Urban & Street Art

From the raw energy of graffiti to the structured minimalism of brutalism, these styles capture the voice of the streets.

πŸŒ† Doodle Art / Scribble Style

An aesthetic reflecting spontaneous creativity, blending childlike playfulness with graphic intensity. 🧭 Origin Doodle Art evolved from informal sketching and margin scribbles into a recognized aesthetic in street culture, fashion, and visual communication. It reflects spontaneous creativity β€” blending childlike playfulness with graphic intensity. πŸ’‘ Inspirations Draws from notebook sketches, graffiti characters, cartoons, outsider art, […]

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Mural in the Mexican muralism style inspired by Diego Rivera, with narrative scenes of community, labor, and history in warm tones.

πŸŒ† Muralesque Art

A style blending fine art techniques with community storytelling on a large scale, rooted in public visibility and collective identity. 🧭 Origin Muralesque art draws from the tradition of large-scale murals, blending fine art techniques with community storytelling. Influenced by Mexican muralism, social realism, and modern street art, it’s rooted in public visibility, collective identity,

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Brutalist-style conceptual illustration of a modular cityscape, featuring black-and-white geometric blocks, exposed grid lines, and red circular highlights marking key nodes, with a flat, utilitarian, dystopian aesthetic.

πŸŒ† Brutalism

A stark, functional style rooted in mid-20th-century architecture that embraces raw structure and minimal decoration. 🧭 Origin Brutalism originated in mid-20th-century architecture, rooted in post-war reconstruction and socialist ideals. In visual design, it evolved into a stark, functional style that embraces harsh contrast, minimal decoration, and raw structure β€” both in buildings and in graphic

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