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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)
Natural Materials (16 Photos)
Content warning: Explore 16 stunning land art creations by Jon Foreman, an artist from Wales who transforms beaches with natural materials like stones and sand. From intricate circles to massive designs, his temporary masterpieces showcase the beauty of nature and creativ
Explore 16 stunning land art creations by Jon Foreman, an artist from Wales who transforms beaches with natural materials like stones and sand.
From intricate circles to massive designs, his temporary masterpieces showcase the beauty of nature and creativity at its best. Let’s dive in and discover these breathtaking works! Make sure to follow him on Instagram!
More: 18 Pics Of Land Art Sculptures by Jon Foreman
1.
“Below” at Lindsway Bay, Wales, UK
Jon Foreman: Wanted to do this one for a while, great to do this drawing style again and get lost in the process. Good weather always helps too. This illusion/composition isn’t nearly as complex as you’d expect, just a bunch of circles really. Then I just add in all the patterns like many of my previous works. There is however a mistake which is very easy to spot, I’ll leave that for you guys to work out.
2.
“Extimus Lux”
3.
“Explosia” at Freshwater West, Wales, UK
Jon Foreman: Often I get to a location not knowing what I’m about to create, this was one of those days. Upon starting all I had in mind was to start with big stones and work my way down to small stones. After a while it became apparent that this was turning into a work very similar to that of Dietmar Voorwold (who btw you should all check out cause his work is awesome!) anyway my point is there are things that I do in land art such as playing with scale/ colour that lead me to places that have already been discovered and it was completely unintentional for it to look like his work, I tried to then add my own style to it by dispersing the stones. Once I got so far I had to finish it having spend a good few hours on it already. Anyway I hope its seen more as a nod to an awesome artist than me copying his work.
4.
“Calefacio Stella” at Freshwater West, Wales, UK
5.
“Exspergo Luna” at Freshwater West, Wales, UK
[b][b]Jon Foreman: [/b]A very time consuming way of working, the stones being compact and interlocking makes for a more solid piece but I could resist a disperse inwards. For some reason this style reminds me of jelly beans. Probably cause of the randomness of the angles that they’re placed. Also, recalling the light from photographing a previous moon piece. I chose to wait a while seeing a cloud heading my way and went for the capture while the cloud was thin so that there would still be shadow, but not too harsh a shadow.
6.
“Consumo” at Freshwater West, Wales, UK
7
“Mushroom Path” at Druidston
8
“Rubra Spiralis” at Sandy Haven.
9
“Horarium” at Little Milford Woods with Layla Parkin.
10
“Oculus” at Freshwater West.
11
“Vortex” at Little Milford woods.
Jon Foreman: Definitely had some collapses with this one. Previous to this work I’ve made pieces to test the strength of the mud/clay that I gather from the river nearby. This shows it well, I used it to stick the sticks to the tree and the leaves to to sticks. Definitely enjoying the mushroom quality and the ability to work much more three dimensionally.
12
“Fluentem Colos” at Little Milford.
13
“Musco” at Minwear Woods
Jon Foreman: Great care is taken when using moss to ensure that there’s still plenty to be able to regrow and hopefully will continue to grow where placed. I chose this specific spot because it’s in a spot on a hill where people are less likely to walk.
14
“Fluidform” at Pensarn
15
“Cluster Moon” at Freshwater West
Jon Foreman: Two days working on this one, the tides didn’t go all the way up that day/night, it began as the dark blue to white working inwards on the first day and went outward from purple to yellow on the second day.
“Twister” at Little Milford Woods
Jon Foreman: I’ve been holding onto this one, the top of the piece is blurry and a lot of the other photos had similar issues, should have checked the images properly on the camera. The leaves are stuck using clay, all long gone now!
More like this: George Washingstone Stone & Pebble Portrait by Justin Bateman (+8 more artworks)
Which is your favorite?
Stone By Stone (20 Photos)
Discover the amazing world of Jon Foreman, where nature and art come together in incredible land sculptures.
Using stones, driftwood, and other natural materials, Foreman turns everyday landscapes into stunning works of art. He lives in Wales and creates art that shows how people and nature can work together. Each sculpture is carefully arranged with beautiful patterns and shapes that highlight the wonders of the natural world.🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
Lux Tenebris
Jon Foreman: Created at Pensarn, Abergele. This was the last piece I made in 2021! I was glad to have gotten the chance to work on a large scale again, it had been a while! As ever I had an idea that changed as I progressed but I love that this one has curves going horizontally and vertically with a kind of half pipe effect (a curved ramp of stones either side). Also very lucky to have had the chance to capture the sea engulfing it. Although it was coming in very fast it was coming very calmly which allowed me to get plenty of photos, got my feet wet for this shot!Crescent
Jon Foreman: Created at Lindsway Bay, Pembrokeshire. I’m so used to following the circle round further that its hard to break the habit. Glad to have managed it with this one though! It really feels like it merges into the sand, which is something that I’m not sure I’ve succeeded in doing in the past. At least not as well as this one.Dissicio Quadratum
Created at Freshwater West.Circumflexus
Jon Foreman: Created for Llano Earth Art Fest Texas. This is the most intensive work I’ve created and took four days to complete! I initially started with the largest stones making the back of the circle, as the stones got smaller I began to realise the time that would be involved. I’d love to know how many there actually are! Photo by Laurence Winram Photography.Fluidus
Jon Foreman: Yes it looks like a jellyfish, no its not meant to be one. I’m not trying to suppress any imagination but for me I’m essentially trying to create something that doesn’t yet exist so that attachment to something that does exist gets on my nerves haha also feels like its oversimplifying the work a bit… But call it what you want haha!This one was actually created before “Peruersum” (The 4 day piece created at LEAF) and is what Peruersum was based on. The difference being that I didn’t have the time fill a full circle for this one so I got the opportunity at LEAF. I love creating the familiarity between pieces of work without directly repeating something. Having said that, i don’t know that I could directly repeat a piece of work without it becoming a tiny bit different!
Also the sand was really annoying that day and every time I put a stone into the sand it created the cracks you can see between the stones, interesting effect i suppose
Acervus Circlus
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. I love working like this, finding colours that contrast well and placing on top of one another. Very satisfying work to do, showing freshwater Wests colours in a different way, although I usually add white too I thought amongst these white may stand out too much.Expletio Duo
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. This piece is 1 in a 3 part set that I’m trying to get made. Many of you will have seen “Expletio” which is a single spiral using these same colours and this fractal style of working. I shall at some stage be creating the third in the set which will be a triple spiral in the same style! Anyway this one proved more fiddly than the previous version, I think I must have downscaled it a bit and that coupled with cold/windy weather made for difficult work. Got there in the end though!Druid Spiral
Jon Foreman: Created at Druidston I love working with the slate at this beach, definitely has a different vibe and colour, I’ll have to get back there again soon!Sinking Circle
Jon Foreman: Although I don’t consider myself an especially good photographer I’m very happy with how this one turned out, aside from the work itself looking good (and with this angle showing the incline more clearly) aside from the work I think I caught the atmosphere of the day which isn’t often very obvious in my work! Also love the water making the edge of the stones glow and they disappear into the distance, I’m all about depth within the sculpture why not outside the sculpture too.Lumen
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. A couple of years back I created a very similar piece to this, the only difference being that the stones were previously placed flat. I feel the sense of movement is enhanced with them placed this way really radiating outward as they disperse.Nether Flower
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Couldn’t resist sharing this angle with the shadows! This one got a little bit messy in the middle because of the nature of the placement in the space available. I have to start in the middle and slot the next layer behind the previous so the more I add the less space there is in the small “hole” I made for this. So yeah they got a little bit squashed but I can live with that!Above Below
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Another mushroom creation, couldn’t resist making use of the massive branch of driftwood. Again these are just stones balanced on sticks accept where they go over the driftwood. A fun one for sure… More mushrooms to come!Shroom Sheet
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West I’ve done quite a lot now with shrooms, yes they’re stones balanced on sticks, no – its not as difficult as it seems! .. until you start putting them very close together… But until creating this piece I’ve yet to work with them while incorporating colour (or more precisely colour change) as with this one! I’ll likely do more at some stage!Obnatus Luna
Jon Foreman: These stones are often buried under the sand when there’s been particularly high tides so I have to hope they’re not buried every time!Flos Tholus
Jon Foreman: At Freshwater West. The only plan I had was to make triangles that go from large in the middle to small on the outside, which, in essence is what i did. However it does really resemble the flower of life when seen from above. You’ll have to wait for that shot though! Stay tuned.
Direct
Jon Foreman: Direct, 2025. Created fairly recently (08/09/2025) at Poppit sands, a first for me making stoneworks. Had a great time that week with a bunch of Land Art friends, more work to come from that time and more shots of this work too! P.S its pretty big, those far strands of stones are longer than they look, its just the angle!More: 9 Leaf Sculptures That Stir the Soul in the Forest (Art by Jon Foreman)
What do you think about this art by Jon Foreman? Which one is your favorite?
Jon Foreman on Instagram: ""Exspergo Luna" (2021) Created at Freshwater West A very time consuming way of working, the stones being compact and interlocking makes for a more solid piece but I could resist a disperse inwards. For some reason this style
19K likes, 199 comments - sculpttheworld on August 30, 2021: ""Exspergo Luna" (2021) Created at Freshwater West A very time consuming way of working, the stones being compact and interlocking makes for a more solid piece but I could resist a dispe…Instagram
The Art of Stones (12 Photos by Jon Foreman)
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
Have you ever seen a beach look this good? Jon Foreman turns stones into hypnotic patterns that look like they belong in a dream. In 2025, he traveled from Wales to Taiwan to create these 12 masterpieces. Some pieces were made with Layla Parkin, and they are all absolutely stunning. Check out these 12 photos of his land art!
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
🌀 1. Revolve — Druidston, Hamlet in Wales
This dark stone spiral pulls your eyes right into the center. It looks like a giant fingerprint left by nature on the sand.
Jon Foreman: Although I love it when a big wave takes the piece in one, Sometimes the gently lapping waves can provide an extra element to a piece. In this case the small crease lines in the sand – a reaction to the stones being there provide an extra essence of motion to a work that already suggests that. I respond to nature, nature responds to me. A conversation, if you like.
☀️ 2. Circuitus Meridiem — Druidston, Hamlet in Wales
This one looks like a glowing stone sun. The white pebbles in the middle pop against the darker stones on the outside. It is the perfect way to welcome the morning.
🌈 3. Sol Colorum — Freshwater West
This is a rainbow made of rocks. The colors shift from orange to blue so perfectly you might think the beach was painted. Nature has the best color palette.
🌗 4. Halved — Lindsway Bay, Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire
This piece looks like a giant pebble split in half. It shows how different colors and textures can fit together in perfect balance. It is like a stone yin and yang.
🍂 5. Lapis Folium — Gann Estuary (Dale), Wales
A 3D leaf made entirely of red stones. It looks like nature forgot a giant autumn leaf on the sand. The detail is simply amazing.
🔘 6. Augere — Druidston, Hamlet in Wales
A huge circle with a bright center. The layers of stones make it look like the art is glowing from the inside. It is hard to believe these are just normal rocks.
🌊 7. Ripple — Qixingtan Beach, Hualien, Taiwan
This looks like a black and white galaxy on the shore. It is as if a drop of water hit the beach and turned into stone. It was created for a festival in Taiwan.
Jon Foreman: As a Ripple, through water undulates and expands, as does the flow of this artwork. Symbolic of the expansion of the festival and the waves it makes, bringing people together from across seas and transcending languages. This piece is also an evolution and expansion on the piece created by myself and Terry in Hualien last year. Spent a few days on this, very slow work, but luckily the sun was behind the clouds this time, so it wasn’t as hot as last time!, we built this piece to last for the festival time so between every large stone there are three small pebbles that act as a tripod for the next stone, even the smallest stacks feature this technique. it was very slow work by comparison to my more floor based work. The overall form is influenced by the ripple effect caused by a droplet in water. I have a fascination with creating flow with such solid objects as stones. I think there’s more to be experimented with for this form.
💥 8. Colos Chaos — Freshwater West
Hundreds of tiny stone towers standing together in a starburst. This collaboration with Layla Parkin looks like a stone explosion that stopped in time. Do not sneeze near this one!
Jon Foreman: It was quite a rush towards the end as the sun was going down, I would have liked to have adjusted some bits even after looking at pictures now, even so I’m still happy with it!
🌙 9. Shell Moon — Sandy Haven Beach, UK
A crescent moon made from hundreds of shells. It is delicate, beautiful, and fits perfectly with the golden sunset light. Truly magical stuff.
🌟 10. Radiance — Freshwater West
A sunburst pattern with a hollow middle. The sharp stone rays look like they are reaching out for the ocean. It is simple but very powerful.
🐚 11. Fossil — Lindsway Bay, Pembrokeshire, UK
This is a massive drawing in the sand. It looks like a giant prehistoric creature left a mark behind. It is huge compared to the person walking nearby!
〰️ 12. Fluidform — Pensarn, Wales
Long rows of white stones that look like frozen waves. The way they ripple across the sand is very calming. It is the perfect way to end this collection.
More: 18 Stunning Land Artworks by Jon Foreman!
Which one is your favorite?
Stone By Stone (20 Photos)
Discover the amazing world of Jon Foreman, where nature and art come together in incredible land sculptures.
Using stones, driftwood, and other natural materials, Foreman turns everyday landscapes into stunning works of art. He lives in Wales and creates art that shows how people and nature can work together. Each sculpture is carefully arranged with beautiful patterns and shapes that highlight the wonders of the natural world.🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
Lux Tenebris
Jon Foreman: Created at Pensarn, Abergele. This was the last piece I made in 2021! I was glad to have gotten the chance to work on a large scale again, it had been a while! As ever I had an idea that changed as I progressed but I love that this one has curves going horizontally and vertically with a kind of half pipe effect (a curved ramp of stones either side). Also very lucky to have had the chance to capture the sea engulfing it. Although it was coming in very fast it was coming very calmly which allowed me to get plenty of photos, got my feet wet for this shot!Crescent
Jon Foreman: Created at Lindsway Bay, Pembrokeshire. I’m so used to following the circle round further that its hard to break the habit. Glad to have managed it with this one though! It really feels like it merges into the sand, which is something that I’m not sure I’ve succeeded in doing in the past. At least not as well as this one.Dissicio Quadratum
Created at Freshwater West.Circumflexus
Jon Foreman: Created for Llano Earth Art Fest Texas. This is the most intensive work I’ve created and took four days to complete! I initially started with the largest stones making the back of the circle, as the stones got smaller I began to realise the time that would be involved. I’d love to know how many there actually are! Photo by Laurence Winram Photography.Fluidus
Jon Foreman: Yes it looks like a jellyfish, no its not meant to be one. I’m not trying to suppress any imagination but for me I’m essentially trying to create something that doesn’t yet exist so that attachment to something that does exist gets on my nerves haha also feels like its oversimplifying the work a bit… But call it what you want haha!This one was actually created before “Peruersum” (The 4 day piece created at LEAF) and is what Peruersum was based on. The difference being that I didn’t have the time fill a full circle for this one so I got the opportunity at LEAF. I love creating the familiarity between pieces of work without directly repeating something. Having said that, i don’t know that I could directly repeat a piece of work without it becoming a tiny bit different!
Also the sand was really annoying that day and every time I put a stone into the sand it created the cracks you can see between the stones, interesting effect i suppose
Acervus Circlus
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. I love working like this, finding colours that contrast well and placing on top of one another. Very satisfying work to do, showing freshwater Wests colours in a different way, although I usually add white too I thought amongst these white may stand out too much.Expletio Duo
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. This piece is 1 in a 3 part set that I’m trying to get made. Many of you will have seen “Expletio” which is a single spiral using these same colours and this fractal style of working. I shall at some stage be creating the third in the set which will be a triple spiral in the same style! Anyway this one proved more fiddly than the previous version, I think I must have downscaled it a bit and that coupled with cold/windy weather made for difficult work. Got there in the end though!Druid Spiral
Jon Foreman: Created at Druidston I love working with the slate at this beach, definitely has a different vibe and colour, I’ll have to get back there again soon!Sinking Circle
Jon Foreman: Although I don’t consider myself an especially good photographer I’m very happy with how this one turned out, aside from the work itself looking good (and with this angle showing the incline more clearly) aside from the work I think I caught the atmosphere of the day which isn’t often very obvious in my work! Also love the water making the edge of the stones glow and they disappear into the distance, I’m all about depth within the sculpture why not outside the sculpture too.Lumen
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. A couple of years back I created a very similar piece to this, the only difference being that the stones were previously placed flat. I feel the sense of movement is enhanced with them placed this way really radiating outward as they disperse.Nether Flower
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Couldn’t resist sharing this angle with the shadows! This one got a little bit messy in the middle because of the nature of the placement in the space available. I have to start in the middle and slot the next layer behind the previous so the more I add the less space there is in the small “hole” I made for this. So yeah they got a little bit squashed but I can live with that!Above Below
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Another mushroom creation, couldn’t resist making use of the massive branch of driftwood. Again these are just stones balanced on sticks accept where they go over the driftwood. A fun one for sure… More mushrooms to come!Shroom Sheet
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West I’ve done quite a lot now with shrooms, yes they’re stones balanced on sticks, no – its not as difficult as it seems! .. until you start putting them very close together… But until creating this piece I’ve yet to work with them while incorporating colour (or more precisely colour change) as with this one! I’ll likely do more at some stage!Obnatus Luna
Jon Foreman: These stones are often buried under the sand when there’s been particularly high tides so I have to hope they’re not buried every time!Flos Tholus
Jon Foreman: At Freshwater West. The only plan I had was to make triangles that go from large in the middle to small on the outside, which, in essence is what i did. However it does really resemble the flower of life when seen from above. You’ll have to wait for that shot though! Stay tuned.
Direct
Jon Foreman: Direct, 2025. Created fairly recently (08/09/2025) at Poppit sands, a first for me making stoneworks. Had a great time that week with a bunch of Land Art friends, more work to come from that time and more shots of this work too! P.S its pretty big, those far strands of stones are longer than they look, its just the angle!More: 9 Leaf Sculptures That Stir the Soul in the Forest (Art by Jon Foreman)
What do you think about this art by Jon Foreman? Which one is your favorite?
Stone By Stone (20 Photos)
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
Discover the amazing world of Jon Foreman, where nature and art come together in incredible land sculptures.
Using stones, driftwood, and other natural materials, Foreman turns everyday landscapes into stunning works of art. He lives in Wales and creates art that shows how people and nature can work together. Each sculpture is carefully arranged with beautiful patterns and shapes that highlight the wonders of the natural world.
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
Lux Tenebris
Jon Foreman: Created at Pensarn, Abergele. This was the last piece I made in 2021! I was glad to have gotten the chance to work on a large scale again, it had been a while! As ever I had an idea that changed as I progressed but I love that this one has curves going horizontally and vertically with a kind of half pipe effect (a curved ramp of stones either side). Also very lucky to have had the chance to capture the sea engulfing it. Although it was coming in very fast it was coming very calmly which allowed me to get plenty of photos, got my feet wet for this shot!
Crescent
Jon Foreman: Created at Lindsway Bay, Pembrokeshire. I’m so used to following the circle round further that its hard to break the habit. Glad to have managed it with this one though! It really feels like it merges into the sand, which is something that I’m not sure I’ve succeeded in doing in the past. At least not as well as this one.
Dissicio Quadratum
Created at Freshwater West.
Circumflexus
Jon Foreman: Created for Llano Earth Art Fest Texas. This is the most intensive work I’ve created and took four days to complete! I initially started with the largest stones making the back of the circle, as the stones got smaller I began to realise the time that would be involved. I’d love to know how many there actually are! Photo by Laurence Winram Photography.
Fluidus
Jon Foreman: Yes it looks like a jellyfish, no its not meant to be one. I’m not trying to suppress any imagination but for me I’m essentially trying to create something that doesn’t yet exist so that attachment to something that does exist gets on my nerves haha also feels like its oversimplifying the work a bit… But call it what you want haha!
This one was actually created before “Peruersum” (The 4 day piece created at LEAF) and is what Peruersum was based on. The difference being that I didn’t have the time fill a full circle for this one so I got the opportunity at LEAF. I love creating the familiarity between pieces of work without directly repeating something. Having said that, i don’t know that I could directly repeat a piece of work without it becoming a tiny bit different!
Also the sand was really annoying that day and every time I put a stone into the sand it created the cracks you can see between the stones, interesting effect i suppose
Acervus Circlus
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. I love working like this, finding colours that contrast well and placing on top of one another. Very satisfying work to do, showing freshwater Wests colours in a different way, although I usually add white too I thought amongst these white may stand out too much.
Expletio Duo
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. This piece is 1 in a 3 part set that I’m trying to get made. Many of you will have seen “Expletio” which is a single spiral using these same colours and this fractal style of working. I shall at some stage be creating the third in the set which will be a triple spiral in the same style! Anyway this one proved more fiddly than the previous version, I think I must have downscaled it a bit and that coupled with cold/windy weather made for difficult work. Got there in the end though!
Druid Spiral
Jon Foreman: Created at Druidston I love working with the slate at this beach, definitely has a different vibe and colour, I’ll have to get back there again soon!
Sinking Circle
Jon Foreman: Although I don’t consider myself an especially good photographer I’m very happy with how this one turned out, aside from the work itself looking good (and with this angle showing the incline more clearly) aside from the work I think I caught the atmosphere of the day which isn’t often very obvious in my work! Also love the water making the edge of the stones glow and they disappear into the distance, I’m all about depth within the sculpture why not outside the sculpture too.
Lumen
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. A couple of years back I created a very similar piece to this, the only difference being that the stones were previously placed flat. I feel the sense of movement is enhanced with them placed this way really radiating outward as they disperse.
Nether Flower
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Couldn’t resist sharing this angle with the shadows! This one got a little bit messy in the middle because of the nature of the placement in the space available. I have to start in the middle and slot the next layer behind the previous so the more I add the less space there is in the small “hole” I made for this. So yeah they got a little bit squashed but I can live with that!
Above Below
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West. Another mushroom creation, couldn’t resist making use of the massive branch of driftwood. Again these are just stones balanced on sticks accept where they go over the driftwood. A fun one for sure… More mushrooms to come!
Shroom Sheet
Jon Foreman: Created at Freshwater West I’ve done quite a lot now with shrooms, yes they’re stones balanced on sticks, no – its not as difficult as it seems! .. until you start putting them very close together… But until creating this piece I’ve yet to work with them while incorporating colour (or more precisely colour change) as with this one! I’ll likely do more at some stage!
Obnatus Luna
Jon Foreman: These stones are often buried under the sand when there’s been particularly high tides so I have to hope they’re not buried every time!
Flos Tholus
Jon Foreman: At Freshwater West. The only plan I had was to make triangles that go from large in the middle to small on the outside, which, in essence is what i did. However it does really resemble the flower of life when seen from above. You’ll have to wait for that shot though! Stay tuned.
Direct
Jon Foreman: Direct, 2025. Created fairly recently (08/09/2025) at Poppit sands, a first for me making stoneworks. Had a great time that week with a bunch of Land Art friends, more work to come from that time and more shots of this work too! P.S its pretty big, those far strands of stones are longer than they look, its just the angle!
More: 9 Leaf Sculptures That Stir the Soul in the Forest (Art by Jon Foreman)
What do you think about this art by Jon Foreman? Which one is your favorite?
10 Forest Sculptures By Jon Foreman
In the heart of Welsh woodlands, leaves, moss, and soil become mesmerizing canvases for land artist Jon Foreman. From vivid vortexes in Little Milford to a glowing gradient around a tree trunk in Colby Woods, this collection captures nine of his most enchanting interventions in nature — some co-created with Layla Parkin. Expect vibrant spirals, intricate patterns, and illusions that make the landscape pulse with life.
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram
1. Vortex — Little Milford Woods, Wales
2. Colos Curva — Little Milford Woods, Wales
3. Dissipatio — Colby Woods, Wales
4. Exolesco — Colby Woods, Wales
5. Horarium — Little Milford Woods, Wales
6. Fluentem Colos — Little Milford, Wales
7. Folia Quadrata — Little Milford Woods, Wales
8. Array — Little Milford, Wales
9. Musco — Minwear Woods, Wales
10. Portal — Little Milford Woods, Wales
Jon Foreman’s forest installations don’t just decorate nature — they collaborate with it. These temporary artworks transform the landscape into a living gallery, reminding us how even the simplest materials can create moments of wonder in public space.
More by Jon Foreman!: 18 Stunning Land Artworks by Jon Foreman! (Nature’s Beauty in Stone Patterns)
Which one is your favorite?
Llano Earth Art Fest
Llano Earth Art Fest. 19 471 ember kedveli · 355 ember beszél erről. Llano Earth Art Fest - Home of the World Rock Stacking Championship. Exciting Inspiriting Naturewww.facebook.com
Fred Brown, sand artist re-created Banksy’s censored art on the beach in Scarborough, UK 🇬🇧
Simply amazing!
#Banksy #SandArt #UnitedKingdom #Resist #England #MastoArt #NoCensorship