Street art can turn urban spaces into special, exciting and exciting places. In the meantime, there are artists who use recycled materials to create amazing works and give a new life. These statues not only have visual beauty, but also contain a message about the importance of recycling and protecting the environment. In other words, in the age of consumerism and environmental crises, artists around the world have chosen a different way to protest and raise awareness by creating street sculptures of recycled materials.
Some sculptures are made to perfectly in harmony with their surroundings and combine art and nature in creative ways. In Finland, for example, Villu Jaanisoo, using discarded tires, made a massive elephant as if it came from the heart of nature. Nagato Iwasaki wood sculptures in Japan are made of floating wood and are so solved in the natural environment that they wipe the boundary between human and nature.
In Montenegro, a recycled metal artist, a dynamic face of Miles Davis, made the myth of jazz music that conveys a sense of music in the statue form. Also, the works of Bordalo II in Portugal are colorful and huge animals of municipal waste that stare at the eyes and convey a powerful message about extinction, pollution and human role.
These sculptures are not only the product of creativity, but a tool for dialogue. They recall that the waste is not the end of the story, but it can be the beginning of a beautiful and meaningful work. In fact, the recycling street art invites the world more tangible to watch change. (Streetartutopia)
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