
Ozkar Gorgias's new artwork shows you what it's like to walk in a street artist's shoes.

This colorful crocheted sweater adorning a Wall Street bull statue was installed by the street artist Olek last week in New York City.

What's the difference between street art and graffiti?
Made from more than 40,000 plastic bags and 7,500 plastic cups, this monster winds its way through the streets of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Broken City Lab set up these brighlty colored cardboard letters to call attention to Windsor, Ontario's "dead-zone" known to as "Ripper's Valley."
Blu says getting buffed from MOCA's wall amounts to censorship that almost turned into self-censorship. The artist won't paint another.

Here's MOCA's response for why the museum took down Blu's mural just one day after the artist completed it.

Pahln takes a decidedly modern approach to street art by combining stop motion animation with stencils and long-form exposure.

Ochoresotto captures images of Sandra Janser and Elisabeth Koller's installation that places brilliant red turf paint on an Austrian street.

The Dutch artist Henk Hofstra goes sunny side up in Leeuwarden, Netherlands.

Boxi's hyperreal stencils are shockingly intricate; you can see for yourself at a Los Angeles show this weekend.
The Shadow Machine, Jason Eppink's contribution to the Underbelly Project, animates photos of blacksmiths from the late-1800s.

The Underbelly Project is a massive, underground street art installation in an abandoned New York City subway station; almost no one has seen it.

Dead Drops fastens USB flash drives to walls, curbs, and buildings around New York and invites strangers to plug-in and share their favorite files.

Dan Witz (whose hyperreal paintings we admire) creates some truly unsettling street art. Maybe don't show this one to the kids?

A combination vocal composition and sound installation pits a choir alongside the sound of traffic to bid a formal farewell to fossil fuels.
The Contrail bike accessory draws colorful lines of chalking fluid on asphalt behind your bike-producing some literal street art and promoting safety.