy to spot with their big, bold hairstyles made of graffiti tags and designs. Vinie also likes to use things around her, like plants, to make her art blend into its surroundings.
With help from her art partner Anti, she started making sculptures in 2016 and again in 2019. Today, Vinie’s art is known all over the world. She takes part in urban art festivals and shares her creations across different countries. Her work mixes her love for painting and traveling, bringing bright and creative designs to city streets everywhere.
LINKS: www.viniegraffiti.com // Instagram / Facebook
More amazing murals: 9 Martín Ron Murals That Redefine Urban Art
More like this: Fabian Bane’s Murals: Stunning Street Art Transforming Walls Around the World
What do you think about the murals by Vinie?
Silly Street Art (8 Photos)
Content warning: Chalk leaf-raker in Michigan, a “Brickhenge” on a sidewalk, cat faces on bins, a tiny figure beside a soda can, a café façade in Taipei, pixel Mario in Sweden, a pipe turned into a mouth in New York, and a flip-flop gag in Copenhagen. Eight light, playful
Chalk leaf-raker in Michigan, a “Brickhenge” on a sidewalk, cat faces on bins, a tiny figure beside a soda can, a café façade in Taipei, pixel Mario in Sweden, a pipe turned into a mouth in New York, and a flip-flop gag in Copenhagen. Eight light, playful works from streets and sidewalks.
More: Clever Art! (10 Photos)
1. Leaf Raker — David Zinn in Michigan, USA
Chalk drawing of a small green character holding a rake, integrated with real autumn leaves on the pavement. More!: Happy Art by David Zinn (10 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
2. Brickhenge — Artist Unknown in (Location Unknown)
Paving bricks arranged into a small ring with lintels, referencing Stonehenge on a street corner.
3. Cat Bins — Artist Unknown in (Location Unknown)
Two trash containers painted with cat faces; a real cat walks past, aligning with the scene.
4. Little People, Soda Can — Slinkachu in (Location Unknown)
Miniature figure facing a discarded soda can with a small cross added to the pull tab. More!: Art on a Tiny Scale (7 Photos)
🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram
5. R9 Café Façade — In Taipei City, Taiwan
Mural of balcony scenes with characters pouring tea, playing saxophone, and interacting with window frames. See it all!: 4 photos – Mural at R9 Cafe in Taipei City, Taiwan
6. Super Mario Between Stones — Pappas Pärlor in Sweden
Perler-bead Mario embedded between cobblestones, appearing to pop up from the pavement. More: 90 Pixel Art Masterpieces: Pappas Pärlor’s Perler Bead Street Takeover
🔗 Follow Pappas Pärlor on Instagram
7. Pipe Face — Tom Bob in New York, USA
Wall pipe painted into a cartoon mouth with a hand beside it; before/after photos show the intervention. More by Tom Bob!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
8. Invisible Man With Flip-Flops — Artist Unknown in Copenhagen, Denmark
Street setup with a small table, a pair of flip-flops, and a sign inviting donations to an “invisible” performer.
More: Funny Signs! (20 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Clever Art! (10 Photos)
From a tree with googly eyes to a crumbling wall turned into a romantic moment, these artworks prove that creativity doesn’t always require a blank canvas. Across New York, Bulgaria, Seoul, and beyond, artists used cracks, plants, poles, staircases, and fences to build surprising and often funny interactions between art and reality. Scroll on for a playful, smart, and sometimes emotional collection of street art that responds to the world it’s painted into.
More: 11 Times I Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings
1. The Snail Catcher
A hyper-realistic mural by Cheone of a young boy extends his arm through a broken wall, appearing to gently touch a real yellow-black striped pole where a snail is crawling. The integration is so precise it looks like he’s interacting with the snail mid-motion.More: 23 Amazing 3D Murals by CHEONE!
2. Floral Crown — OG Millie in New York, USA
A woman with soft, glowing skin and vivid green eyes is painted against a pastel circular background. Her painted hair seamlessly transforms into a lush explosion of real pink and purple flowers cascading from the wall.More: Flower mural by OGMillie (5 photos)
3. Googly Tree — Bulgaria
A thick tree has grown around metal railings, forming a natural mouth shape. Someone added googly eyes above it, turning the tree into a funny face peering out over the water.More: 16 Googly-Eyed Street Art Gems That I Love
4. Parkour Kid — Marek Looney Rybowski in Gdynia, Poland
A playful mural of a child in a cap and red sneakers is painted to appear as if he’s hanging from a concrete overhang, feet swinging in the air while a butterfly flutters nearby.See the entire mural!: Mural by LOONEY in Gdynia, Poland (11 photos)
5. Koi Staircase — Ihwa Mural Village in Seoul, South Korea
A flight of urban stairs becomes a vibrant pond when painted with swimming koi fish in yellow, orange, and white, gliding against a deep blue background.
6. Rising Water — Banksy in London, UK
Spray-painted text reads “I DON’T BELIEVE IN GLOBAL WARMING,” with the lower words submerged beneath real water, making the message ironic and pointed.More: “I Don’t Believe in Global Warming” by Banksy
7. Dancing Fence — Oakoak in France
A section of a metal fence has been bent to resemble a dancing couple. Two simple pink circle faces are added to enhance the illusion, giving the rusted structure a touch of romance.More by Oakoak!: From Homer Simpson to Obelix: Oakoak’s Genius Street Art! (10 Photos)
8. Skull Wall — Suitswon in Brooklyn, New York, USA
A large, abandoned concrete structure with missing windows and overgrown vegetation has been painted into a realistic skull. The empty window spaces serve as eye sockets.
9. Crumbled Love
On a damaged wall in Leipzig (Germany), a crumbling patch becomes the body of a dog, painted kissing a woman. A heart floats above them, using decay to deliver tenderness.
10. Vertical Garden Street — Valparaíso, Chile
Plastic bottles are transformed into planters and attached to a wall painted as a colorful street of buildings, turning trash into greenery on a painted urban scene.More: 9 Genius Street Artworks That Will Change How You See the City
Which one is your favorite?
How Clever (10 Photos)
Content warning: From witty illusions on city walls to playful transformations of pipes and sidewalks, here are 10 clever street art works from around the world. Featured are murals in France, Sweden, Belgium, and more — each piece turning its surroundings into something
From witty illusions on city walls to playful transformations of pipes and sidewalks, here are 10 clever street art works from around the world. Featured are murals in France, Sweden, Belgium, and more — each piece turning its surroundings into something surprising and memorable.
More: Silly Signs! (8 Photos)
1. Closed Forever — By Oakoak in Gent, Belgium
A Simpsons-inspired mural showing Moe’s Tavern with a sad Barney Gumble leaning on the bar, paired with the text “Closed Forever.” Painted on a brick wall with simple bottles and stools to complete the scene. More!: Wrong but Right: Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram
2. The Photographer — By Blesea in Normandy, France
A large mural of a young girl holding a camera, painted across a World War II bunker on the beach. Her wide eyes and the detailed lens turn the structure into a striking scene.
🔗 Follow Blesea on Instagram
3. Cat on the Roof — By Sagie in Kristianstad, Sweden
A grey tabby cat painted to look as if it is climbing down from a rooftop. The fur texture and shading make the mural appear almost lifelike.
🔗 Follow Sagie on Instagram
4. Painting the Crosswalk — By Cheone in Italy
A mural of a man with a paint roller seamlessly integrated with a real crosswalk. The painted figure appears to be creating the street lines in real time. More!: 23 Amazing 3D Murals by CHEONE!
🔗 Follow Cheone on Instagram
5. In Which Nadine Amuses a Dragon — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, USA
A small chalk drawing on a sidewalk showing a playful green dragon laughing on its back while a tiny mouse looks on. Blended with fallen leaves to complete the autumn scene. More!: Beautiful Autumn By David Zinn! (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
6. Kissing Pipes — By Tom Bob in New York, USA
Two outdoor pipes transformed into colorful cartoon characters leaning in for a kiss. Painted in bright blue and yellow with playful polka dots and hearts above them. More!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
7. Black Fox — By students of the Art Academy of Latvia and organization Dzivnieku Bedriba in Riga, Latvia
A large three-dimensional fox mounted on a white brick wall. The work combines sculpture and street art, giving the fox a lifelike stance. More photos and video!: Black Fox – In Riga, Latvia
8. Sleeping Beauty — By Made in Graffiti in Picardie, France
A hillside mural showing a person asleep under a blanket, blending into the grassy landscape. Viewed from a distance, the field transforms into a giant bed.
🔗 Follow Made in Graffiti on Instagram
9. Eurasian Blue Tit — By JanIsDeMan in Zeeland, Netherlands
A large blue tit painted on a brick building, shown perched against the wall with a berry in its beak. The bird’s colors stand out against the rural landscape behind the structure. More!: 8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man That Will Make You Smile
🔗 Follow JanIsDeMan on Instagram
10. Les Rêveurs de Demain — By Eskat in Limay, France
A mural showing a globe surrounded by flowers, a boy and an older man sitting on a leaf, and a sleeping wolf beside a resting child. The scene combines nature, imagination, and village life in one composition.
🔗 Follow Eskat on Instagram
More: Creative Genius (8 Photos)
Which of these clever works is your favorite?
Funny Signs! (8 Photos)
From autocorrect jokes on roadside boards to dog stick libraries and even a street post claiming to be Luke’s father—these signs bring humor into the most unexpected places. This collection of silly signs captures creative and funny moments spotted in everyday life.
More: Funny Signs! (18 Photos)
1. Gary Come Home — City Street, Unknown
A SpongeBob reference placed on a street pole calls for Gary the snail to come home, bringing cartoon humor to the sidewalk.
2. Dog Library — Neighborhood Park, USA
A playful wooden sign designates a ‘Dog Library’ where visitors can ‘take a stick, leave a stick’ for four-legged readers.
3. One Copy Per Child — Porch Library, USA
A front porch setup for Halloween offers free copies of George Orwell’s 1984, with a sign declaring ‘One copy of 1984 per child’ in place of candy.
4. Earthquake Detection Kit — School Wall, USA
Two googly eyes glued to a yellow paper under the title ‘Earthquake Detection Kit’—ready to wiggle at the slightest tremor. More!: The City Has Eyes (8 Photos)
5. Autocorrect Humor — Roadside, USA
A roadside sign pokes fun at autocorrect with a mistaken message about a ‘funnel’ being held ‘tomato’ instead of a funeral tomorrow.
6. Invisible — Street Performance, Europe
A witty sign promises an ‘invisible man with flip-flops,’ with only the footwear left visible for curious passersby.
7. No Entry Bar — Modified Street Sign, Europe
A no-entry traffic sign is altered with silhouettes, transforming the white bar into a counter at a neighborhood bar.
8. I Am Your Father — Street Corner, Europe
A clever Star Wars reference gives voice to a vent pipe, declaring to passersby: ‘Luke, I am your father.’More: Street Artist painting funny fake shadows to confuse people (20 photos)
Which silly sign is your favorite?
oakoak (@oakoak_street_art) • Instagram photos and videos
124K Followers, 354 Following, 882 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from oakoak (@oakoak_street_art)www.instagram.com
Street Art You Can’t Ignore When You Walk By (12 Photos)
Content warning: From storm drains turned into alligators to tunnels transformed into giant binoculars, these 12 playful interventions show how artists and designers reshape city details into clever works of art. This collection includes a flamingo gas meter in Massachuse
From storm drains turned into alligators to tunnels transformed into giant binoculars, these 12 playful interventions show how artists and designers reshape city details into clever works of art. This collection includes a flamingo gas meter in Massachusetts, a spiraling stone wall in England, a surreal mural in France, and more urban surprises across the world.
More: Trash! (8 Photos)
1. Alligator Drain — By David Zinn in USA
A storm drain cover is painted into the back of an alligator, with its head and tail extending onto the pavement. The green-eyed reptile blends seamlessly with the urban setting.
2. E.T. Hydrant — Artist Unknown in Europe
A fire hydrant component is reimagined as E.T.’s face, with a drawn body placed below. The use of found objects gives the character a striking three-dimensional effect.
3. Hungry Mural — Artist Unknown in Bordeaux, France
A wall painting shows a woman leading her daughter away, ignoring a homeless man holding a sign that says “J’ai faim” (“I’m hungry”). The mural comments on social indifference in urban life.
4. Brickwork Bench — By Mahsa Saeidi & Sedighe Eskandarpour at Boulevard Shahed in Shiraz, Iran
A long bench of curved brickwork is built around trees along a pedestrian walkway. Its flowing design integrates seamlessly with the natural setting.
5. Spyglass — By 3Steps in Wetzlar, Germany
An underpass is painted so the twin tunnels form the lenses of a giant pair of binoculars. The design uses perspective to create an illusion of depth and scale.
6. Altered Sign — Monotremu in Timișoara, Romania
A standard pedestrian crossing sign is reimagined with the figure transformed into the iconic scream pose from Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.” A witty nod to one of the world’s most famous paintings placed directly into everyday traffic signage.
7. Spiral Wall — John Bainbridge in UK
A dry-stone wall is arranged in a spiral pattern, with bricks radiating toward a small central hole. The unusual design creates a hypnotic sense of motion within solid masonry.
8. Flamingo Meter — Tom Bob in Massachusetts, USA
A gas meter and pipes are painted bright pink and transformed into a flamingo. The industrial hardware becomes part of a playful street art character. More by Tom Bob!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
9. The Eye — My Dog Sighs in Wynwood, Miami, Florida
A large mural of an eye painted on a beige wall. The detailed iris reflects the surrounding area and sky, giving the piece depth and realism. More!: Eyes That Speak: A Stunning Collection of My Dog Sighs Most Powerful Street Artworks (7 Murals)
🔗 Follow My Dog Sighs on Instagram
10. Reading Together — Amanda Newman in Melbourne, Australia
A mural beneath an overpass shows two children reading a book titled “Uncle Bobby’s Wedding.” The left child has curly dark hair, and the right child has light hair. The background fades through a full rainbow gradient, giving the scene a soft glow. Rocks at the base frame the lower edge of the artwork.
🔗 Follow Amanda Newman on Instagram
11. Bird in the Water — VYRÜS in Oye-Plage, France
A black-and-white mural of a wading bird stretches across the side of a tall building. The bird stands with wings lifted, creating a wide silhouette above its reflection in the shallow water below. The light-colored wall emphasizes the contrast in the painted feathers.
🔗 Follow VYRÜS on Instagram
Photo by Adeline Maria
12. Lynx of the Forest — Alegria del Prado in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
A large lynx forms the center of this mural, composed of layered leaves, flowers, and forest animals. The warm color palette blends oranges, browns, and muted greens. Smaller birds, a rabbit, an owl, and butterflies are integrated within the lynx’s body, creating one continuous nature motif. More!: Beautiful Wildlife Murals by Alegria del Prado (9 Photos)
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More: The Art of Fixing What’s Broken (9 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Garbage With Style (8 Photos)
From cookie-loving bins to clever cyclist designs, these creative trash cans show how small details can bring humor, style, and smart function to public spaces. In this collection, you’ll see a dapper gentleman bin, a giant bottle recycling cage, cartoon faces painted on dumpsters, and more unusual ideas found around the world.
More: The City Has Eyes (8 Photos)
1. Bottle Bin
A yellow wire frame designed in the shape of a huge plastic bottle, serving as a recycling container for smaller bottles. Its oversized form makes recycling more engaging and visible in the park.
2. Cookie Monster Bin
A playful purple bin fitted with large googly eyes and a cookie at the opening, mimicking the Cookie Monster. A humorous design encouraging passersby to interact with the bin.
8. Gentleman Bin
A metal mesh bin transformed into a standing figure with shoes, gloves, and a top hat, giving the appearance of a saluting gentleman. A whimsical character in public space.
4. Cyclist’s Bin — Copenhagen, Denmark
A black tilted bin installed at an angle along a bike lane, making it easy for cyclists to dispose of trash while riding. A functional design tailored to the city’s cycling culture.
5. Cat Dumpsters
Two dumpsters painted with large, detailed cat faces, complete with whiskers and expressive eyes. The artwork humorously blends with a real cat passing by on the street.
6. Cartoon Bins
Two wheelie bins customized with airbrushed cartoon faces. One has a shocked expression, the other is blue and cheeky, sticking its tongue out. A playful twist on ordinary bins.
7. Cigarette Bin
A trash container shaped like an oversized cigarette butt, positioned by a bench to encourage smokers to dispose of their waste properly.
8. Donald Dump — Paris, France
A standard green bin topped with a folded cardboard box arranged to look like a head, complete with cut-out eyes and yellow hair. A temporary but striking urban character.More: Made You Smile (8 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Clever Surprises (8 Photos)
Content warning: From a wall crack turned into a bird to a “dog library” for sticks, this collection brings together eight playful street artworks that twist everyday objects into clever surprises. Expect invisible men, rock dinosaurs, sewer covers turned into record play
From a wall crack turned into a bird to a “dog library” for sticks, this collection brings together eight playful street artworks that twist everyday objects into clever surprises. Expect invisible men, rock dinosaurs, sewer covers turned into record players, and more creative illusions that prove the streets are full of imagination.
More!: Made You Smile (8 Photos)
1. Bird Crack
A simple crack in the wall turned into the body of a bird with two legs drawn underneath. A minimal intervention that turns damage into creativity.
2. Dog Library
A humorous installation with a sign reading “Dog Library: Take a stick, leave a stick.” A witty nod to how dogs collect sticks, presented like a public service.
3. Invisible Man
A small setup on the street with flip-flops on a stool and a sign announcing an “Invisible Naked Man.” A funny take on busking with nothing to see but imagination.
4. Rock Dinosaur — David Zinn in USA
A rock on the sidewalk becomes the head of a dinosaur, complete with an open mouth and tiny arms, thanks to clever chalk art. More!: Cute Art By David Zinn (14 Photos)
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5. DJ Cover
A manhole cover is outlined with white paint to resemble a turntable, turning a functional object into a playful nod to music culture.
6. Miles Davis Sculpture — Vlado Kostov in Kotor, Montenegro
A sculpture of Miles Davis made from scrap metal, created by Vlado Kostov. The piece merges music and machinery in the old town of Kotor.
7. The Cracks — Oakoak in France
A small painted figure with a pickaxe appears to be working on a real crack in the stone, blending painting with physical damage. More!: Street Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram
8. Shady Watch Dealer — Tom Bob in California, USA
Utility meters on a wall are transformed into watches, displayed by a painted shady dealer character. A clever piece by Tom Bob that reimagines urban infrastructure. More!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
More: Funny Signs! (18 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Made You Smile (15 Photos)
Sometimes the world feels like it’s moving too fast, but these artists are here to remind us to stop and look at the little things.
From a simple rock that tells a joke to a pedestrian crossing that has come to life, these small artworks prove that creativity is often most powerful when it’s unexpected.We’ve gathered 15 photos that will brighten your day and remind you that there is magic waiting in the cracks of the sidewalk—if you only take a moment to look.
More: Funny Signs (20 Photos)
Balcony Illusion by Oakoak in Paris, France
By adding a mural of two figures peeking out from a boarded-up window, Oakoak breathes life back into an abandoned building. The way the characters seem to be watching the world go by creates a playful loop of “people-watching” that adds charm to a neglected space. More!: Wrong but Right – Art By Oakoak (9 Photos)💡 Nerd Fact: Oakoak has been building tiny site-specific jokes out of cracks, shadows, and road markings since 2006, so works like this feel almost like street-level readymades: the city supplies the object, and the artist supplies the twist.
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Nadine and the Surprisingly Effective Joke by David Zinn
David Zinn is a master of the “temporary smile.” Using nothing but chalk and the natural shape of a rock on the sidewalk, he created a scene where a little green monster is cracking up at a joke told by his character Nadine. It’s a perfect example of how a bit of imagination can turn a gray corner into a scene of pure joy. More!: 9 Cute Spring Drawings by David Zinn💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s own site describes his temporary pavement works as improvisations made from chalk, charcoal, and found objects. That makes him a great example of pareidolia in action: the brain’s habit of seeing meaningful images in random shapes, pebbles, and cracks.
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram
Have You Seen This Dog?
This isn’t your typical lost pet flyer. Instead of a missing dog, the poster simply asks, “Have you seen this dog?” and then answers with a picture of a happy pup: “Now you have. Have a GOOD day.” It’s a wonderful bit of low-tech street art designed specifically to lift a stranger’s mood.
Little People Museum — Slinkachu in UK
A miniature installation where tiny figurines examine a cigarette butt displayed as if it were a museum artifact. More!: 7 Tiny Street Dramas by Slinkachu💡 Nerd Fact: Slinkachu’s mini scenes are not just cute visual gags. He says they are meant to mix surprise with the loneliness and melancholy of big-city life, which is why his tiny characters often feel funny and slightly heartbreaking at the same time.
🔗 Follow Slinkachu on Instagram
Keeping the Feet Warm
Someone decided that these pipes looked a little too cold standing on the sidewalk. By painting colorful socks and sneakers onto the concrete below them, the artist turned a dull plumbing fixture into a pair of legs ready for a walk. It’s the kind of whimsical detail that makes city life feel more personal.
R2-D2’s Day Off by EFIX
Even droids need a moment of romance. EFIX added a cardboard character to a public trash can, making it look like R2-D2 is sheepishly offering flowers to a bin. It’s a brilliant way to humanize our city streets with a bit of pop-culture humor. More!: EFIX’s Clever Art (9 Photos)💡 Nerd Fact: EFIX says he uses childhood pop-culture characters to keep our “child soul” alive and make people see street furniture differently; the Star Wars trivia layer is that R2-D2’s name itself came from a sound-editing label, “Reel 2, Dialog 2.”
🔗 Follow EFIX on Instagram
Museum Quality Dandelion by Michael Pederson in Sydney, Australia
Michael Pederson treats the most ignored parts of the city with the highest respect. By placing tiny museum stanchions and a “Please Do Not Touch” sign around a common dandelion growing through the pavement, he forces us to appreciate the resilience of nature in the concrete jungle. More!: Clever Art By Michael Pederson (17 Photos)💡 Nerd Fact: Pederson has been making tiny public interventions since 2013, and his signature move is to leave small, playful installations in unexpected places. So the “museum” around the weed is really part of a bigger practice: making overlooked corners behave like cultural landmarks.
🔗 Follow Michael Pederson on Instagram
Charlie Chaplin by Tom Bob in Massachusetts, USA
Tom Bob is the king of the “before and after.” Here, he transformed a standard red standpipe and a bit of patched concrete into the legendary Charlie Chaplin. By adding the iconic bowler hat, mustache, and cane, he turned a boring piece of infrastructure into a cinematic tribute that makes everyone stop and grin. More!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)💡 Nerd Fact: Tom Bob once said some street objects seem to “tell” him what they want to become. Chaplin is an especially nerdy match here, because the Tramp costume was famously built out of contradictions: baggy pants, tight coat, small hat, and huge shoes.
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The Ghost Crossing by Oakoak in Auchel, France
Street artist Oakoak is famous for his “blink-and-you’ll-miss-it” wit. By adding eyes and a clever shadow to one stripe of a crosswalk, he transformed a standard piece of traffic safety into a floating ghost. It’s simple, smart, and impossible not to smile at. More by Oakoak: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)💡 Nerd Fact: Oakoak’s real trick is how little he actually adds. His whole practice is built around letting existing road markings, cracks, and shadows do most of the storytelling, which is why pieces like this feel more like discoveries than decorations.
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram
“The Fabulous Tale of Being Different” by Case Maclaim in Madrid, Spain
Case Maclaim’s mural in Madrid depicts a young person in a wheelchair draped in vibrant fabrics, blending strength and softness in a single portrait. More photos!: The Fabulous Tale Of Being Different (by Case Maclaim in Madrid)Case Maclaim: I believe the actual beauty of fairy tales is that it is up to our imagination how the character looks and moves and that version is not really up to debate, as it is just like a fingerprint, very unique and personal. With this mural in the old, historical city center of Madrid I wanted to try a different approach. So I gave the viewer a new character of a yet unknown fairy tale. I have high hopes that it will encourage specially the young audience to come up with their very own story, in which the lead is a confident, black child in a golden wheelchair and in a self-made mermaid costume.
🔗 Follow Case Maclaim on Instagram
A Helping Paw by Trevor Cole in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada
Sometimes the best art is the kind that triggers a real-world reaction. This photo captures a real-life dog reaching out to “comfort” a stencil of a sad boy on a wall. It’s a beautiful, spontaneous moment that proves empathy isn’t just for humans.Stencil by Trevor Cole in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada. Photo by Erika Lopez of her dog Carlos.
Lego Man by Näutil in Saint-Pierre-Église, France
Turning a cold, concrete bunker from WWII into a giant, smiling LEGO man is a brilliant way to reclaim a historical space. This mural by näutil creates a sharp, playful contrast between the heavy history of the structure and the simple joy of a childhood toy. It’s a perfect example of how art can change the energy of a location completely. More photos here!More: Life and Poetry By Näutil (15 Photos!)
💡 Nerd Fact: For näutil, painting bunkers is biographical, not random: he grew up in a seafaring family and started doing graffiti on coastal blockhaus walls. The LEGO skin also echoes Jan Vormann’s Dispatchwork project, which has been “repairing” damaged walls with toy bricks since 2007.
🔗 Follow näutil on Instagram
Viviane Hesitate by Seth Globepainter in Paris, France
In the La Butte-aux-cailles neighborhood, Seth Globepainter captures a perfect moment of childhood curiosity. This interaction—where a real girl stops to watch a mural of a character jumping into a wall—bridges the gap between our world and the world of imagination.More by Seth!: 34 Murals That Turn Walls Into Wonders: Seth’s Street Art Will Blow Your Mind
💡 Nerd Fact: Seth’s children often hide or turn away their faces on purpose. He says that lets viewers project themselves into the work, and since 2003 he has used childhood as a way to make murals question, dream, and look beyond rather than preach.
🔗 Follow Seth Globepainter on Instagram
Pop Art Pink Panther by Matt Gondek in Toronto, Canada
Matt Gondek is known for his signature “deconstructed” style, where iconic pop culture figures appear to be melting. This massive mural in Toronto takes the suave Pink Panther and places him on a colorful, gritty throne. It’s a bold piece that proves even the most classic characters can be reinvented with a modern, slightly rebellious edge.💡 Nerd Fact: The Pink Panther did not begin as a standalone cartoon star at all: he was created in 1963 for the film credits and later spun off into more than 125 theatrical shorts and multiple TV shows. So handing him to a “deconstructive pop artist” like Matt Gondek is basically pop culture remixing one of its own oldest cool icons.
🔗 Follow Matt Gondek on Instagram
La Linea on the Barn
The classic character “La Linea,” created by Italian animator Osvaldo Cavandoli, makes a surprise appearance on the side of this rural barn. The simplicity of the single continuous line is a masterpiece of minimalist storytelling. Seeing this high-strung character “walking” across a farm building is an instant nostalgia trip for anyone who grew up with his expressive adventures.💡 Nerd Fact: La Linea is older than many people realize: the rights holder Quipos says Cavandoli introduced the character in 1969, and that single-line grouch later travelled to around fifty countries. It is basically a masterclass in how much personality one uninterrupted line can carry.
Which one is your favorite?
Funny Signs! (8 Photos)
Content warning: From autocorrect jokes on roadside boards to dog stick libraries and even a street post claiming to be Luke’s father—these signs bring humor into the most unexpected places. This collection of silly signs captures creative and funny moments spotted in eve
From autocorrect jokes on roadside boards to dog stick libraries and even a street post claiming to be Luke’s father—these signs bring humor into the most unexpected places. This collection of silly signs captures creative and funny moments spotted in everyday life.
More: Funny Signs! (18 Photos)
1. Gary Come Home — City Street, Unknown
A SpongeBob reference placed on a street pole calls for Gary the snail to come home, bringing cartoon humor to the sidewalk.
2. Dog Library — Neighborhood Park, USA
A playful wooden sign designates a ‘Dog Library’ where visitors can ‘take a stick, leave a stick’ for four-legged readers.
3. One Copy Per Child — Porch Library, USA
A front porch setup for Halloween offers free copies of George Orwell’s 1984, with a sign declaring ‘One copy of 1984 per child’ in place of candy.
4. Earthquake Detection Kit — School Wall, USA
Two googly eyes glued to a yellow paper under the title ‘Earthquake Detection Kit’—ready to wiggle at the slightest tremor. More!: The City Has Eyes (8 Photos)
5. Autocorrect Humor — Roadside, USA
A roadside sign pokes fun at autocorrect with a mistaken message about a ‘funnel’ being held ‘tomato’ instead of a funeral tomorrow.
6. Invisible — Street Performance, Europe
A witty sign promises an ‘invisible man with flip-flops,’ with only the footwear left visible for curious passersby.
7. No Entry Bar — Modified Street Sign, Europe
A no-entry traffic sign is altered with silhouettes, transforming the white bar into a counter at a neighborhood bar.
8. I Am Your Father — Street Corner, Europe
A clever Star Wars reference gives voice to a vent pipe, declaring to passersby: ‘Luke, I am your father.’
More: Street Artist painting funny fake shadows to confuse people (20 photos)
Which silly sign is your favorite?
Funny Signs (20 Photos)
Some public signs tell you where to go or what to do. These ones? They play with expectations. From witty chalkboards and absurd flyers to poetic instructions and signs that lead nowhere, these 20 messages prove that a little humor or mystery goes a long way in urban spaces.
More: How Clever (8 Photos)
1. Take What You Need
A simple handwritten flyer reads “Love.” with an invitation: “(Take as much love as you need).” The tear-off tabs just say “LOVE.”
2. Lost My Brain
A satirical lost-and-found flyer features a red anatomical brain diagram and a caption: “Please don’t contact me, I’m happy.”
3. Bar Scene on a No Entry Sign
A creative modification of a no-entry traffic sign transforms the white bar into a bar counter. Three stick figures have been drawn onto the sign—one sitting on a bar stool holding a martini glass, chatting with two others standing beside the “counter.” This humorous intervention turns an ordinary traffic sign into a social vignette.
4. No King
5. Sleeping Bat Warning
Sign on a bookshop door says “Please open the door carefully as there is a bat sleeping on it,” with a real bat sleeping by the doorframe.About it: A Sleeping Bat at The Next Page Bookshop in Calgary Becomes an Unlikely Star
6. Showbiz Ruined Me — By Pao in Rome, Italy
A sculpture of SpongeBob looks heartbroken, sitting on the street with a cardboard sign: “Showbiz ruined me.”
7. Dog Library
A wooden sign beneath a tree offers: “Dog Library. Take a stick. Leave a stick.” The pile of branches says it all.
8. Have You Seen This Dog?
Two dog photos and the words: “Have you seen this dog?” Below: “Now you have. Have a GOOD day.” The tear-tabs? “Have a great day.”
9. Please Do Not Smile — New York City Subway, USA
Posted at 14th Street Station: “Please do not smile at strangers.” Whether real or a prank, it’s coldly hilarious.
10. Private Sign
Painted in bold white letters: “PRIVATE SIGN — DO NOT READ.” Naturally, it’s irresistible.
11. The Secret of Happiness
Painted across a long building, the message begins: “The secret of happiness is t—” and then the rest has peeled away.
12. Reboot Universe
At first glance, a standard pedestrian crossing button. But instead of “PUSH TO CROSS,” it reads: “REBOOT UNIVERSE.”
13. Beware of Smartphone Zombies
A modern caution sign warns: “BEWARE OF SMARTPHONE ZOMBIES,” with silhouettes of people walking while staring at their phones.
14. No Don Quixote
A traffic-style sign bans a rider on a horse with a lance—clearly referencing Don Quixote. Behind it: a real windmill.
15. Great Wheat Sharks — Anne Melady in Ontario, Canada
Shark fins appear to slice through a golden wheat field along Highway 8 west of Dublin, Ontario. Installed by 75-year-old landowner and retired nurse Anne Melady, the piece is titled Great Wheat Sharks. She created it to lighten the mood for drivers during the pandemic and continues the now-local tradition with humor and simplicity.More photos and about it: Please do not feed the Great Wheat Sharks
16. Is It Me You’re Looking For?
A flyer with the face of Lionel Richie and the lyrics from his hit song “Hello” is posted on a utility pole. The bottom of the flyer includes tear-off tabs, each printed with a different lyric fragment, playfully inviting passersby to take one. The setup mimics a typical “lost and found” poster but twists it into a street-level pun.
17. Kingdoms to Countries
On a pub chalkboard: “A long time ago we had Empires run by Emperors. Then we had Kingdoms run by Kings. Now we have Countries…”
18. Accompanied by an Adult
The sign boldly says: “All Americans must be accompanied by an adult.” No context. No problem.
19. Cigarette bin that doubles as a voting booth…
and a political roast all in one. People walk by, chuck in a butt, and suddenly it’s not just litter — it’s democracy with extra sass.
20. The Japanese text (ネコ飛出し注意) translates to “Watch out for jumping cats” or more literally “Caution: Cats dashing out”.
It’s a local road sign sometimes put up in Japanese neighborhoods where there are many stray or outdoor cats. The flying-cat graphics are just a playful way to show that cats might suddenly run across the street, so drivers should slow down and be careful.More: Urban Art Hacks (11 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
From melting eggs to mind-bending portraits, WOSKerski continues to electrify the streets of the UK with his hyper-realistic murals. In Shoreditch, London, a surreal moment titled Free Range Eggxaggeration features a cloaked hand delicately lifting a dripping egg. Meanwhile in Glasgow, a graffiti warrior dressed in bold yellow defies gravity mid-swing with a paint roller. This collection spans Southend-on-Sea, Penge, and beyond—showcasing WOSKerski’s unmatched ability to mix humor, illusion, and raw skill.
🔗 Follow WOSKerski on Instagram
A Photo Opportunity — London, UK
This mural shows photographers wandering a grey-toned pencil landscape, where giant yellow pencils burst from the ground like monuments. The illusionistic scene cleverly blends color and grayscale to highlight the surreal setting.
Overload — London, UK
A close-up of a woman in bold pink-tinted glasses and a high-collared jacket. The halo-like white ring and energetic brushstrokes behind her enhance the intensity of her gaze.
Quiet Strength — London, UK
Painted on a dark wall, a woman appears serene with closed eyes and natural lighting across her face. Her expression is meditative, with a white halo and geometric bursts framing her head.
Free-Range Eggxaggeration — Southend-on-Sea, UK
A fried egg forms the shape of a t-shirt hanging from a clothesline. The yolk appears to melt down the fabric, dripping toward the pavement in a playful, absurd twist.
Leap — Glasgow, UK
This mural depicts a dynamic figure in a yellow hoodie and coat leaping forward with a pink roller brush in one hand and spray can in the other. The faceless pose and motion freeze-frame give it energy and mystery.
Dog — Penge, South East London, UK
A humorous and energetic portrait of a dog with wide eyes and a tongue lolling to the side, framed by a yellow circle that adds vibrancy and focus.
Squish — London, UK
A playful portrait of a woman squishing her cheeks with her hands, her lips puckered and eyes wide. Her skin glows with soft highlights and pink tones, contrasting against the textured wall.
Sticky Mural — Southend-on-Sea, UK
A hyper-real painting of a hand lifting a fried egg from mid-air, backed by billowing purple drapery covering the entire house facade. The oversized scale creates a theatrical illusion.
These murals don’t just decorate buildings—they redefine them. Seth Globepainter’s work invites us to see cities as living canvases where memory, play, and possibility are always within reach.
More: 8 Stunning Dog Murals Around the World (For Dog Lovers!)
Which one is your favorite?
34 Murals That Turn Walls Into Wonders: Seth’s Street Art Will Blow Your Mind
Take a journey into the colorful world of Seth Globepainter, a French street artist who turns boring walls into amazing, dreamlike art.
Born as Julien Malland in Paris, Seth started painting graffiti in the 1990s in the city’s 20th district. Over time, he grew into a famous mural artist, using bright colors and powerful emotions to create art that speaks to people all over the world.In this post, you’ll see 32 of Seth’s most magical murals. These artworks show how he can turn everyday buildings into unforgettable pieces of art.
A Creative Voyage:
Seth’s life as an artist changed in 2003 when he started a world tour. He worked with artists from different cultures and learned new ways to paint in cities around the globe. This experience led to his book “Globe Painter” (2007) and the documentary series “Les Nouveaux Explorateurs,” which was shown on Canal+. Over five years, Seth visited 15 unique places, expanding his artistic style and creativity.During these travels, Seth developed his signature style, often focusing on themes of childhood and imagination.
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Enter the vortex – rue Jeanne d’Arc, Paris 13 with Galerie Itinerrance in Paris, France
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Viviane hesitate, La Butte aux cailles, Paris, France.
A World of Wonder:
Seth Globepainter’s art shows how street art can change the way we see the world. His murals bring out feelings and tell amazing stories. If you want to see more of Seth’s work, check out his official website! Feeling inspired? Share your street art photos and stories in our Facebook group “Your Street Art Utopia” and join the fun conversation!3.
Periscopes – Street Art by Seth in Shanghai, China.
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Cat Walk – Street Art by Seth in Shanghai, China.
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Seth on Putins War on Ukraine in Paris, France.
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“Keep in touch” Popasna, Donbass Ukraine.
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“Telefòn” Little Haïti, Miami.
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“O marinheiro ”, Passo da Pátria, Natal, Brasil.
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In Paris, France.
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“Little Thor” in Neuf-Brisach, France.
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The gardeners – At Nicklaus children’s hospital in Miami, USA
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3 masks – Chosun University, Gwangju, South Korea.
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“Jack in the box” in Aalborg, Denmark
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In a lane near Yu garden, Shanghai, China.
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Collaboration with Korean painter Heo Dal Yong in Hae Dong, Damyang, South Korea.
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In Paris, France.
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Camsize and friend, Ravine-Sèche, Haïti.
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In Paris, France.
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In Paris, France.
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In Paris, France
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“The wire” in Fontaine, France.
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Lala can fly too, – Butte aux cailles, Paris, France.
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Jaho on his doorstep, Butte aux cailles, Paris, France.
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With Saner Edgar in Coyoacàn, Ciudad Mexico.
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In Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
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Little Putu meets her new friend, Canggu, Bali, Indonesia.
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Wendy at the window – Jersey City, USA.
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Dirty Hands – With the kids of Passo da Pátria, Natal, Brasil.
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Escada – Collaboration with DERLON in Obrigado Irmão. São Paulo, Brazil.
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“The ladder ”, tribute to the artist Bilal Berreni, known by the pseudonym Zoo Project died in July 2013 at the age of 23. His name is given to a place in the district of Saint-Blaise in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, the same place where he grew up and where this mural is painted.
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“Hang on” for Street Art Fest Grenoble Alpes in Grenoble, France.
Which one is your favorite?