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Love Notes For You (9 Photos)

streetartutopia.streetartutopia.com.ap.brid.gy June 28, 2026
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Nine street artworks that say what people sometimes cannot.

Love notes do not always arrive on paper. These nine street artworks turn concrete, brick, shutters, sidewalks, and small corners into messages about love: romantic, funny, imperfect, and easy to carry with you after you scroll past.

More: Love street art on Street Art Utopia


💌 You Are Not Hard to Love — By Poetry by Boots in Louisville, Kentucky 🇺🇸

Poetry by Boots puts one sentence on a concrete wall, and it lands softly. In the artist’s own post from Louisville, Kentucky, the line is direct: the right person will never make you feel like you’re hard to love. It reads like a note left for someone who needed it.

💡 Boots Fact: Poetry by Boots is the street-poetry project of Kimberly Brown. A 2026 Chicago Sun-Times profile says Brown has painted thousands of original poetry snippets and that her painted poems can now be found in all 50 states — so one wall sentence is also part of a nationwide breadcrumb trail.

🔗 Follow Poetry by Boots on Instagram


🌹 Leave Your Ego at the Door — By Poetry by Boots 🇺🇸

Another small sentence doing a lot. Love becomes less of a grand speech and more of a daily choice: listen, soften, and leave the armor somewhere else.

💡 Stencil Fact: In a 2021 interview with NashvilleVoyager, Boots said she writes every poem herself, cuts every stencil by hand, researches places and cities, then goes out painting through the night. The sidewalk line may look effortless, but it comes from a careful, hands-on process.

More: Imagine the Love We Could All Have If We Left Our Egos at the Door — Poetry by Boots

🔗 Follow Poetry by Boots on Instagram


✨ Klimt’s The Kiss Reimagined — By Bogi Fabian in Vienna, Austria 🇦🇹

At Hernstorferstraße 12 in Vienna’s 14th district, Bogi Fabian keeps the gold, pattern, and embrace of Gustav Klimt’s The Kiss , then wraps it around a yellow corner facade. The artist describes the wall as a reinterpretation of Klimt’s iconic work, while the Belvedere notes that the original painting was first shown in Vienna in 1908. A red no-entry sign cuts into the scene: romance, but with traffic rules.

💡 Klimt Fact: The original The Kiss entered public history while it was still new: the Belvedere’s own timeline notes that Austria’s Imperial Ministry of Culture and Education acquired it in 1908 for the Modern Gallery. So this street version is remixing a Viennese love icon that has belonged to public museum culture for more than a century.

More: A Masterpiece on the Streets: Klimt’s The Kiss Reimagined in Vienna

🔗 Visit Bogi Fabian’s website


📱 Modern Love — By Levalet in Hermonville, France 🇫🇷

Levalet brings Romeo and Juliet into the phone era. The lovers are close, but both look down at screens. That site-specific joke fits the way Urban Nation describes Levalet’s public-space work: drawn figures that interact with the architecture around them, often in absurd situations. Funny, and a little bleak. Presence still matters.

💡 Levalet Fact: Charles Leval, known as Levalet, stages bodies drawn in Chinese ink in public space, according to Urban Nation. A gallery biography also connects his work to theatre, cinema, and improvisation, which makes this balcony scene feel less like a static illustration and more like a tiny street play.

More: Modern Love: Levalet’s Spin on Romeo and Juliet in Hermonville, Champagne-Ardenne

🔗 Follow Levalet on Instagram


🧱 I Love You — By Oakoak in Saint-Étienne, France 🇫🇷

Oakoak often makes the city feel like it is in on the joke. His own street-art archive lists this as I love you , Saint-Étienne, France, 2012, with the damaged spot in the pavement turned into the heart. Small, clear, and waiting underfoot.

More: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)

🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram


🐭 Cute Mouse Love — By David Zinn 🇺🇸

David Zinn makes romance tiny enough to fit between bricks. In his own caption, “Sheldon puts his heart on a string every morning from 6:15 to 8:45.” One small mouse, one string, one pink heart: the whole scene feels temporary and devoted.

More: Cute Mouse Love — By David Zinn (2 Photos)

🔗 Visit David Zinn’s website


💔 Cracked — By Martin Whatson with Jonas Leborg in Oslo, Norway 🇳🇴

Martin Whatson’s own post identifies Cracked at Schous Bryggeri / Thorvald Meyers gate 78A in Grünerløkka, Oslo, a location also mapped by Street Art Cities, and credits the collaboration with Jonas Leborg / SMWHR Studio. The wall looks split open, with a huge heart of graffiti underneath: a clean surface giving way to Whatson’s signature burst of color.

💡 Oslo Fact: Whatson’s official bio says decay is central to his work: old buildings, graffiti, posters, and decaying walls feed his compositions, and he often uses vibrant color to interrupt a gray foundation. On Cracked , the heart is not only romantic — it sits inside his long-running interest in beauty found in what cities leave behind.

More: Cracked — Mural by Martin Whatson in Oslo

🔗 Follow Martin Whatson on Instagram and Jonas Leborg on Instagram


🖤 Love Is Like Punk: Not Dead — Artist Unknown

This one has sticker-on-a-guitar-case energy: white paint on a black door, an anarchy-style heart above it, and a message that refuses to tidy itself up. Fair enough.

💡 Punk Fact: “Punks not dead” was not just a slogan on jackets. AllMusic lists Punks Not Dead as The Exploited’s 1981 first full-length album, a rough second-wave punk answer to anyone treating punk as finished. This door turns that old refusal into a love note.

More: Love Is Like Punk: Not Dead


🦋 Girl with Red Heart — By Alessio B in Montagnana, Italy 🇮🇹

Alessio B keeps this one clean and quiet. A girl sits with her back to us, facing a large red heart as small butterflies lift from the top. The mood fits the artist’s broader stencil language: Urban Nation describes Alessio-B as a Padua-based stencil artist whose work often carries messages of optimism, peace, love, and positivity.

💡 Alessio Fact: Padua’s tourism office says Alessio B’s stencil art often uses images inspired by childhood and the feelings and delicacy associated with it. That matters here because the piece does not sell love as drama; it frames love as something tender, simple, and still learnable.

More: Street Art by Alessio B in Montagnana, Italy (3 Photos)

🔗 Visit Alessio B’s website


Which one is your favorite?

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