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Junk Metal Sculptures (8 Photos)
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
8 junk metal sculptures where scrap becomes bodies, animals, music, and memorials.
Each work keeps the material visible: bolts, chains, gears, tire tread, screws, nuts, and blades still read as metal, even after they become something new. That tension is what makes the sculptures so satisfying to look at.
💡 Nerd Fact: Scrap metal is not just “waste” in steel culture. The World Steel Association notes that steel’s magnetic properties make it easy to recover from waste streams, and that recycled steel maintains the inherent properties of the original material. In other words, a broken gear, tool, or machine part can carry both a past life and a future one.
More: Playing with statues (25 photos)
💨 “You Blew Me Away 8” — By Penny Hardy in the UK 🇬🇧
This figure looks as if a gust has pulled pieces out of the body and left them suspended in the air. Penny Hardy’s official Blown Away series page frames the works as a response to strong emotions, the body, and external forces; a listing for You Blew Me Away 8 identifies it as a limited-edition mild-steel sculpture made from found scrap metal. Bolts, rods, and rusted fragments stay visible, giving the sculpture both damage and energy. It feels fragile and stubborn at the same time.
💡 Nerd Fact: Hardy’s path to sculpture includes a precise visual background: her official biography lists a BA Hons in Scientific Illustration and freelance illustration work for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. That training helps explain why the loose, windblown form still feels carefully observed.
More: You Blew Me Away 8 by sculptor Penny Hardy
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🌊 Stainless-Steel Silhouettes — By Jean Martin in Saint Barthélemy 🇧🇱
From a distance, the figures read as four calm human bodies at the edge of the sea. Up close, they resolve into a lacework of stainless-steel nuts, each one welded into a surface that is both solid and full of gaps. An Artists of St Barth profile describes Martin’s use of stainless-steel nuts as building blocks, while his own site groups related open figures under Steel Lace and Evolutive sculptures. The ocean and sky show through bodies that seem to be forming, dissolving, or both.
💡 Material Fact: Martin did not begin with nuts as a novelty effect. An Artists of St Barth profile says his artistic journey in Saint-Barthélemy began in a stainless-steel workshop making elements for contemporary villas, before he shifted from welder to sculptor. It also says he treats nuts almost like “atoms” — small repeatable units that can build any form.
More: Powerful statues made of stainless steel nuts by Jean Martin in Saint Barth
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🐦 Kingfisher with Catch — By J.K. Brown in the UK 🇬🇧
J.K. Brown’s own site presents him as an artist and sculptor, and in his artist-submitted feature, this piece appears simply as Kingfisher. Blue metal panels become the bird’s back; rusted pieces and screws build the wings and breast; a tiny silver fish completes the moment. The pose is so specific that it feels like the second after a successful dive.
💡 Wildlife Fact: Brown’s animal sculptures are tied to local ecology as well as scrap. In his artist-submitted text, he says he lives in rural West Wales, where native wildlife inspires him, and that some fragments he uses are fly-tipped or washed up on beaches. The kingfisher subject fits that idea because the real bird depends on healthy waterways; the RSPB notes that UK kingfishers are vulnerable to hard winters and habitat degradation through pollution or poor watercourse management.
More: ‘Kingfisher’ by J.K. Brown
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🐏 Merino Ram — By Matt Sloane in Tasmania, Australia 🇦🇺
Matt Sloane’s official site presents bespoke sculptures made from recycled steel, and the linked Instagram post calls this work his big Merino Ram. It feels rooted in the Tasmanian landscape around it. The heavy head, curled horns, and thick body are built from parts that once belonged to machines, but the layering makes them read as fleece. Tire tread and gear shapes do not hide inside the form — they become the woolly weight of the animal.
💡 Wool Fact: “Merino” carries a huge Australian backstory. The National Museum of Australia records that the first merino sheep landed in Australia in 1797, and that wool had become Australia’s major export by the late 19th century. So this ram is more than an animal form; it points at a whole rural economy.
More: Merino Ram sculpture by Matt Sloane in Tasmania, Australia
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🎺 Miles Davis — By Vlado Kostov in Kotor, Montenegro 🇲🇪
Mounted against old stone, this metal portrait feels like it is playing directly out of the wall. The wider practice fits Vlado Kostov’s documented scrap-metal sculpture work: Balkan Insight profiled his junkyard art as carrying an environmental message. Chains, tubes, gears, and vent-like pieces create the jacket, arms, trumpet, and sound. The recycled metal gives the jazz figure a fitting rhythm: every part looks improvised, but the silhouette is instantly readable.
💡 Jazz Fact: Miles Davis is a fitting subject for a sculpture made from reused parts because his music kept being rebuilt too. His official site describes Kind of Blue as a 1959 album associated with modal jazz and improvisation over reduced harmony — fewer parts creating a bigger atmosphere.
More: Great portrait of Miles Davis! Sculpture by Vlado Kostov in Kotor Old Town
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🐿️ Red Squirrel — By Bordalo II in Dublin, Ireland 🇮🇪
Bordalo II’s official Big Trash Animals portfolio lists this work as Red Squirrel, Dublin, Ireland, 2017, in the Neutral sub-series, where waste is camouflaged until it almost reads as a living animal. A later Cassandra Voices article records that the Tara Street installation was removed in 2019, so these photographs now carry an extra layer: they document a real piece of Dublin street art that no longer exists on the wall.
💡 Trash Animal Fact: Bordalo II is unusually transparent about the scale of reuse: his official site lists 178 tons of reused materials since 2012. That number makes the squirrel feel less like a one-off mural and more like one specimen in a long-running archive of urban waste.
More: 22 photos – A Collection of Street Art by Bordalo II
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🕊️ The Knife Angel — By Alfie Bradley in the UK 🇬🇧
Alfie Bradley’s official page describes The Knife Angel as a 27ft national monument against violence and aggression, made with more than 100,000 surrendered and collected knives. The British Ironwork Centre’s build notes explain that blades were blunted and sterilized before being welded into the form, with some wing blades engraved by families affected by knife violence. Its scale matters, but so does the close-up detail: thousands of blades become feathers, folds, and armor, turning objects associated with harm into a memorial for grief, warning, and change.
💡 Memorial Fact: The project began before the angel form existed. The British Ironwork Centre says it created more than 200 secure knife banks for police forces, and later recycled around a quarter of a million blades in the wider process. The sculpture is therefore not just an artwork made from weapons; it is the visible face of a much larger anti-violence campaign.
More: Made of 100,000 knives removed from UK streets (3 photos and video)
🔗 Follow Alfie Bradley on Instagram
🐶🐱 Dog and Cat Duo — By Brian Mock in the USA 🇺🇸
Brian Mock’s own dog portfolio and animal portfolio show the range of pet and wildlife subjects he builds from reclaimed parts. This pairing is quieter than the monument-sized pieces above, but the close looking is rewarding. The dog’s body is packed with screws, sockets, forks, and gears; the cat is lighter and more wiry, with rods shaping the pose. Their expressions come from posture rather than soft material, which is exactly what makes the duo charming: hard scrap turns into companionship.
💡 Maker Fact: Mock’s official about page says he grew up drawing, then spent much of adulthood painting and wood carving before recycled-metal sculpture ignited his passion in the late 1990s. That mixed background matters: the pets are welded, but the personality comes from an artist who had already trained his eye in softer media.
More: Brian Mock — Recycled Metal Art
🔗 Follow Brian Mock on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
Fun With Statues (26 photos)
The best statues do not just stand there! Give them one passerby, one camera, and a perfectly timed idea. Suddenly, a quiet monument turns into a brilliant joke, a fun duet, or a tiny piece of street theater.
That is exactly what makes these photos so incredibly good! They are way more than just funny camera angles. They show the absolute magic that happens when public art meets real life. A simple bronze figure becomes a hilarious scene partner. An old memorial gets a brand new personality. The local city square turns into a fun, improvised stage. These playful interactions prove a wonderful point. The most memorable public art is not always the sculpture itself. Sometimes, it is the magical split second when somebody jumps in to complete it!More: Funny Signs (10 Photos)
🤭 The Ultimate “How Dare You” Moment
Classical beauty meets a modern-day slap! The timing here is absolutely perfect. The statue’s recoiling expression makes this a total masterpiece of clever perspective.
🧗♂️ The Infinite Tug-of-War — By Dennis Smith in Salt Lake City, USA 🇺🇸
The Counterpoint sculpture in Salt Lake City proves to be a very tough opponent. This exaggerated game of tug-of-war is interactive street art at its very best!💡 Nerd Fact: The funny part is that Dennis Smith did not sculpt a struggle at all. The Smithsonian record for Counterpoint describes two family groups at play. It features a father with a child on his shoulders and a mother swinging her daughter around. This photo hilariously hijacks a sculpture that was originally about joyful family motion instead of conflict.
🕷️ When Spidey Met His Match — By Carlos Terrés in Guadalajara, Mexico 🇲🇽
A true superhero showdown in Guadalajara! Even Spider-Man has to respect the local legends. Jorge Matute Remus looks less like a statue here and more like the city’s patron saint of impossible problem-solving.💡 Nerd Fact: Guadalajara’s official tourism page says Matute Remus supervised the massive move and slight rotation of the Teléfonos de México building without interrupting service back in 1950. Even better, art historian Irma Gabriela Juárez Becerra notes that Carlos Terrés had already sculpted a Matute Remus for the former telephone-company site in 2002. This means the engineering legend ended up being retold in bronze more than once.
🫣 Caught Bronze-Handed
Sometimes statues can be a bit too hands-on! Her shocked reaction is absolutely priceless. It is the perfect match for this bronze figure’s unexpected move.
💋 Love is in the Air — In Jeju, South Korea 🇰🇷
Jeju Loveland was practically built for this kind of cheeky photo. A quick kiss turns the park’s already mischievous energy into a perfect little piece of performance art!💡 Nerd Fact: Jeju Loveland is a full sculpture park and not just a one-off joke. The Korea Tourism Organization says 20 artists took part in creating it. Most of them were talented Hongik University graduates. Visit Jeju points out that it is one of the few tourist attractions on the island that you can enjoy at night.
🔨 Hammer Time!
This brave soul decided to take a quick nap right on the tracks. Meanwhile, these bronze workers are swinging their heavy hammers hard. Talk about living dangerously!
🥊 Talk to the Hand
This unicycling statue has zero tolerance for pedestrians getting in its way. That is a very solid boop right on the nose!
👁️ A Close Encounter with Yin & Yang — By Robert Arneson in Davis, USA 🇺🇸
Sometimes the art looks right back at you! This giant face in Davis provides the perfect backdrop for a totally surreal and funny moment.💡 Nerd Fact: Arneson was not just making quirky campus mascots. UC Davis notes that he helped push ceramics far beyond traditional pottery. The official Eggheads page says Yin & Yang was installed in 1992 and was conceived as being “about conversation.” That makes this accidental face-off weirdly faithful to the sculpture’s whole core idea!
🏃♂️ Tripping at Liberty Square — By István Máté in Budapest, Hungary 🇭🇺
Politics can be super tricky to navigate! This playful visitor in Budapest shows us exactly what it looks like to literally fall for Ronald Reagan.💡 Nerd Fact: Liberty Square makes this statue extra loaded with meaning. In the official inauguration speech, Hungary framed the 2011 monument as a tribute to Reagan’s role in ending communism in the region. An Associated Press report noted that it was installed near both the U.S. Embassy and the Soviet war memorial. This setup is basically Cold War symbolism compressed into one single square!
📱 Founding Fathers, Now Accepting Selfies — By Studio EIS in Philadelphia, USA 🇺🇸
History gets a really fun digital update in Philadelphia! Suddenly, two bronze founders look less like distant historical figures and more like two guys trying to get everyone into the perfect frame.💡 Nerd Fact: These are not just random museum doubles. The Constitution Center’s FAQ says Signers’ Hall contains 42 life-size bronze figures created by Studio EIS. About 50 talented artists worked on them. Here is the best trivia twist. Thomas Jefferson and John Adams are not in the room at all. Both were serving abroad in Europe during the Constitutional Convention.
🕊️ The Pigeon’s Revenge — In Bracknell, UK 🇬🇧
Check out this beautifully surreal scene from Bracknell! If you have ever nervously fed a pigeon in the park, this giant sculpture might just be your worst nightmare come to life.
👼 Angelic Aggression
Do not let those cute little wings fool you! This feisty cherub is practicing its best wrestling moves on a very surprised museum guest.
🤝 A New Best Friend
Art truly speaks to people of all ages! This charming interaction perfectly captures the pure imagination of a child meeting a cool new bronze buddy.
🥋 Breaking the Fourth Wall — By William Hodd McElcheran in Calgary, Canada 🇨🇦
Why just quietly look at the conversation when you can literally jump right in? This perfectly timed kick adds some serious action movie vibes to the local street art scene!💡 Nerd Fact: This is one of Calgary’s most photobomb-friendly sculptures because that was basically the whole point! The Calgary Public Art Guide says Conversation belongs to McElcheran’s Businessman Series. These life-size figures are placed right on the ground instead of being raised up on pedestals like classical heroes. Avenue Calgary notes that the piece was unveiled in 1981. Locals have been happily jumping into the argument ever since!
💃 Ring Around the Rosie… for Adults
Nostalgia is a super powerful thing! Joining the circle makes this public sculpture feel exactly like an active, joyful playground all over again.
👷♂️ The Carpenter’s Wrath
Watch your head! This muscular bronze figure looks more than ready to put that huge hammer to work. This brave visitor is standing right in the dangerous splash zone.
📸 Einstein’s Modern Theory of Selfies
Energy equals modern camera squared! Albert Einstein looks surprisingly comfortable with a flashy smartphone right in his face.
🧳 The Sidewalk Thief
This beautiful bronze couple is saying their deeply romantic goodbyes. Meanwhile, a super helpful passerby decided to take care of that heavy suitcase for them!
🐻 A Bear Hug to Remember
A tough mountain bike trip just took a whimsical turn! This very tired rider found a cool bear statue completely willing to offer some much-needed physical support.
🗽 Lady Liberty’s Smoke Break — By Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi in New York, USA 🇺🇸
Lighting up with the absolute best torch in the business! Brilliant forced perspective easily turns this famous national landmark into a very willing accomplice.💡 Nerd Fact: Bartholdi designed the beautiful icon, but the hidden genius engineer is Gustave Eiffel. The National Park Service says Eiffel created the massive 92-foot internal pylon and flexible support system. Its official statue facts page notes that Lady Liberty can safely sway up to 3 inches in the heavy wind. The golden torch can actually move as much as 6 inches!
👆 Boop!
Who says bronze is totally cold and unfeeling? This incredibly playful statue seems to find its visitor quite amusing. Or maybe it is just playing a fun game of got-your-nose!
📰 Checking the Latest News
See? This is exactly what everyone is talking about online today! Sharing a bright screen with a life-sized bronze figure perfectly bridges the gap between different eras.
🤫 Whispered Secrets
Some juicy stories are meant only for the ears of marble! This wonderfully intimate moment turns a static museum sculpture into a very patient and quiet listener.
🌊 Sharing “La Bella Lola” — By Carmen Fraile in Torrevieja, Spain 🇪🇸
Welcome to beautiful Torrevieja, Spain! Sitting casually beside La Bella Lola turns this seaside monument into a lovely shared pause. Suddenly, the sculpture feels less like a landmark and more like someone still scanning the open horizon.💡 Nerd Fact: Torrevieja’s official tourism page describes La Bella Lola as a tribute to Torrevejense women who lovingly watched their seafaring loved ones depart. That is exactly why the beautiful sculpture reads as longing rather than just simple seaside decoration. The city’s English tourism page also notes an interesting detail. A copy of Carmen Fraile’s work was kindly donated to Oviedo in 2009.
🪒 Statues Need Grooming Too
A simple pink razor completely turns a timeless classical pose into a super relatable morning routine! It is the exact kind of subtle street art intervention that instantly stops people right in their tracks.
🎭 The Final Pose
This is the absolute perfect grand finale! This hilarious interaction proves once again that public street art is here for absolutely everyone to explore and enjoy.Which one is your favorite?
Work of Art: Conversation by William Hodd McElcheran
One of the most recognizable pieces of art in Calgary, these two bronze businessmen talking shop on Stephen Avenue continue to be objects of curiosity after four decades.avenuecalgary (Avenue Calgary)
Junkyard Art Holds Message for the Planet | Balkan Insight
Vlado Kostov’s sculptures, all made from scrap metal, are not just interesting artworks; they tell of the need to save planet Earth.Nemanja Cabric (BIRN)