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Nature Is Everything! 18 Stunning Artworks by Hannah Bullen-Ryner
Content warning: In the quiet embrace of nature, artist Hannah Bullen-Ryner creates enchanting, ephemeral artworks that celebrate the beauty and fragility of the natural world. With a keen eye for detail and a deep respect for the environment, she transforms fallen petals
In the quiet embrace of nature, artist Hannah Bullen-Ryner creates enchanting, ephemeral artworks that celebrate the beauty and fragility of the natural world.
With a keen eye for detail and a deep respect for the environment, she transforms fallen petals, delicate leaves, and tiny stones into expressive creatures and intricate mandalas, each piece thoughtfully arranged on the forest floor. In this collection, Hannah brings a vibrant cast of characters to life—a curious opossum, a vivid cardinal crafted from every red petal at hand, a graceful swan from fallen white blossoms, and even a playful octopus with swirling, petal-like tentacles. Her radiant mandala bird, framed by a halo of purple and pink petals, feels like a glimpse into a peaceful, otherworldly realm.
Captured only in photos before returning to the earth, Hannah’s work use the fleeting magic of everyday moments, encouraging us to pause, reflect, and reconnect with the natural world.
Hannah Bullen-Ryner: Instagram / Facebook / Etsy
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: My ephemeral version of ‘Girl with a Pearl Earring’ by Johannes Vermeer.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Two little Warbler’s and a tiny Golden-crowned kinglet. I have always been drawn to circles around my work, it’s like looking into a little window into another world, or a portal, just for a moment. Even though it’s tiny, this piece took quite some time! I made the birds simultaneously, laying their eyes first and then all their beaks, and working my way out from there. I then built the blue pebble mosaic around them. (Tricky because ohh so delicate!) These tiny pebbles were collected by my parents at the beach.. they came to me as a mixed bag of wondrous colours and these are all the beautiful sea-blue tones.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Seahorse… People question how I can possibly find all these materials, but the answer is really very easy. My work is very, very small. I need very tiny ingredients and I am never not looking. I’m a magpie and have tiny pebbles and things constantly, in every single pocket. I also recycle elements over and over and over again. I store them in half coconut shells that I leave on site and cover with an old fence post. If petals have dried I dunk them in some water until they are workable again. Hopefully this gives you a bit more of an insight.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Costa’s Hummingbird using wilted wild Crocus flowers.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Barn owl. I had so much fun bringing this little one to life. In the past I’ve struggled to get their sleek form right, but I had extra time today, and I am so pleased with how this turned out! I also had fun smashing up great lumps of chalk to create these tiny fragments, using a bigger, sharper rock, caveman styles.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Say hello to my little friend the Sea Turtle. This little guy took me around 5 hours! I included an old bit of found glass bottle in this piece alongside my natural elements.
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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.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Kind and gentle Wolf to calm, soothe and heal. May he find you where you are.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: A positive and hopeful young Lynx.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Meet my little Leopard friend
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Octopus. She’s far from perfect because I made her in just under two hours, and the wind, oh the wind! We had fun Mother Nature and little ol’ me, arranging and rearranging the tentacles. In the end this is our collaborative effort! Made predominantly using flowers *borrowed* from my parents garden, and tiny pebbles and shell fragments picked out from their gravel!
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Baby Elephant.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Male Cardinal. Did I specifically know I was going to make a Cardinal today? No.. Did I gather lots of red things? Also no. Did I therefore have to use every single scrap of red I had hanging around in my coconut bowls? Um yes! I genuinely don’t know why I do this to myself but hey! I love him! Perhaps he came to visit you?
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: My first ever ephemeral Swan… I was gifted one orange and three white cut flowers from my local supermarket that had fallen from a display, so I used a few orange petals for the beak and the white petals along some parts of the neck.. everything else is foraged as usual.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: One of my all time favourite birds found here in the UK, the tiny Bluetit. Made here, with a mossy and lichen-y tummy and a sparkle in their eye. Continuing to send out a message of love and hope to all those suffering at the hands of war.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Today I only had around 45 minutes to make some art so I just free-flowed like I used to, no reference pics, just me and the elements.. and this little fluffy appeared and made me smile..
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Meet my tiny, baby Opossum friend. So cute I really wanted to take her home in my pocket! Thank you for the recommendation to make one of these beautiful souls! While I created her (sitting on the woodland floor) I made friends with a Magpie who got brave enough to come within about two feet of me to collect some yummy pellets I had put down. A family of Long tails chirruped in the branches above, and naturally, my trusty friend the Robin stayed close by keeping me company.
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Hannah Bullen-Ryner Art: Our energy doesn’t stop neatly at the boundary of our skin, we are each a glowing galaxy of light that radiates within and around our physical bodies. Our skin cannot contain us.
What do you think about the art by Hannah Bullen-Ryner? Do you have a favorite?
Beautiful Wildlife Murals by Alegria del Prado (9 Photos)
Content warning: Alegria del Prado fills entire buildings with animals, children, leaves and warm natural tones. In Madrid, a bear made from feathers and flowers frames a young girl with a bird. In Rabat, a patterned falcon stands above the street. In Galicia, a lynx made
Alegria del Prado fills entire buildings with animals, children, leaves and warm natural tones. In Madrid, a bear made from feathers and flowers frames a young girl with a bird. In Rabat, a patterned falcon stands above the street. In Galicia, a lynx made of flowers and small animals covers the full side of a tall building. This collection features 9 murals from Spain, France, Italy, Morocco and Russia.
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1. Bear and Girl — Madrid, Spain
A bear shaped from leaves, feathers, owls and flowers surrounds a young girl holding a bird.
2. Falcon — Rabat, Morocco
A detailed falcon decorated with floral and geometric elements stands on a rock.
More!: 4 Photos of Falcon – Mural by Alegria del Prado in Rabat, Morocco
3. Fox — Carballo, Spain
A fox looking outward, its body filled with layered leaves and branches.
More!: 7 Photos of Fox mural by Alegria del Prado in Carballo, Spain
4. Girl with Whale — Vigo, Galicia, Spain
A girl in an orange dress holds a whale surrounded by rural animals and flowers.
5. Boat Scene — Burgos, Spain
A long decorative boat filled with a girl, a cat, butterflies, birds and natural textures.
Photo by Adeline Maria
6. Lynx — Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
A tall lynx composed of leaves, flowers, owls, birds, butterflies and a hare.
7. Sleeping Lion — Stornara, Italy
A lion sleeps inside the carved opening of a large tree trunk.
8. White Tiger — Balashikha, Russia
A towering white tiger built from layered natural patterns and soft geometric shapes.
More!: Siberian Tiger by Alegria del Prado in Balashikha, Russia (6 photos)
9. Cats and Birds — Carballo, Spain
Multiple cats appear with small birds beneath moonlight, blending warm and cool tones.
More!: 4 Photos of Cats and Birds Mural by Alegria del Prado in Carballo, Spain
More: Nature Is Everything (10 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
4 Photos of Falcon – Mural by Alegria del Prado in Rabat, Morocco
Muralist Alegria del Prado
Mural of a Falcon by Alegria del Prado in Rabat, Morocco for Rabat Street Art Festival. Photos by Ahmed Ismaili.More birds in street art: 11 Bird-Inspired Creations: A Global Tribute to Feathered Friends
What do you think about this mural by Alegria del Prado?
Statue Of Biggest Cat In The World? – By BORDALO II in Lisboa, Portugal (6 photos)
Content warning: Iberian Lynx Cat by BORDALO II. Made of plastic waste in Lisboa, Portugal. With attention to detail, BORDALO II creates inspiring and imaginative pieces made of waste, “Trash Animals”, that beautify public spaces and raise awareness about the impact of hu
Iberian Lynx Cat by BORDALO II. Made of plastic waste in Lisboa, Portugal.
With attention to detail, BORDALO II creates inspiring and imaginative pieces made of waste, “Trash Animals”, that beautify public spaces and raise awareness about the impact of human activity on nature. His art merges creativity with a powerful ecological message, making him a standout figure in the street art world.
Like what you see? Follow BORDALO II here!
Do you like cats? More here!: 43 Purrfect Street Art Pieces: A Tribute to Our Cats
More from recent years by BORDALO II:
“Bear” in Turin, Italy.
“The Dublin Red Squirrel” in Dublin, Ireland.
“Barbary Baby and Mom Monkey” in Viseu, Portugal.
Need more?: 22 photos – A Collection of Street Art by Bordalo II
This is a collection from 2015 of some of BORDALO II most beloved trash art sculptures.
Do you like trash art?
45 Cats – Purrrrrfect Street Art Pieces
Cats have a special talent for taking over cities. Street artists clearly love them just as much as we do!
This collection shows how many forms cat art can take in public spaces. We have gathered giant lifelike murals, glowing paste-ups, sculptures, stained glass, graffiti stickers, painted rocks, and snowy little interventions.Some of these cats hide in boxes. Others stretch across entire buildings. A few only need simple graffiti lines to steal the scene. Scroll through our ultimate cat list and move from huge 3D street art pieces to tiny, unforgettable street moments.
More: Beautiful Animal Statues (8 Photos)
📦 Cardboard Box Cat — By Nego in Torrellas, Zaragoza, Spain 🇪🇸
Nego turns an ordinary building corner into a giant cardboard box. The cat peeks out as if the whole house has become a toy. It is funny, smart, and perfectly scaled to make the street feel more playful.💡 Nerd Fact: This joke lands even harder because it taps into real cat behavior. Utrecht University notes that cats with access to simple hiding boxes adapt faster to stressful environments, so the cardboard box is not just a joke. It is also the kind of hiding place cats actually use to feel safer.
More: House turned into a giant cardboard box with a cat
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🐈 Gatet Gegant — By Oriol Arumí in Torrefarrera, Catalonia, Spain 🇪🇸
Oriol Arumí turns a quiet building into a giant local favorite. The official Torrefarrera Street Art Festival guide lists the 2020 mural as Gatet gegant on Carrer Serra Llarga, and the illusion really does make the whole block feel like the kitten’s living room.More: The Giant Kitten
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🔴 The Red Cat — By LeHo Artwork in Taipei, Taiwan 🇹🇼
This glowing cat was presented in LeHo Artwork’s post about the mural as part of the 幻獸 series for Taipei’s lantern festival, which helps explain why the cat feels warm, luminous, and slightly unreal. The 3D illusion makes it seem as if the red body is radiating straight out from the wall.More: The Red Cat Mural: A Street Art Piece by LeHo Artwork in Taipei
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🗽 Tombili — By Seval Şahin in Kadıköy, Istanbul, Turkey 🇹🇷
Not every great cat piece needs to be painted on a wall. According to Kadıköy Municipality, sculptor Seval Şahin made the statue voluntarily, and it was installed at the spot in Ziverbey where Tombili became famous for this relaxed pose. It turns a beloved neighborhood stray into a permanent piece of urban memory.💡 Nerd Fact: Tombili’s monument became its own mini civic saga. Kadıköy Municipality says it only happened after a 17,000-signature campaign, and Hürriyet Daily News later reported that the statue was stolen and returned days later after public outrage.
More: They made a statue to honor a stray cat that used to sit in this position and watch the passers-by
🐾 Squishee the Alleycat — By SWIFTMANTIS in Papaioea, New Zealand 🇳🇿
This is not just a realistic cat portrait. On the artist’s official mural page, SWIFTMANTIS explains that Squishee was a real local alley cat living under their old brick studio in Palmy before eventually earning a home with them. Painted for Street Prints: Papaioea 2020, the mural carries that real affection as much as the technical skill.💡 Nerd Fact: Squishee’s story kept growing after the mural was finished. On the artist’s own print page, SWIFTMANTIS says later editions became a memorial print with Squishee’s real paw print, and 10% of sales go to Manawatu Alley Cats Trust.
More: Street (cat) Art by SWIFTMANTIS in Papaioea, New Zealand (4 photos)
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😾 The Dream of Separation — By DALeast in Paris, France 🇫🇷
DALeast’s official site lists the 2019 Paris work as The Dream of Separation, and that title fits the image beautifully. His signature tangle of metallic lines makes the two cats feel as if they are colliding, splintering, and vibrating all at once.More: Street Art by DALeast – In Paris, France
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😺 Cat! — By Näutil in Réthoville, Manche, France 🇫🇷
Näutil keeps things loose, playful, and full of character here. The graffiti cat feels wonderfully expressive without needing much realism. That is why it pops so nicely against the wall.More: Cat! – Street art by Näutil in Réthoville, France (9 photos)
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😸 Pelle Svanslös and Maja Gräddnos — By Charlie Granberg in Uppsala, Sweden 🇸🇪
Charlie Granberg gives Pelle Svanslös and Maja Gräddnos a bright and friendly presence, but the mural is bigger and more site-specific than it first looks. Destination Uppsala highlights it as a 15-meter mural of Peter-No-Tail and Molly Cream-Nose in Påvel Snickares Gränd, which makes it feel completely at home in the city that gave the character life.💡 Nerd Fact: Pelle’s stories carry more history than the phrase “beloved children’s cat” might suggest. The official Pelle Svanslös site says the character began on Uppsala radio in 1937, and the books quietly folded in wartime Sweden through blackout rules, ration cards, and even a Danish cat nickname that plays on Quisling.
More: Pelle Svanslös mural by Charlie Granberg in Uppsala, Sweden
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📷 Photo by Strangefruit Street Art
❄️ Summer and Winter — By Braga Last One in Les Pennes-Mirabeau, Bouches-du-Rhône, France 🇫🇷
Braga Last One makes this fluffy cat feel like it belongs to two seasons at once. The 3D illusion, fur texture, and split atmosphere give the mural a surreal edge without losing its soft touch.More: Summer and Winter by Braga Last One in southern France (6 photos and video)
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♻️ Iberian Lynx — By BORDALO II in Lisbon, Portugal 🇵🇹
BORDALO II does not just depict a lynx. He builds it out of the waste we leave behind. That makes this street art animal both beautiful and unsettling, and it makes the environmental message hard to miss.💡 Nerd Fact: This animal choice hits even harder now. Reuters reported that the Iberian lynx was moved from Endangered to Vulnerable in 2024, while BORDALO II’s own Big Trash Animals statement says the whole series is built on the contradiction of using waste to depict creatures whose habitats are damaged by waste.
More: 6 pics: Lynx Cat – Made of plastic waste by BORDALO II in Lisboa, Portugal
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🪜 Valparaíso Cat Stairs — By Unknown Artist in Valparaíso, Chile 🇨🇱
This is one of those pieces where the whole street becomes the canvas. Turning the stairs into a giant cat face is simple and bold. It is exactly the kind of public street art that makes a city feel playful.More: Street Art in Valparaíso, Chile
😼 Cat — By Stamatis Laskos in Naousa, Imathia, Greece 🇬🇷
Stamatis Laskos gives this cat a stretched and fascinating shape. It feels somewhere between a graffiti creature and a sleepy house cat. It is quirky, lean, and full of personality.More: Cat by Stamatis Laskos in Naousa, Imathia, Greece
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🐯 The Cat — By Dan Leo at Waterford Walls, Waterford, Ireland 🇮🇪
Dan Leo’s mural feels sharp, graphic, and almost totemic. Waterford Walls listed it simply as “The cat” and placed it on Park Road opposite People’s Park, which suits the piece perfectly. The bold shapes and color blocks give it a clean punch that reads from far away.More: Cat Mural by Dan Leo (+ 4 more animals)
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😻 Meow Meow — By Tianooo The Cat in Hamburg, Germany 🇩🇪
Tianooo’s small cat paste-ups have a way of completely stealing the wall around them. This little Hamburg piece is sweet and full of emotion. It is the kind of tiny street art that makes a city corner feel warmer.More: Meow meow (5 photos)
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📦 Cat In A Box — By Vladi in Hong Kong 🇭🇰
This is a very simple idea, but Vladi lands it perfectly. The 3D box illusion and the cat’s relaxed expression sell the joke. Together, they make the mural feel light, funny, and instantly shareable.More: Cat In A Box – By Vladi in Hong Kong
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🌈 Cat Mural — By Uriginal in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
Uriginal goes full graphic here. Strong geometry and bright colors carry the piece. The result is crisp, cheerful, and ready to energize the wall around it.More: A feast for the eyes with the enchanting cat mural by artist Uriginal in Barcelona (4 photos)
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💤 Sleeping Painted Cat — By Jack Lack in Grenoble, France 🇫🇷
There is something wonderful about a giant mural that chooses calm over drama. Jack Lack makes this sleeping cat feel soft and peaceful. It is a perfect match for the quiet side of the building.More: Sleeping Painted Cat by Jack Lack in Grenoble, France
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🐈⬛ Black Cat — By 3MK in Ptolemaida, Greece 🇬🇷
3MK gives this black cat intense energy. The green eyes carry most of the tension. Once they catch your gaze, the whole wall suddenly feels alive.More: Black Cat mural by 3MK in Ptolemaida, Greece
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⭐ Cute Star Cat — By Sagie in Jönköping, Sweden 🇸🇪
Sagie leans into softness here, and it works beautifully. In the artist’s post about the mural, he notes that one ear was actually made of wood and glued onto the wall, giving the dreamy cat a subtle sculptural twist. That handmade detail makes the whole piece feel even more like a giant bedtime story.More: Cute Star Cat by Sagie in Jönköping, Sweden
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🐭 Cat Waiting for Mouse — By LIZ ART BERLIN in Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪
This street art piece is all about brilliant placement. LIZ ART BERLIN uses the real mouse hole as part of the artwork. It turns a simple paste-up into a perfect little joke between the wall and the street.More: Cat waiting for mouse – 11 Paste Ups by LIZ ART BERLIN
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🌿 Rustle in Feilding — By SWIFTMANTIS in Feilding, New Zealand 🇳🇿
SWIFTMANTIS uses a highly detailed style here, but the story behind the mural is just as memorable. On the official project page, the artist explains that Rustle traveled from London to Feilding mid-pandemic to be reunited with his mum Sophie after six months apart. The painted leaves make that real cat feel like it is quietly spying on the city from its own green hideout.🔗 Follow SWIFTMANTIS on Instagram
🫒 Olive — By SWIFTMANTIS in Christchurch, New Zealand 🇳🇿
This mural lands because it is deeply personal. On the official mural page, SWIFTMANTIS describes Olive as a Christchurch city stray painted for Flare Street Art Festival to help her find a home, and the note now happily adds that she has since been adopted. That turns the wall into more than a portrait. It becomes a public act of care.🔗 Follow SWIFTMANTIS on Instagram
💖 Neon Cat — By David Speed in London, England 🇬🇧
David Speed makes this cat feel like it was painted with pure electricity. The fluorescent pink glow pushes the piece right to the edge. It is a perfect mix of neon sign, bold graffiti, and pop spectacle.More: Cat in London by Neon Artist David Speed
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❤️ Cat Lover — By Wek / Spray Lover in Lisbon, Portugal 🇵🇹
This piece keeps things tender and beautifully direct. Spray Lover focuses purely on the cat’s softness and presence. The street art mural feels affectionate without needing any extra visual tricks.More: Cat Lover by Spray Lover in Lisbon, Portugal (4 photos)
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🏙️ Giant Cat Mural — By LexusOne in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia 🇷🇺
LexusOne works on a huge scale here. The size gives the cat a calm, guardian-like presence. It feels like the entire building has been turned into a lookout point for one enormous neighborhood cat.More: Cat mural by LexusOne in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
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💕 We Will Meet Again… — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This one is simple, text-based, and still surprisingly effective. It works because the graffiti line is funny and tender. It is just dramatic enough to sound like something only true cat people would understand.More: We will meet again in another life when we are both cats
🪟 Stained Glass Cat — By Kateryna Shelyhina in Unknown Location 🌍
This is not a standard graffiti mural, but it absolutely belongs here. The stretched cat silhouette and stained-glass treatment are elegant. They give it a graceful sense of movement that feels both handmade and magical.More: The natural movement of this cat sculpture is amazing
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🚐 All Cats Are Beautiful — By Pro Boy Nick in Unknown Location 🌍
The charm here is how temporary the art is. Pro Boy Nick turns a dirty van window into a surprisingly elegant cat portrait. It proves that even street grime can become a pretty great canvas.💡 Nerd Fact: This sits inside a broader street-art lineage sometimes called reverse graffiti. In a Guardian piece on Paul “Moose” Curtis, the method is described as making an image by removing grime instead of adding paint, which means the drawing is literally made out of the clean parts.
More: All Cats Are Beautiful (Dirty Van Art)
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✊ Cats Against Racism — By Unknown Artist in Adelaide, Australia 🇦🇺
This is exactly the kind of small intervention that can completely change the tone of a place. Covering hateful propaganda with a cat sticker is funny and sharp. It is a perfect example of street art doing something immediate and human.More: There was some racist rubbish here but I covered it up with this picture of a cat
🐈 Cat — By JPS in Unknown Location 🌍
JPS has a gift for making stencils feel quietly cinematic. This street art cat is perfectly placed and well observed. It feels less like a painted image and more like a real animal that just decided to sit there.More: Cat – Street Art by JPS
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😴 Sleeping Kitten 2 — By WA in Lima, Peru 🇵🇪
This mural is all about pure softness and restraint. WA presented this anamorphic Lima intervention as Gatito durmiendo, and that slight perspective trick helps the sleeping kitten feel even softer. The painting turns a simple pose into something deeply peaceful.More: Sleeping kitten 2 by WA in Lima, Peru
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🐾 Big Ginger Kitten — By Mr Meana in London, England 🇬🇧
Mr Meana gives this kitten just enough perspective and attitude to make it pop. It feels like it is climbing right out of the wall. This 3D street art is playful, oversized, and hard not to smile at.More: Big ginger kitten escaping from the side of the building
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🎀 1312 Hello Kitty — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This piece works because it takes something instantly cute and flips it into something confrontational. The clash between the familiar Hello Kitty face and the sharper message gives the graffiti its punch.More: 1312 Hello Kitty
🔗 Possible attribution: Sugar Bombing on Instagram
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bHBH-nUJGx8
👀 Cat Watching the Dog — By Street Artist N.M in Flensburg, Germany 🇩🇪
The fun here is in the delayed reveal. At first, it looks like an ordinary dog moment. Then you realize the cat on the wall is actually painted. That makes the whole piece feel like a tiny live-action street prank.More: Street Artist N.M in Flensburg, Germany
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😺 Happy Cats — By K. Skretutsky in Kyiv, Ukraine 🇺🇦
This is more playful public sculpture than traditional wall art. But it absolutely belongs in our street art cat collection. The big smile and colorful mosaic surface make it feel like a piece of the city designed purely for joy.More: Happy Cats! – In Kyiv, Ukraine
🎨 #Caturday Stencil — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
Sometimes all a wall needs is one neat black-and-white cat shape. This stencil is quick, minimal, and very charming. It easily proves that street art does not need massive scale to leave a big mark.More: Unknown artist and location
⛄ Snow Cats Climbing Trees — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This is exactly the kind of temporary street intervention that feels small and brilliant at the same time. Turning clumps of snow into climbing cats makes winter itself feel like part of the artwork.More: Snow Cats climbing trees
💡 Cat Lights — By Unknown Artist in Zelenogradsk, Russia 🇷🇺
These cat lights are not a typical graffiti mural, but they show how deeply feline culture is built into Zelenogradsk’s public space. The official Visit Kaliningrad guide describes Kurortny Avenue as a street full of cat-themed urban details, including cat traffic lights, murals, and even a Cat Museum. It is public art, local identity, and pure charm all rolled into one small detail.💡 Nerd Fact: Zelenogradsk did not stop at cute cat details. The official Visit Kaliningrad guide says the town’s cat museum helped set the feline theme for the whole place, and its event calendar even lists “Zelenogradsk Cat’s Birthday” on March 1.
More: Cat lights in Zelenogradsk, Russia
🐈 Katzenstele — By Siegfried Neuenhausen in Braunschweig, Germany 🇩🇪
This monument has a very different energy from the murals in this post. The Städtisches Museum Braunschweig identifies it by its official title, Katzenstele, and notes that the large sculpture has been part of Braunschweig’s cityscape since 1981. It feels solemn and affectionate at the same time.💡 Nerd Fact: This monument is so woven into Braunschweig that the city still plans around it. In a 2023 document, Braunschweig described the Katzenstele as a popular photo motif and a special attraction for children, which is why officials approved work on a new pedestal to keep bins and bikes from crowding it.
More: This is in Germany. It was made to honor all homeless cats! (3 pics)
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⬛ Black Shadow — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This piece proves how little it can take to bring a wall to life. A simple black cat silhouette tucked into a niche feels just right. It almost looks like the building was simply waiting for it.
🐈 Cat Meets Cat Graffiti — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This is half artwork and half perfect timing. The real cat passing the line-drawn graffiti cat is magical. It turns an already nice street piece into one of those rare moments that feels almost too good to be accidental.
🪨 Painted Cat Rocks — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
These painted rocks are tiny, and that is a huge part of their appeal. They feel like little gifts left in a public space. They are the kind of small cat street art that can brighten your day out of nowhere.More: #caturstones on #caturday
🐾 The Cat Trace — By Unknown Artist in Unknown Location 🌍
This one is charming because it turns walking into a discovery. A simple trail of paw prints is enough to make the sidewalk feel playful. It looks as if a cat just wandered through and left a little story behind.More: The Cat Trace (Caturday #69)
💨 Smoke Cat on the Wall — By 0331C in Unknown Location 🌍
This is one of the strangest cat pieces in the set, and that is exactly why it works. Using soot and smoke to make a cat silhouette is clever. It gives the wall a ghostly, almost disappearing presence.More: Street Art by 0331C – A Collection
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🐱 Banksy’s Gaza Kitten — By Banksy in Gaza, Palestine 🇵🇸
This piece hits hard because the kitten is playful while the setting is anything but. ABC News reported that the mural was painted on the remains of a home in Beit Hanoun destroyed during the 2014 war in Gaza. That contrast makes the image impossible to take casually.💡 Nerd Fact: The kitten was never meant to function as a standalone mural. Reuters noted that Banksy folded it into a satirical mini-video about Gaza and said he used a kitten because people online click on cats when they would otherwise scroll past destruction.
More: 6 Photos of Street Art by Banksy in Gaza, Palestine: “People only look at pictures of kittens”
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Which one is your favorite?
New Murals by Banksy Spotted in Gaza Strip
The street artist is well-known for his political paintings.KATE BUBACZ (ABC News)
Birds! (14 Photos)
Content warning: Which one is your favorite?
From intimate close-ups to massive architectural takeovers, this collection of bird-themed street art captures the elegance of birds across the globe.
You’ll find photorealistic falcons, surreal cranes, oversized parrots, and delicate wrens brought to life on city walls—each mural a tribute to avian beauty and the artists who transform urban landscapes with their feathers and color. Locations range from the Netherlands and Morocco to France and Australia, each mural offering a unique interpretation of nature through public art.
More birds!: 8 Beautiful Artworks That Seem to Grow From Nature
1. Daniel Mac Lloyd’s mural in Heerlen, Netherlands
Two vibrant blue parrots embrace in a strikingly intimate pose, filling the entire side of a house. Painted with rich blues and bursts of orange, the feathers look almost fluid—blending realism with a painterly splash technique that gives motion and emotion to the birds. More photos!: Bird Love by Daniel Mac LLOYD in Heerlen, Netherlands
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2. Geoffrey Carran’s mural in Carlton North, Melbourne, Australia
A vibrant superb fairywren perches on a blooming branch of pink flowers, painted on a sleek gray wall. The contrast of the soft blossoms and the vivid blue plumage creates a delicate and cheerful composition full of spring energy. More photos!: Male Fairy Wren by Geoffrey Carran Melbourne, Australia
🔗 Follow Geoffrey Carran on Instagram
3. Alegría del Prado’s mural in Rabat, Morocco
A regal falcon with floral plumage and textile patterns adorns a white building in Rabat. The intricate design blends feathers with decorative motifs, transforming the raptor into a symbolic and cultural tapestry. More photos!: 4 Photos of Falcon – Mural by Alegria del Prado in Rabat, Morocco
🔗 Follow Alegría del Prado on Instagram
4. Curtis Hylton’s mural in Nykvarn, Sweden
A majestic osprey emerges from a composition of large cream-colored roses and golden shells, with two chicks nestled below. The hyperrealism and symbolic floral fusion create a visual story of protection and grace. More photos!: Floral Osprey – By Curtis Hylton in Nykvarn, Sweden
🔗 Follow Curtis Hylton on Instagram
5. Vadim Mezzo’s mural in Rostov-on-Don, Russia
Two elegant herons stand side by side in front of a stylized pink sunset and pine tree silhouettes. The mural is geometric yet soft, creating a tranquil lake scene with a graphic, poster-like quality. More photos!: “In silence” by Vadim Mezzo in Rostov-on-Don, Russia
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6. A-MO’s mural in Bordeaux, France
A kingfisher, perched on the corner of a building, bursts with color and texture. The dynamic brushwork mimics feathers in motion, and the location cleverly integrates the mural into urban flow. More photos!: Kingfisher by A-MO in Bordeaux, France
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7. WD (Wild Drawing)’s mural in Athens, Greece
An owl stares intensely from a historic building corner, its massive eyes framed by golden ornamental swirls. The illusion of depth and the realistic textures make it feel alive within the wall. More by WD!: 3D Street Art by WD (7 Murals)
🔗 Follow WD (Wild Drawing) on Instagram
8. TUZQ’s mural in Mol, Belgium
A grey crowned crane stands regally with deep blue feathers and a shimmering gold crest. The dark background contrasts sharply with the vivid bird, adding theatrical lighting to this photorealistic piece. More photos!: Mural of a Crane bird by TUZQ in Mol, Belgium
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9. Adele Renault’s mural in Stavelot, Belgium
A pigeon’s head dominates a multi-surfaced house, with textured roof tiles doubling as feathers. The gradient iridescence and scale of the piece give it a surreal monumentality. More photos!: This Stunning Pigeon Mural in Belgium Is a Must-See
🔗 Follow Adele Renault on Instagram
10. L7m’s mural
A small bird bursts into motion with chaotic lines and neon shades of pink, orange, and black. L7m blends abstract graffiti with realism, creating a sense of explosive speed and urban energy. More by L7m!: Street Art by L7m – A Collection
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11. Jan Is De Man’s mural in Vinkeveense Plassen, Netherlands
A photorealistic peacock appears to be walking off a brick wall and into nature. The illusionary depth and shimmering tail feathers spill across the path like a real bird mid-stride. More!: 8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man That Will Make You Smile
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12. Mural by Carlos Alberto GH in Palenque, Chiapas, Mexico
A hyper-realistic 3D street art mural by Carlos Alberto GH in Palenque, Chiapas, Mexico, depicting a vibrant scarlet macaw in flight. The parrot’s red, blue, and yellow feathers are rendered with stunning precision, creating the illusion that the bird is emerging from the wall. More photos!: By Carlos Alberto GH – In Chiapas, Mexico (6 photos)
🔗 Follow Carlos Alberto GH on Instagram
13. Chicken Punk — Lexus One in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
A large mural of a rooster painted with striking realism. The bird’s red comb and wattles contrast with its layered brown feathers, while its tail fans out in deep blue and purple tones.
🔗 Follow Lexus One on Instagram
Photo by LuKutz
14. Nature Is the Teacher of Art — Anna Tautt & Kkade Schwarzmaler in Hamburg, Germany
An Art Nouveau–inspired mural featuring two thrushes against a deep green background. Surrounded by ornate golden framing, the birds are rendered with lifelike detail, one perched and the other with an open beak as if calling.
🔗 Follow Anna Tautt & Kkade Schwarzmaler on Instagram
More: When Street Art Meets Nature (40 Photos)
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?