
24 times artists let the real world complete the artwork.
Here, nature is not scenery. A living bush becomes hair, grass becomes a lion’s mane, stones turn into portraits, and the tide gets the last edit.
Some pieces are murals. Others are beach drawings, land art, driftwood sculptures, or temporary arrangements on the ground. The fun is in the handoff: what did the artist add, and what was already there?
Editor’s note: First published March 30, 2026. Updated May 30, 2026 with six more artworks, clearer captions, and refreshed source links.
More: When Street Art Meets Nature (40 Photos)

🌺 Bougainvillea Shades — Street Art in Pondicherry, India 🇮🇳
Sometimes nature does the styling. In this Pondicherry piece, the mural’s giant sunglasses and calm face work on their own, but the bougainvillea spilling over the wall becomes her hair. It changes with every season and every bloom.
More photos: Street Art in Pondicherry, India
💡 Nerd Fact: Oxford University Herbaria connects bougainvillea to Louis-Antoine de Bougainville’s 1766–1769 voyage, where naturalist Philibert Commerson discovered the plant and his assistant Jeanne Baret became the first woman to go around the globe. That makes bougainvillea spilling over a wall in Puducherry’s French Quarter feel especially fitting.
🔗 More photos by Kanthan on Instagram

🕊️ Dove of Peace — By Hannah Bullen-Ryner
Hannah Bullen-Ryner’s birds feel found more than built. In the artist’s own post, this white dove was made in response to the war in Ukraine, using white blossom flowers, small white feathers, and wilted crocus petals. It reads as peace, but also as something temporary. Soon enough, it goes back to the ground.
More: Nature Is Everything! 18 Stunning Artworks by Hannah Bullen-Ryner
💡 Nerd Fact: On her artist website, Bullen-Ryner describes working with locally found natural materials and no permanent fixings, so the disappearing part is not a flaw. It is the point. She has also described the temporary nature of the work as calming and therapeutic.
🔗 Follow Hannah Bullen-Ryner on Instagram

🦁 Mane Problem — By David Zinn in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA 🇺🇸
David Zinn has a good eye for the crack, weed, or patch of grass that can carry a drawing. In the post for this drawing, he framed the joke as “Nathan removed the thorn but couldn’t do anything about the mane problem,” which is exactly the kind of found collaboration his sidewalk creatures live on.
More: Cute Art By David Zinn (16 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s official bio notes that his temporary drawings are made with chalk, charcoal, and found objects, and are improvised on location. So a random tuft of grass becoming a lion’s mane is classic Zinn logic.
🔗 Follow David Zinn on Instagram

🌾 Stillness in Motion: The Matka Series — By Olga Ziemska in Orońsko, Poland 🇵🇱
Olga Ziemska uses bundled branches to give a still figure the look of movement. The artist’s project page identifies the work as a 2002 site-specific sculpture at the Centre of Polish Sculpture in Orońsko, made from hand-stacked locally reclaimed willow branches. The long sweep of willow behind the body reads like wind or hair pulled sideways, making the figure literally of its environment.
💡 Nerd Fact: Stillness in Motion was created in 2002 and became the first work in Olga Ziemska’s Matka series. “Matka” means “mother” in Polish, so the figure is about movement, but also about origin, place, and our first physical environment: the womb.
🔗 Follow Olga Ziemska on Instagram

🌊 The Eye — By Näutil in Siouville-Hague, France 🇫🇷
This WWII bunker on the beach at Siouville-Hague was already heavy with mood. Näutil painted one huge blue eye on it, and the waves in front do the rest. The concrete looks less like a block and more like something watching the tide.
More photos of The Eye: By Näutil – In Siouville-Hague, France
💡 Nerd Fact: French coverage later identified the artist as Cyrille Corlays, alias Näutil, and noted that the eye had become a local landmark before he eventually closed it. Näutil’s own writing links the half-closed eye to the idea that life is constant movement and nothing stays fixed, which means the surf, weather, and changing coastline are part of the piece’s meaning.
🔗 Follow Näutil on Instagram

🪵 Spirit in Driftwood — By Debra Bernier on Vancouver Island, Canada 🇨🇦
Debra Bernier lets the driftwood stay in charge. On her Shaping Spirit artist page, she explains that the tides, wind, and weather have already shaped the wood before she ever touches it. In this sculpture, a calm human face sits inside the hollow curve of the wood. The grain, torn edges, and closed eyes do most of the work. It feels uncovered more than carved.
More: 19 Driftwood Sculptures by Debra Bernier
💡 Nerd Fact: Metchosin ArtPod’s Shaping Spirit profile says the earth, ocean, moon, and tides all help shape driftwood before Bernier works with it. That local shoreline context matters: these are not just figures carved into wood, but forms with another life inside them.
🔗 Follow Debra Bernier on Facebook

🍃 Tree Ring Mandala — By James Brunt with young Syrian collaborators
James Brunt turns the ground around a tree into a living pattern. In his post about the work, he described spending time with seven young Syrian men, with little shared language but no lack of communication. Leaves, sticks, and greenery move outward like growth rings, making the trunk the center of a temporary mandala.
More: Land Art by James Brunt (9 photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Bayt Al Fann describes Brunt’s work as ephemeral art made from natural materials found in forests, parks, and beaches, often arranged into mandala-like spirals and concentric circles. His work turns leaves, sticks, and stones into something halfway between ritual, play, and math.
🔗 Visit James Brunt’s website

🏖️ Head in the Sand — By Ian Mutch near Wyadup Rocks, Western Australia 🇦🇺
Ian Mutch works straight into the beach. His own beach-drawing archive places “Head in the Sand” near Wyadup Rocks and says it was made just days before Australia’s COVID lockdown. The huge sand drawing takes a familiar head-in-the-sand joke and makes it literal, with the figure cut into the shoreline and a real shopping cart doing its part.
More: “Head in the sand” Beach art by Ian Mutch in Australia (6 artworks)
💡 Nerd Fact: Ian Mutch’s beach-drawing archive says Head in the Sand was made near Wyadup Rocks just days before Australia’s COVID lockdown, and that it responded to the strange public mood of the time, including panic buying. So the joke in the image is also a timestamp from that moment.
🔗 Follow Ian Mutch on Instagram

🌍 World in Progress — By Saype in Geneva, Switzerland 🇨🇭
Saype works at a scale where a lawn becomes a drawing surface. In “World in progress,” two children draw on the grass in the park of the Palais des Nations in Geneva with biodegradable paint. The message is big, but the image stays simple: kids sketching a future onto the ground.
More: World in progress – By Saype in Geneva (4 photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Swiss government coverage says World in Progress was presented in the park of the Palais des Nations for the 75th anniversary of the UN Charter. Saype’s giant grass works are made with eco-conscious, biodegradable paint based mainly on chalk and charcoal, so the technique fits the message.
🔗 Follow Saype on Instagram

🌿 OSolTerrae — By Fin DAC in Portland, Oregon, USA 🇺🇸
Fin DAC left room for time. In his own post, he says the Portland mural was painted for SolTerra and features about 1,000 live plants in the headdress. The work sits on the SolTerra building at 959 SE Division Street, where the greenery needed time to grow into the crown.
More: The live plants needed time to grow – By Fin DAC in Portland
💡 Nerd Fact: The title is commonly given as OSolTerrae, also described as Woman-Sun-Earth. A Bird Alliance of Oregon mural guide notes the 70-foot SolTerra work has more than 1,000 plants for hair. And ASLA notes green walls can lower summer temperatures and reduce wall-surface temperature swings, so the headdress is also living-wall design.
🔗 Follow Fin DAC on Instagram

🪨 Fisherman — By Justin Bateman in Chiang Mai, Thailand 🇹🇭
Justin Bateman builds faces one pebble at a time. In “Fisherman,” the different stones carry the wrinkles, beard, skin, and shadows. It feels solid, but one hand or one storm could scatter it.
More by Justin Bateman: George Washingstone Stone & Pebble Portrait by Justin Bateman (+8 more artworks)
💡 Nerd Fact: Justin Bateman likes to say “Pebbles are my Pixels”, which is a neat description of how these portraits work: each stone acts like a tiny brushstroke. He also embraces impermanence on purpose, drawing inspiration from Tibetan sand mandalas that are meant to be destroyed after completion.
🔗 Visit Justin Bateman’s website

🔥 Prometheus — By David Popa in Crete, Greece 🇬🇷
David Popa paints with naturally sourced pigments directly on rock. His Prometheus project page places the work on the island of Crete and describes it as a massive ephemeral earth fresco that will fade from the elements. This cracked face feels old before the weather even gets to it. Sea, stone, salt, and scale do a lot of the work.
More: Prometheus! The supreme trickster and god of fire
💡 Nerd Fact: Britannica describes Prometheus as a Titan, supreme trickster, and god of fire, with a name linked to “Forethinker.” David Popa’s version is deliberately ephemeral too, so the bringer of civilization is painted into a surface that wind, salt, and time are meant to erase again.
🔗 Visit David Popa’s website

🐎 Pebble Stallion — By Beach4Art at Sandymere Beach, North Devon, UK 🇬🇧
Beach4Art makes stones and driftwood carry real movement. Their World Horse Day post places this beach-art series at Sandymere Beach in North Devon, made from stones, shells, and driftwood. The raised leg, mane, and pebble shading give the horse its energy. It is temporary beach work, so the tide gets the last edit.
More: Horse Art (9 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Beach4Art is not a solo artist name but a family project: Ieva Slares, her husband Dzintars, and their two children create these temporary works together on the North Devon coast. A My Modern Met feature traces the project to family beach walks and found natural materials, which makes the horse feel less like a stunt and more like land art built from shared time.
🔗 Follow Beach4Art on Instagram

🐦 Hummingbird Bloom — By Safe in Moyobamba, Peru 🇵🇪
Safe fills a plain street-side wall with hummingbirds, oversized flowers, and dense color. The TierraQPinta post places the mural in Moyobamba for TQP 2023, and the black background makes the birds and blooms stand forward. It brings a small blast of rainforest to the street.
More: Mural by Safe in Moyobamba, Peru for TierraQPinta
💡 Nerd Fact: Moyobamba is famous as the City of Orchids, and Peru’s Andina news agency notes that the area’s flora includes more than 3,500 orchid species. So those giant flowers are not just decoration; they echo one of the city’s strongest botanical identities.
🔗 Follow Safe on Instagram

🐚 Birth of Venus — By Jben beach art and Thomas Cambois atelier in France 🇫🇷
Jben beach art and Thomas Cambois take Botticelli to the beach. The figures, shell, and vine border are drawn into wet sand, with the surf sitting close by. One incoming tide and the whole thing is gone.
More: 5 Pics Beach Art: Birth of Venus by Botticelli
💡 Nerd Fact: The Uffizi dates Botticelli’s Birth of Venus to around 1485 and describes Venus arriving ashore on Cyprus, born from sea spray and carried by the wind. Re-making it in sand beside the tide puts the image back inside the myth that inspired it.
🔗 Follow Jben beach art on Facebook and Thomas Cambois atelier on Facebook

🟢 Tapis Rouge (The Green Carpet) — By Gaëlle Villedary in Jaujac, France 🇫🇷
Gaëlle Villedary rolled a strip of lawn through Jaujac like a green carpet. Landscape Architecture platform Landezine identifies the work as Tapis Rouge!, completed in 2011 for the village’s Art and Nature Trail. Against the stone lane and steps, the grass looks unreal, even though it is very real.
More photos: The Green Carpet – In Jaujac, France
💡 Nerd Fact: Landezine records that Tapis Rouge used 168 rolls of lawn, stretched about 420 meters, and weighed around 3.5 tonnes. The joke gets better when you realize how much real landscape engineering went into the green carpet.
🔗 Visit Gaëlle Villedary’s website

🍎 The Little Girl and the Little-Apple Tree — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
Oakoak is at his best when the city supplies half the joke. On his own street-art archive, this piece is listed as “The little girl and the little-apple tree.” Here, a branch of red berries becomes a tree for a tiny painted girl. A small wall detail turns into a story.
More: Small Girl and small apple – By Oakoak
💡 Nerd Fact: The confirmed title sums up Oakoak’s method nicely. URBAN NATION calls him a French street interventionist who turns everyday city objects into comic-like sidewalk stories. In other words, branches, cracks, shadows, and street furniture are not props for him; they are the setup.
🔗 Follow Oakoak on Instagram

🌿 Sideshow Bob’s Plant Hair — By Marquitos Corvalán in Chaco, Argentina 🇦🇷
Wait for it… the hair isn’t painted.
Marquitos Corvalán set up the Sideshow Bob face, clean and simple. Then the ivy dropped in and took control. It hangs down like messy hair and changes the whole piece.
You can set it up, but you can’t really plan this. The wall did its part. Nature finished it.
💡 Nerd Fact: Sideshow Bob is officially Robert Underdunk Terwilliger, and his towering red hair is one of the character’s defining visual traits. Here, ivy turns that cartoon silhouette into a living wall gag.
🔗 Follow Marquitos Corvalán on Facebook

💧 Beyond the Surface — By Paul Watty in Goirle, Netherlands 🇳🇱
Paul Watty uses the brick wall like a riverbank. Street Art Cities documents Beyond the Surface at Melkweg 22 in Goirle and connects the mural to De Leij, the small river that has shaped the local landscape. A large dragonfly rests across windows, water lilies, reflections, and deep greens. The building stays visible, but the mural makes it feel like habitat.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 7 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Street Art Cities describes the dragonfly as resting on a water lily, with reeds, water, and warm light tying the image to summer around De Leij. The title also fits the insect itself: the British Dragonfly Society lists egg, larva/nymph, and adult stages, with many eggs laid in or near water before the winged stage.
🔗 Follow Paul Watty on Instagram · Photo by Rian Nijssen on Instagram

🔑 The Key Fish — By Naomi Haverland in Kissimmee, Florida, USA 🇺🇸
Naomi Haverland paints the fish as if it is hanging from the wall. Local coverage of the Earth Day unveiling places the ARTisNOW mural at Mosaic at Lake Toho, 110 Lakeview Drive. It is part creature, part planter, with flowers, cattails, barrel curves, chains, and a golden key below. The painted shadow sells the illusion.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 6 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: The Lake Toho connection matters. The City of Kissimmee traces the city back to a trading post on the northern bank of Lake Tohopekaliga, so the fish, cattails, water lilies, and key feel rooted in local place rather than generic decoration.
🔗 Follow Naomi Haverland on Instagram and Osceola Arts on Instagram

🌳 Face in the Ruins — By Falko Fantastic in Cape Town, South Africa 🇿🇦
Falko Fantastic uses the broken wall instead of hiding it. The long gap across the eyes becomes part of the face, and the real trees behind it fill the missing strip. The ruin is not background here; it is the structure.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 6 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: 16 on Lerotholi’s artist page traces Falko Fantastic’s first graffiti work back to 1988 during apartheid South Africa and describes his art as non-intrusive work that interacts with its surroundings. That gives this quiet ruined-wall intervention a long street-art backstory.
🔗 Follow Falko Fantastic on Instagram

🪨 “Linear” — By Jon Foreman at Lindsway Bay, Wales, UK 🏴
Jon Foreman does not need a wall. His own post identifies Linear as a 2025 work created at Lindsway Bay. Smooth beach stones become a long fan of color across the sand, with cliffs, sky, and tide around it. It looks carefully measured, but it is still beach work. The sea gets a vote.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 6 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Foreman’s caption keeps the title beautifully simple: “Linear, 2025,” followed by “Simplicity, motion, colour.” That says a lot about the piece. The stones make the line, but the beach, cliffs, and tide make the clock.
🔗 Follow Jon Foreman on Instagram

🌸 “River Bloom” — By Loretta Lizzio in Perth, Australia 🇦🇺
Loretta Lizzio covers the service-lane wall with a reclining figure, vines, flowers, leaves, and flowing hair. The City of South Perth festival page lists River Bloom at 19 Welwyn Ave, Manning, on the rear wall of BWS. The body and landscape start to blend, and the hard city edges around it make the green feel stronger.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 7 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: The City of South Perth says the 2026 No More Blank Walls Mural Festival ran from 10 to 18 April and turned South Perth, Manning, Karawara, and Kensington into an open-air gallery. The title River Bloom fits the mood: hair, branches, petals, and water-like movement all drift together as if the wall is turning into a riverbank.
🔗 Follow Loretta Lizzio on Instagram, No More Blank Walls on Instagram and Blank Walls on Instagram

🫒 Olive Mother — By Sock Wild Sketch & TETAL in Cerignola, Italy 🇮🇹
Sock Wild Sketch and TETAL paint the building as a weathered wooden face tied to land and harvest. The work was shared through their duo Deux Mains Peinture, and the Cerignola setting makes the olive crown feel especially grounded. Olive leaves crown the face, dark fruit gathers above the eyes, cracks run through the skin, and two pale streams fall from the lower wall. Rooted, old, and alive.
More: New Street Art, Murals and Public Art Vol. 7 (30 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Cerignola is deeply tied to olives, especially the Bella di Cerignola variety. Qualigeo describes La Bella della Daunia PDO as large green and black table olives from the Bella di Cerignola variety, produced in a defined area of Apulia. So the crown is not random decoration; it turns a local agricultural identity into a monumental street portrait.
🔗 Follow Sock Wild Sketch on Instagram and TETAL on Instagram
Which one is your favorite?
The Leij is a small river that has traditionally defined the landscape of Goirle. Fields, farms, and (later on) residential areas arose along its banks.The artworks on both walls together form a story, like a visual walk along the river. They are cal
streetartcities.com
When Street Art Meets Nature (40 Photos)

When street art meets nature, the results are stunning. Some artists blend their murals seamlessly with the landscape, while others use real plants to bring their work to life.
In Ecuador, El Decertor painted a mural that merges with the natural surroundings. In Martinique, Nuxuno Xän turned a tree trunk into part of a painted figure. In New York, OGMillie created a floral mural that brightens the urban space. In Brazil, Fábio Gomes Trindade’s portraits use real bougainvillea as hair, while in Poland, Natalia Rak painted a girl appearing to water a living tree.
These works show how street art and nature can come together in unexpected and beautiful ways.
More: 18 Stunning Land Art Creations by Jon Foreman: Nature’s Beauty in Stone Patterns
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By El Decertor – In Imbabura, Ecuador (2 photos)
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Flower Power by Fábio Gomes Trindade in Goiás, Brasil (3 artworks)
Raising Awareness: Street Art as a Conservation Tool
Nature-inspired street art can be a powerful means of drawing attention to endangered species and emphasizing the importance of preserving natural habitats. By using their talents, street artists can become advocates for environmental conservation and ignite conversations about our shared responsibility to protect the planet.
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By Nuxuno Xän – In Fort De France, Martinique
Inspiring Sustainability: Environmental Messages in Street Art
Street art that incorporates natural elements can also raise public awareness about environmental issues and promote sustainable living. These awe-inspiring creations can encourage people to reflect on their impact on the environment and take action to reduce their carbon footprint, recycle, and preserve nature.
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In Nicaragua
Creating a Sense of Place: Street Art Trails and Tourism
Street art can be used to design nature trails, where visitors can explore the environment while admiring artistic masterpieces. These trails promote tourism, allowing visitors to learn about the local ecosystem, culture, and history while appreciating the art. The fusion of street art and nature can foster a deep connection with the location and enhance the overall experience.
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Flower mural by OGMillie and Floratorium in New York (5 photos)
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In Pondicherry, India 2 photos
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By Robson Melancia in Dois Córregos, Brazil
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By Xanoy – Green Smile
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By SFHIR in Málaga, Spain
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By Fauxreel in Toronto, Canada
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Street Art by David Zinn (3 photos)
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“UMI” Sculpture by Daniel Popper in Lisle, Illinois 4 photos
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Cuteness overload! Chalk Art by David Zinn (6 photos)
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Legend about Giants by Natalia Rak in Białystok, Poland
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16 Photos – Street Art by Michael Pederson in Sydney, Australia
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Street Art by Pejac – A Collection
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By Jonna Pohjalainen – In Turku, Finland
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By Wild Drawing in Athens, Greece
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Banksy Bush
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By Oakoak in Avignon, France
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By Sandrine Boulet
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Street Art by Oakoak – Calvin and Hobbes
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87 Perler Bead by Pappas Pärlor -Collection 1
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By Dr Love at Upfest – In Bristol, England
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Moss Graffiti by Carly Schmitt
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The Green Carpet – In Jaujac, France 6 photos to see it all
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Small Girl and small apple – By Oakoak
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By Sandrine Boulet
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By Sandrine Boulet
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Street Art by JPS – A Collection (+40 photos)
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Garden Hot Air Balloon – By Oakoak
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Street Art by Vinie – A Collection (24 photos)
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The sleeping beauty – In Picardie, France
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“Beautiful Love” by Alter OS in Mexico City
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Come in to Light – Wooden Sculpture By Daniel Popper In Tulum, Mexico
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Clothespin Sculpture by Mehmet Ali Uysal in Belgium.
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The Caring Hand by Eva Oertli and Beat Huber in Glarus, Switzerland.
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Kindergarten children dropped seeds in the crack of the sidewalk to see what would happen.
More: 8 Inspiring Sculptures Seamlessly Integrated with Nature
Which one is your favorite?
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