Made The City Feel Kinder (11 Photos)
Street art moments that make public space feel kinder.
These pieces change the mood with small acts of wit and warmth: a bin becomes a puppy, a drain becomes an octopus, a curb becomes tiny homes, and a cracked wall smiles back. None of them tries too hard. Together, they make the city feel a little more human.
🥬 “Crunchie” — By Helga Stentzel in London, UK 🇬🇧
Helga Stentzel’s store lists this lettuce dog as “Crunchie” , part of her Edible Creatures series of food-and-household-object characters. The lid becomes a roof, the black bags become a hiding place, and Crunchie looks half guilty, half ready to be adopted.
💡 Nerd Fact: Stentzel describes her Edible Creatures as characters made from food and household objects that sometimes get “caught on camera.” That tiny phrase changes the read: Crunchie is staged less like a still life and more like a paparazzi shot of an imaginary pet.
More: Dog made of salad in the trash bin on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow Helga Stentzel on Instagram
🧸 Simple Maths — By TRUST. iCON
TRUST. iCON keeps the idea to one clean equation: 1 + 1 = heart. Global Street Art documented this version as Simple Maths with @trusticon, and the small bear makes the answer feel as if it was obvious all along.
💡 Nerd Fact: A London Calling write-up says TRUST. iCON often mixes childhood snapshots, pop-culture humor, and pointed insight. That makes this piece feel like a classroom doodle with an adult street-art punchline.
More: Simple Maths on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Visit TRUST. iCON’s website
🥊 Heart Attack — “Kill them with kindness” — By TABBY in Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹
TABBY’s archive lists this 2017 outdoor piece as “Heart Attack – Kill them with kindness”. Two fighters square up with red heart-shaped gloves. It still has a jab, just not the usual one.
💡 Nerd Fact: TABBY told URBANSHIT Gallery that new pieces often start as written words or phrases in a growing pile of notes before they become images. “Kill them with kindness” is exactly that kind of text-to-stencil transformation: an idiom turned into a fight scene.
More: Heart Attack by TABBY on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Visit TABBY’s website
❤️ The Heart That Survived — In São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
A worker cleans the wall, but the tiny red pixel heart stays. The clip is shared as a São Paulo moment, and the intention remains part of its charm: maybe it was deliberate, maybe it simply felt wrong to remove it. Either way, the little heart does the job.
💡 Nerd Fact: São Paulo’s walls sit inside a long debate about public “visual pollution”: the city’s Clean City Law removed thousands of outdoor ads, and later graffiti clean-up campaigns sparked arguments about what should be erased and what should be protected. That makes the spared heart feel like a tiny, accidental vote for tenderness.
🔗 Watch the original video on Instagram
🏠 Tiny Homes on the Sidewalk — By Apolo Torres in São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷
This curb piece sits inside the accessibility campaign “Sem Rampa, Calçada é Muro” (“Without a ramp, a sidewalk is a wall”), created for ONG Movimento SuperAção by Z+. Artists including Apolo Torres moved graffiti onto curb obstacles that can become real walls for wheelchair users. The miniature houses are sweet, but the point is serious.
💡 Nerd Fact: The first phase of “Sem Rampa, Calçada é Muro” put 14 artworks on São Paulo curbs that, by law, should have ramps; the campaign also posted the locations online. The art was not decoration only—it was a public checklist of barriers to fix.
More: Tiny Homes on a Public Sidewalk on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow Apolo Torres on Instagram and CALÇADA É MURO on Instagram
🐙 I See You Little Octopus — By Sandrine Estrade Boulet in Marles-les-Mines, France 🇫🇷
Sandrine Estrade Boulet looks at a small drain and gives it legs. The red octopus comes from Festival les Petits Bonheurs, a Béthune-Bruay street-art project where invited artists worked with people with disabilities to make temporary works in towns including Marles-les-Mines.
💡 Nerd Fact: “Les Petits Bonheurs” means “The Little Happinesses,” and the festival format was built around temporary street artworks made by people with disabilities alongside invited artists. The octopus belongs to a bigger idea: small urban surprises can also be social participation.
More: I See You Little Octopus on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow Sandrine Estrade Boulet on Instagram
🧱 The Brick Smile — By PENAO in Barcelona, Spain 🇪🇸
PENAO uses the broken brickwork instead of hiding it. Barbara Picci documented the piece as “The brick smile” at Passatge Marina, 26; the rough opening becomes a wide mouth with brick teeth. It is not polished, which is exactly why it works.
💡 Nerd Fact: Independent street-art archiving matters here. Barbara Picci’s post preserves the title, exact address, date and photo credit for a piece that could disappear with one repair job. In street art, metadata can be the difference between a city joke and a traceable artwork.
More: Brick Smile by PENAO on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow PENAO on Instagram
https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=2384626101838337
🙂 Street Art to Make People Smile — By Rudy Willingham in Seattle, USA 🇺🇸
Rudy Willingham keeps the setup light. BrightVibes describes his Seattle street pieces as removable stickers that create funny mini-scenarios for neighbors and passers-by. The work is made to be noticed fast, laughed at, and then left behind for the next person.
💡 Nerd Fact: Willingham is not only a street artist: BrightVibes describes him as a Seattle electronic producer, DJ and drone photographer. That background explains the rhythm of these tiny interventions; they work like one-frame jokes placed at exactly the right beat.
More: I make street art to make people smile on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow Rudy Willingham on Instagram
🙂 Building With Smiley Face — By JanIsDeMan in IJsselstein, Netherlands 🇳🇱
JanIsDeMan lets the facade do most of the work. The windows become eyes, the crack becomes a mouth, and the whole building gives IJsselstein a huge grin. Street Art Cities describes his murals as site-specific works where the wall, building, and surroundings feed the concept.
💡 Nerd Fact: JanIsDeMan’s practice is often participatory: his own bio notes that he has built giant bookcase murals from local residents’ favorite books. So a smiling building fits a bigger habit of making walls feel like they belong to the people around them.
More: 8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man That Will Make You Smile
🔗 Visit JanIsDeMan’s website
💛 Believe in Me — By Sr. X in London, UK 🇬🇧
Sr. X posted this London Mural Festival wall as “Believe in Me” in Quex Mews, Kilburn. Global Street Art documented the wall at 2 Quex Rd, London NW6 4PH. A pop-art Madonna-and-child composition becomes strange and sweet when the child is Pikachu.
💡 Nerd Fact: The pose echoes a very old visual language: Madonna-and-Child images became a major Christian art theme after Mary’s title Theotokos was affirmed in 431 CE. Sr. X, a Spanish artist based in London, flips that sacred template through pop culture rather than copying it straight.
More: Believe in Me on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Follow Sr. X on Instagram
🌬️ Clean Energy — By TABBY
TABBY shared “Clean Energy” in 2020, and his archive lists it as a cut-out wooden canvas panel. A tiny worker sweeps a wind turbine with a broom. Clean energy, taken very literally.
💡 Nerd Fact: TABBY published “Clean Energy” on April 22, 2020; the same date as Earth Day. That matters because Earth Day marks the birth of the modern environmental movement in 1970, so the tiny cleaner is also a timestamped climate joke.
More: Clean Energy on Street Art Utopia
🔗 Visit TABBY’s website
Discussion in the ATmosphere