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Content warning: From Massachusetts and Miami to Warsaw, Birmingham, Ecuador, France, and Spain, these works prove that a great mural does not always need a blank wall. A road sign becomes The Last Supper. Concrete steps host a tiny chalk drama. A living hedge becomes a b
From Massachusetts and Miami to Warsaw, Birmingham, Ecuador, France, and Spain, these works prove that a great mural does not always need a blank wall.
A road sign becomes The Last Supper. Concrete steps host a tiny chalk drama. A living hedge becomes a blanket over a sleeping child. Pipes, stairs, plants, barbed wire, and building corners all help finish the idea.
💡 Nerd Fact: Leonardo’s The Last Supper was painted for Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan and shows the moment when Jesus tells the Apostles that one of them will betray him, according to Britannica. That built-in drama is part of why the image still reads clearly, even when compressed onto a road sign.
💡 Nerd Fact: This wall belongs to George Kirby Jr. Paint Co., a New Bedford business with family history going back to 1846 and a long connection to marine paint. So Tom Bob’s flamingo is perched on a building with real maritime-industrial history behind it.
🧗 First Steps After a Fall — By David Zinn in Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn is at his best when the pavement tells him what to draw. Here the concrete steps become a tiny recovery scene, with a small pale kitten stretching back up toward a mouse after its slip. The drawing is gentle, funny, and dependent on the stairs to tell the story. More: David Zinn’s Hidden Chalk Art (12 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: On his official artist page, Zinn says his temporary street drawings are made entirely with chalk, charcoal, and found objects. The page also names recurring characters such as Sluggo, Philomena, and Nadine. That is part of what makes his sidewalk world feel like a continuing miniature mythology, not just a set of one-off doodles.
🌿 Cobija de plantas — By El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador 🇪🇨
El Decertor titled this mural Cobija de plantas and painted it in Imbabura for Numu Festival. The living hedge is not beside the work but part of it, reading as a real blanket pulled over the sleeping child. It is a beautiful example of a mural letting the site finish the image. More: By El Decertor in Imbabura, Ecuador (2 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Decertor describes his practice as building “weatherproof memories in public spaces”. In a Buenos Aires Street Art interview, he also connects parts of his wider mural work to Indigenous identity, ancestry, land, and communities pushed aside. That background gives this quiet sleeping-child image more emotional weight than a simple visual trick.
📞 Telefòn — By Seth in Little Haiti, Miami, USA 🇺🇸
This Little Haiti mural is listed on Seth’s website as Telefòn, part of the Made in Haiti project with Martha Cooper. Real barbed wire becomes the phone line between the two children, which is why the image lands so strongly: innocence and danger share the same line. More: 34 Murals That Turn Walls Into Wonders: Seth’s Street Art
💡 Nerd Fact: Seth’s Made in Haiti project followed a March 2019 trip through Haiti with Martha Cooper and focused on the imaginative wealth and resilience of Haitian children. So Telefòn belongs to a larger body of work shaped by travel, observation, and documentary attention — not just a one-off clever mural.
👼 Roots and wings — By WD in Aurec-sur-Loire, France 🇫🇷
WD titled this anamorphic mural Roots and wings. The building’s corners are not just a backdrop; they are part of the composition, and Street Art Cities places the work at 88 Rue du 19 Mars 1962 in Aurec-sur-Loire. The result feels less painted onto the facade than locked into its architecture. More by WD: 3D Murals by WD (8 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: According to the Street Art Cities description, the title Roots and wings is literal in concept: roots stand for the strong foundations we grow from, while wings represent the skills and confidence that let us explore and make choices. That gives the mural a clear coming-of-age idea: where you come from matters, and so does the confidence to move forward.
💡 Nerd Fact: This fox is part of the “Longbridge Foxes”, painted for the River Rea trail. The wider Longbridge work has included restoring the river corridor, adding ecological enhancements, and creating new habitats, according to the project engineers. So the animal choice connects with a real landscape-regeneration story, not just a decorative theme.
💡 Nerd Fact: On the official Rexenera Fest page, this giant fox is described as a guardian animal and a symbol of cunning and care — qualities linked to protecting the home and keeping a family together. Alegría del Prado is also the duo of Octavio Alegría and Ester del Prado, who have worked together since 2010, which helps explain the layered feel of the mural.
Moxaico made this pair as two separate works, TUCAN and OCELOTE, for the 2025 edition of Paseando entre Velas in Vícar. Framed like medallions and finished in gold, they sit somewhere between mural, mosaic, and ornament, with the architecture acting as part of the frame.
Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings (15 Photos)
Plot twist: The best street art collaborators are already built into the city.
These artists turned giant sharks stranded on land, traffic signs, staircases, and entire buildings into their own surreal street art.
🌿 “Planté là” — By Levalet in Paris, France 🇫🇷
Levalet makes this Paris wall feel wonderfully unstable. The figure seems to tumble straight into a painted plant-shadow, while the real foliage above finishes the joke and turns the whole corner into one seamless visual trick.
💡 Nerd Fact: The title works like a French wordplay: Mazel Galerie translates it as “Plant here,” while “planter là” can also mean leaving someone standing there or dumping them on the spot. So the joke starts in the language before it even starts on the wall.
This is exactly the kind of piece that makes you stop and blink. Xanoy turns an old boat into a giant shark, and suddenly a useless object in the landscape becomes a surreal creature that looks like it washed ashore in the wrong world.
Carly Schmitt keeps this one beautifully quiet. The deer feels less painted than grown, as if it just appeared beside the doorway on its own and decided the wall needed a little more life.
🌍 Floating Earth — By Luke Jerram in London, UK 🇬🇧
Luke Jerram takes a familiar image and makes it feel totally uncanny. The illuminated planet floating in dark water looks both monumental and fragile, turning the city around it into a temporary orbit.
💡 Fun Fact: The “Floating Earth” artwork uses detailed, real NASA imagery rendered at a scale of exactly 1.8 million times smaller than the actual planet.
🐍 The Golden Legend — By SFHIR in Guarda, Portugal 🇵🇹
SFHIR saw a staircase and apparently thought, what if this was a serpent’s natural habitat? The result is a mural that fits the architecture so perfectly it feels like the snake has always been coiled through the concrete.
🌿 Ivy Portrait — By Fauxreel in Toronto, Canada 🇨🇦
Fauxreel lets the wall do half the work and the ivy do the rest. The greenery becomes hair, shadow, costume, and atmosphere all at once, which makes the portrait feel less placed on the wall than discovered inside it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Fauxreel’s work is site-led by design: Dan Bergeron says the shape, texture, location, and history of a place dictate what he makes there. That fits perfectly with an artist whose portraits often come out of photography, social observation, and giving visibility to people in public space.
📚 Bookshelf Building — By Jan Is De Man in Solnechnodolsk, Russia 🇷🇺
Jan Is De Man is a master of making buildings pretend to be something else. Here, a plain apartment block becomes an oversized bookshelf full of local favorites, and the entire facade suddenly feels warmer, smarter, and way more playful.
💡 Fun Fact: When Jan Is De Man paints his giant bookshelves, he doesn’t just invent random titles. He actually knocks on the doors of the people living in the building and asks for their favorite books, then paints those exact covers on the facade.
Vhils does not paint over a surface so much as excavate it. The portrait and branch-like textures feel embedded in the building’s own history, as if the wall had been carrying this image the whole time.
💡 Urban Nerd Fact: Vhils’ whole method comes from seeing city walls as archives. On his official bio, he explains that growing up around Lisbon’s rapid redevelopment made him notice how walls absorb social and historical change, which is why he removes layers instead of adding them: he treats the surface like urban memory.
This one is simple, sharp, and impossible to forget. Dr Love turns a little patch of real moss into the crown of a tree and suddenly the entire piece becomes about that living things are not decorative extras, they are the air.
💡 Eco Nerd Fact: This fits a bigger thread in Dr Love’s work: in Tbilisi, he has used murals to raise awareness about air pollution, and a Bristol breath-themed exhibition later described this Upfest piece as exploring the relationship between humans and their environment.
🐙 Waterworld — By Sandrine Boulet in Saint-Cast-le-Guildo, France 🇫🇷
Sandrine Boulet sees tiny ecosystems where most people see cracks and weeds. That is what makes this little octopus so satisfying: the real plants become perfect tentacles, and a broken seam in the wall turns into a miniature tide pool.
💡 Nerd Fact: Sandrine Estrade Boulet’s whole practice is basically built on the idea of “look in a different way” — that exact phrase appears on her own site. Profiles of her work also note that she often uses temporary, damage-free tweaks to everyday street details, so this tiny octopus feels less like a random joke and more like her entire artistic philosophy in miniature
🚧 Sign Intervention — By Clet Abraham in London, England 🇬🇧
Clet Abraham has a special talent for making official signs feel weirdly human. With just a tiny added character, the red no-entry symbol turns into a miniature scene, and suddenly street furniture becomes part of the city’s sense of humor.
💡 Sign Nerd Fact: Clet’s altered road signs are usually made with removable vinyl stickers, and he’s explicit that they should not destroy the sign’s original meaning. That’s why his best interventions feel clever rather than chaotic: they work like visual translations, not vandalized instructions.
📦 Box of Imagination — By Wild Drawing in Cheltenham, UK 🇬🇧
Wild Drawing turns this building into a giant opened package and somehow makes the illusion feel totally natural. The ribbon snakes around the architecture, the wall becomes the box, and the whole thing feels like imagination physically spilling into the street.
💡 Bright Yellow Light — By (fos) in Madrid, Spain 🇪🇸
This is such a smart little reality hack. (fos) takes an ordinary lamp and exaggerates its glow into a bold geometric beam, making the entire storefront look like it has been switched from normal life into a graphic novel.
💡 Design Nerd Fact:“(fos)” was both the collective’s name and the title of its first installation, and the word itself means “light” in Greek and “melted” in Catalan. Even better, the Madrid piece was temporary — the facade only stayed “lit” for four days and nights.
⚪ Circle and Series of Shards — By Felice Varini in Vercorin, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Felice Varini is one of the great magicians of perspective. From the right viewpoint the village clicks into a perfect graphic composition, and from almost anywhere else it falls apart into fragments again.
💡 Process Nerd Fact: Varini often maps these works by projecting the geometry onto the site at night with a powerful projector and tracing it with his team. He has also described the ideal spot as a “reading point,” which is a very Varini way of saying the viewer has to learn how to read the architecture.
🐯 Tiger Bites a Tree — By Koka Mexico in Mexico City, Mexico 🇲🇽
Koka Mexico does not just paint next to the tree, he recruits it. The trunk becomes the exact thing the tiger is chomping on, which makes the mural feel playful, physical, and perfectly locked to its location.
(fos) is a multidisciplinary team based in Madrid and Barcelona. They are working as independent architects, interior designers, art directors and graphic designers, decided to join as a multidisciplinary team to create design experiences ‘and, above…
Content warning: Street Artist Cukin Koszalin By Cukin Koszalin in Miroslawiec, Poland. Cukin Koszalin: “Wildlife holds answers to questions that man hasn’t learned to ask.” Photo by Adriana Śmigielska Comments: pic.twitter.com/PEOGXU7hXn— STREET ART UTOPIA 🖼️ (@StreetArt
Content warning: Street Artist Annatomix Origami fox mural by Annatomix for St Modwen Homes in Longbridge, Birmingham, UK. Annatomix: So pleased to have finished these foxes for #stmodwenhomes in #longbridge. They’re sitting on a future nature / art trail that’s not open
Street Artist Annatomix
Origami fox mural by Annatomix for St Modwen Homes in Longbridge, Birmingham, UK.
Annatomix: So pleased to have finished these foxes for #stmodwenhomes in #longbridge. They’re sitting on a future nature / art trail that’s not open yet, but I will update you all when it is. These lads are all around 15ft tall and painted on some of the wettest brickwork I’ve ever had the pleasure of tackling. And that’s why this job took weeks.
Annatomix: I get inspiration for my work from a huge variety of places, but my main focus is around the relationship between humanity and nature – such as how humanity tries to force nature to do what it wants, and how futile that is.
I read a lot and I particularly enjoy philosophy, theology and mythology – the more ancient, the better – and this also has a big influence on what I create.
4,482 likes, 174 comments - annatomix on May 14, 2023: "So pleased to have finished these foxes for #stmodwen in #longbridge. They're sitting on a future nature / art trail that's not open yet, but I will update you all when it is.
Content warning: Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Street Artist HERA By HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France for Le Point Millepages. Translation of the murals text: The children asked the fox how to escape from everyday
HERA: I have an apartment with high ceilings in which the living room also serves as my workshop. So when I entertain friends, we sit in my open kitchen where a huge bookcase takes up an entire wall. There are a lot of children’s books, and just as many books by photographers like Christina Mittermeier and Steve Mc Curry. They are a source of inspiration and I take them from apartment to apartment, like an essential part of who I am.
Le Point Millepages: Women you love to read?
HERA: Susanne Goga, German novelist, is single-handedly responsible for my renewed interest in the city in which I live, Berlin. Her series “LEO BERLIN” is full of historical glimpses when she tells the life of her hero Leo Wechsler, Commissioner for Crim ‘in the 1920s. I have as big a weakness for thrillers as for history. The combination of the two is therefore perfect for me! Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Le Point Millepages: The book that changed your life?
HERA: There are many of them but one that I take in my luggage when I travel to paint is “Alibi School” by Jeffrey Mc Daniel. It’s a collection of poetry, and in fact, he gave it to me himself in 1997: I was 16 and I was on a school exchange at Venice High School in Los Angeles. Jeffrey had been invited as a lecturer in Lynn Sabin’s poetry class and he had an insane way of mixing humor with the gruesome side of life. To be honest, at 16, I didn’t really understand where his energy was coming from, but I did understand a few years later when I started doing graffiti. It was at this precise moment that I rediscovered the book of Mc Daniel and that I reread his verses over and over again until I knew them by heart. AND I have often quoted him on many murals to share his thoughts with the rest of the world. Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs. Mural by HERA of herakut in Vincennes, France. Photo by De La Couleur Sur Nos Murs.
HERA, a German street artist, has made a name for herself with murals that blend fine art and graffiti.
After stepping away from HERAKUT, she now works independently, creating large-scale art that often features humans and animals in dreamlike, emotional scenes. HERA’s style mixes detailed brushwork with the raw energy of street art, inviting viewers to connect with the deep stories her work tells. She continues to inspire with her unique, heartfelt murals found in cities around the world.
HERA about Wild Child: Choosing a stray cat as the hero of a piece of public art is my way of attempting a balance between the existing monuments of some pompous monarchs or war generals and the real inhabitants of a place. I want the little ones, the real ones, the actual souls of the streets to be recognized. I want to pay homage to the ones who surely have fought through their fair share of struggles, and have their scars to prove it, but chose to for the most days just quietly exists, mind their business and remind us to enjoy even the uneventful days.
By HERA in Vincennes, France for Le Point Millepages.
Translation of the murals text: The children asked the fox how to escape from everyday life. He answers “it’s easy, all you need is to open a book”
By HERA in Karlstad, Sweden for Karlstad Street Art curated by Huderrederre.
HERA: Because I work when I freestyle i came to the wall without a sketch and spend my time listening to what locals said about Karlstad. Every detail of this artwork was inspired by some info I came across at the spot, but also its overall theme about hospitality.
The words on the upper left side read “Sola i Karlstad” which was the nickname of one particularly friendly tavern waitress and innkeeper in the city back in the 18th century; Eva Lisa Holtz. I think it’s absolutely amazing that the city even has a statue for her. How many cities in the world can say that they consider a sunny disposition and kindness as monument-worthy traits? I just love that!
So, that and the fact that being a good host is a ton of effort, I felt like I should dedicate this mural art to everyone who uses their time on earth to nurture others. And to unite others, no matter how far apart they usually sit.
By HERA in Aschaffenburg, Germany for Stadtbau Aschaffenburg.
Explore More of HERA’s Work on Instagram
Want to see more of HERA’s stunning murals and creative process? Follow her on Instagram at @hera_herakut to dive deeper into her world of art. From new projects to behind-the-scenes glimpses, her feed is a journey through her evolving solo work. Stay connected to see where her imagination takes her next!
What do you think about the murals by HERA? Do you have a favorite?
Content warning: HERA, a German street artist, has made a name for herself with murals that blend fine art and graffiti. After stepping away from HERAKUT, she now works independently, creating large-scale art that often features humans and animals in dreamlike, emotional
HERA, a German street artist, has made a name for herself with murals that blend fine art and graffiti.
After stepping away from HERAKUT, she now works independently, creating large-scale art that often features humans and animals in dreamlike, emotional scenes. HERA’s style mixes detailed brushwork with the raw energy of street art, inviting viewers to connect with the deep stories her work tells. She continues to inspire with her unique, heartfelt murals found in cities around the world.
HERA about Wild Child: Choosing a stray cat as the hero of a piece of public art is my way of attempting a balance between the existing monuments of some pompous monarchs or war generals and the real inhabitants of a place. I want the little ones, the real ones, the actual souls of the streets to be recognized. I want to pay homage to the ones who surely have fought through their fair share of struggles, and have their scars to prove it, but chose to for the most days just quietly exists, mind their business and remind us to enjoy even the uneventful days.
By HERA in Vincennes, France for Le Point Millepages.
Translation of the murals text: The children asked the fox how to escape from everyday life. He answers “it’s easy, all you need is to open a book”
By HERA in Karlstad, Sweden for Karlstad Street Art curated by Huderrederre.
HERA: Because I work when I freestyle i came to the wall without a sketch and spend my time listening to what locals said about Karlstad. Every detail of this artwork was inspired by some info I came across at the spot, but also its overall theme about hospitality.
The words on the upper left side read “Sola i Karlstad” which was the nickname of one particularly friendly tavern waitress and innkeeper in the city back in the 18th century; Eva Lisa Holtz. I think it’s absolutely amazing that the city even has a statue for her. How many cities in the world can say that they consider a sunny disposition and kindness as monument-worthy traits? I just love that!
So, that and the fact that being a good host is a ton of effort, I felt like I should dedicate this mural art to everyone who uses their time on earth to nurture others. And to unite others, no matter how far apart they usually sit.
By HERA in Aschaffenburg, Germany for Stadtbau Aschaffenburg.
Explore More of HERA’s Work on Instagram
Want to see more of HERA’s stunning murals and creative process? Follow her on Instagram at @hera_herakut to dive deeper into her world of art. From new projects to behind-the-scenes glimpses, her feed is a journey through her evolving solo work. Stay connected to see where her imagination takes her next!
What do you think about the murals by HERA? Do you have a favorite?
STREET ART UTOPIA. 1 730 521 ember kedveli · 65 583 ember beszél erről. About the best, most beloved street art, graffiti and public art around the world.
How to stop supporting propaganda masquerading as news. Stop visiting their sites and reading their nonsense. Here’s how it works.
1) See clickbaity outrageous headline. 2) You click, as a responsible informed citizen. 3) Read it. 4) You feel more outrage.
Repeat infinitely.
When you ask, “How can anyone believe such things?” You are being perfectly rational, but missing the point. The outrage is the point.
The subtext of every article, every loud mouthed video, every shitty meme, is the erosion of our basic assumptions. Kill the rational and replace it with outrage and any conman can become an authority on anything.
Portrait of a Red Fox 🦊
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