Street art has been a unique form of expression since the 1800s. It is inherently populist and often used as a means to fight the establishment by rebelious movements.

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1 of 40A wall mural on Pereulok Radishcheva street by Oleg Lukyanov depicting Notre Dame Cathedral as it looked before the April 2019 fire; the mural is approximately 1m in height and 1.5m in length. Alexander DemianchukTASS via Getty Images 2 of 40 3 of 40Mural titled “La Madre Secular 2” by street artist INTI, as part of the open air street-art display in Paris. Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images 4 of 40 5 of 40 6 of 40 7 of 40 8 of 40 9 of 40 10 of 40 11 of 40 12 of 40 13 of 40 14 of 40 15 of 40Mural in Prayagraj, India.Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via Getty Images 16 of 40 17 of 40 18 of 40 19 of 40 20 of 40 21 of 40Aerial view of a Suprematist Cross artwork with a passage from the Kazimir Malevich manifesto by calligraphy artist Pokras Lampas in Russia. It was partially damaged by utility workers who tried to pave asphalt at a zebra crossing.Donat SorokinTASS via Getty Images 22 of 40 23 of 40 24 of 40 25 of 40 26 of 40 27 of 40 28 of 40 29 of 40Indian residents walk past a wall painting on a building in Mumbai.Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images 30 of 40 31 of 40 32 of 40 33 of 40 34 of 40 35 of 40 36 of 40 37 of 40Workers mural by Jaune, an urban artist from Brussels.Juancho Torres/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images 38 of 40 39 of 40 40 of 40Like this gallery?Share it:

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40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World View Gallery

Where Did Street Art Come From?

Vyacheslav ProkofyevTASS via Getty ImagesA street artist works on her art piece at a street art festival.

Street art, sometimes referred to as “urban art,” has a long history that is not particularly well-documented, arguably because of its nature (it has always been considered an underground or subculture) and our lack of means to properly record it before the advent of technology.

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1 of 40A wall mural on Pereulok Radishcheva street by Oleg Lukyanov depicting Notre Dame Cathedral as it looked before the April 2019 fire; the mural is approximately 1m in height and 1.5m in length. Alexander DemianchukTASS via Getty Images 2 of 40 3 of 40Mural titled “La Madre Secular 2” by street artist INTI, as part of the open air street-art display in Paris. Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images 4 of 40 5 of 40 6 of 40 7 of 40 8 of 40 9 of 40 10 of 40 11 of 40 12 of 40 13 of 40 14 of 40 15 of 40Mural in Prayagraj, India.Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via Getty Images 16 of 40 17 of 40 18 of 40 19 of 40 20 of 40 21 of 40Aerial view of a Suprematist Cross artwork with a passage from the Kazimir Malevich manifesto by calligraphy artist Pokras Lampas in Russia. It was partially damaged by utility workers who tried to pave asphalt at a zebra crossing.Donat SorokinTASS via Getty Images 22 of 40 23 of 40 24 of 40 25 of 40 26 of 40 27 of 40 28 of 40 29 of 40Indian residents walk past a wall painting on a building in Mumbai.Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images 30 of 40 31 of 40 32 of 40 33 of 40 34 of 40 35 of 40 36 of 40 37 of 40Workers mural by Jaune, an urban artist from Brussels.Juancho Torres/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images 38 of 40 39 of 40 40 of 40Like this gallery?Share it:

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Like this gallery?Share it:

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And if you liked this post, be sure to check out these popular posts:

The Incredible World Of 3D Street Art

13 Shocking Examples Of Child Marriages Throughout The World And History

50 Incredible Examples Of Macro Photography In Action

1 of 40A wall mural on Pereulok Radishcheva street by Oleg Lukyanov depicting Notre Dame Cathedral as it looked before the April 2019 fire; the mural is approximately 1m in height and 1.5m in length. Alexander DemianchukTASS via Getty Images 2 of 40 3 of 40Mural titled “La Madre Secular 2” by street artist INTI, as part of the open air street-art display in Paris. Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images 4 of 40 5 of 40 6 of 40 7 of 40 8 of 40 9 of 40 10 of 40 11 of 40 12 of 40 13 of 40 14 of 40 15 of 40Mural in Prayagraj, India.Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via Getty Images 16 of 40 17 of 40 18 of 40 19 of 40 20 of 40 21 of 40Aerial view of a Suprematist Cross artwork with a passage from the Kazimir Malevich manifesto by calligraphy artist Pokras Lampas in Russia. It was partially damaged by utility workers who tried to pave asphalt at a zebra crossing.Donat SorokinTASS via Getty Images 22 of 40 23 of 40 24 of 40 25 of 40 26 of 40 27 of 40 28 of 40 29 of 40Indian residents walk past a wall painting on a building in Mumbai.Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images 30 of 40 31 of 40 32 of 40 33 of 40 34 of 40 35 of 40 36 of 40 37 of 40Workers mural by Jaune, an urban artist from Brussels.Juancho Torres/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images 38 of 40 39 of 40 40 of 40Like this gallery?Share it:

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The Incredible World Of 3D Street Art

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1 of 40A wall mural on Pereulok Radishcheva street by Oleg Lukyanov depicting Notre Dame Cathedral as it looked before the April 2019 fire; the mural is approximately 1m in height and 1.5m in length. Alexander DemianchukTASS via Getty Images 2 of 40 3 of 40Mural titled “La Madre Secular 2” by street artist INTI, as part of the open air street-art display in Paris. Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images 4 of 40 5 of 40 6 of 40 7 of 40 8 of 40 9 of 40 10 of 40 11 of 40 12 of 40 13 of 40 14 of 40 15 of 40Mural in Prayagraj, India.Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via Getty Images 16 of 40 17 of 40 18 of 40 19 of 40 20 of 40 21 of 40Aerial view of a Suprematist Cross artwork with a passage from the Kazimir Malevich manifesto by calligraphy artist Pokras Lampas in Russia. It was partially damaged by utility workers who tried to pave asphalt at a zebra crossing.Donat SorokinTASS via Getty Images 22 of 40 23 of 40 24 of 40 25 of 40 26 of 40 27 of 40 28 of 40 29 of 40Indian residents walk past a wall painting on a building in Mumbai.Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images 30 of 40 31 of 40 32 of 40 33 of 40 34 of 40 35 of 40 36 of 40 37 of 40Workers mural by Jaune, an urban artist from Brussels.Juancho Torres/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images 38 of 40 39 of 40 40 of 40Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 40A wall mural on Pereulok Radishcheva street by Oleg Lukyanov depicting Notre Dame Cathedral as it looked before the April 2019 fire; the mural is approximately 1m in height and 1.5m in length. Alexander DemianchukTASS via Getty Images

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3 of 40Mural titled “La Madre Secular 2” by street artist INTI, as part of the open air street-art display in Paris. Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images

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15 of 40Mural in Prayagraj, India.Debajyoti Chakraborty/NurPhoto via Getty Images

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21 of 40Aerial view of a Suprematist Cross artwork with a passage from the Kazimir Malevich manifesto by calligraphy artist Pokras Lampas in Russia. It was partially damaged by utility workers who tried to pave asphalt at a zebra crossing.Donat SorokinTASS via Getty Images

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29 of 40Indian residents walk past a wall painting on a building in Mumbai.Punit Paranjpe/AFP/Getty Images

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37 of 40Workers mural by Jaune, an urban artist from Brussels.Juancho Torres/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

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40 of 40Like this gallery?Share it:

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40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World View Gallery

40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World View Gallery

40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World View Gallery

40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World View Gallery

40 Extremely Imaginative Examples Of Street Art From Around The World

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But the history of street art stretches back to the 1800s — possibly even earlier — when Vienna writer and mountain climber Joseph Kyselak was famous for etching his name across the Austro-Hungarian Empire during the early 19th century.

Kyselak’s habit of writing his name around the city made him, essentially, the world’s first known “tagger” which is basically street art slang to describe the act of brandishing an artist’s personal signature.

Kyselak wasn’t really making art — he would only leave a marking of his name and nothing else — but he successfully made a quirky hobby out of it. He tagged countless sites throughout his travels around the Austrian monarchy’s territory, including rocks, churches, and other places.

Sergei MalgavkoTASS via Getty ImagesParticipants in a street art festival held in Russia.

Some believe that his odd hobby started from a friendly bet with friends about whether the writer could become famous throughout the empire within three years.

Apparently, Kyselak decided the best way to make himself famous was to cover public spaces with his name. But what simply started as a bet (which he later won) turned into an obsession; his tagging impulses got so intense that Austrian Emperor Francis I allegedly summoned Kyselak after he had desecrated an imperial building.

Eventually, the emperor managed to get him to agree to stop smearing sites with his name, but not before tagging the emperor’s desk before he was dismissed.

Another way historians believe street art came to be was through the public drawings created by traveling workers in England and the U.S., a trend that became known as “boxcar” in which workers-slash-artists made color drawings using wax pencils, oil bars, or mark alls. Author Jack London who mentions seeing these markings on trains during his trips in the 1890s.

Street Art As A Political Tool

Harrison Caballero/Anadolu Agency/Getty ImagesStreet art painted to mark Independence Day in Bogota, Colombia.

Before street art became as elaborate as it has gotten now, much of its earlier forms were simply scribbled messages. Often, these rebellious writings would be political particularly given the revolutions across Europe.

Italian dictator Benito Mussolini, for example, is regarded as one of the biggest influencers of stencil-style graffiti which his administration used to spread fascist propaganda across the country and continent. By the mid-20th Century, fascist stencils on the public walls became the chosen way to voice support for a social cause and were typically written using cryptic shapes and symbols to evade detection from authorities and opposition.

These art works evolved into more elaborate drawings that even depicted the influencers of that time, such as Mussolini. Back then, his face could be found plastered on the street corners of major cities like Milan, Florence, and Rome — all of which were considered the epicenter of fascism.

The remarkably photogenic iconography of the street art back then does share striking similarities to some of the work in these contemporary times, even after the movement itself has blurred with other street subcultures, such as skate and punk culture.

In the 1920s, muralismo had spread to the Global South where a lot of political change was also taking place. Mexican muralist Diego Rivera — the husband and creative partner of Frida Kahlo — was famous for his street art which focused heavily on nationalism and the Mexican revolution.

Artur Widak/NurPhotoA motocyclist passes in front of a mural inside Intramuros of Manila.

Meanwhile, street art continued to rage in Europe. Romanian photographer Brassaï documented much of what was created in the open spaces of Paris during the 1930s and subsequently published a picture book under the title Graffiti.

The book, which included an essay on the subject by his good friend Pablo Picasso, divided the street marks he captured into nine categories: Wall as Inspiration; The Language of the Wall; The Birth of the Face; Masks and Faces; Animals; Love; Death; Magic; and Primitive Images. As London’s Victoria and Albert museum says of the street art photos:

Today, as the world continues to be shaped and molded by catalysis events, street art remains a form of unbridled artistic expression that is used to heal wounds, provoke change, and have fun while doing it.

After seeing these astounding examples of street art, discover the whimsical world of 3D street art. And then, learn how Brazilian street art ended up in the most unexpected place: Scotland’s Kelburn Castle.