In cities, street art remains one of the most powerful tools for conveying radical visions, social messages, and deep connections between humans and the environment. That’s why we at Psylo love it so much.
At the heart of Psylo’s vision is the desire to propose an aesthetic that speaks of respect: for the Earth, for people, for cultures often ignored. We create alternative fashion because we don’t want to follow rules that lead to conformity and exploitation. Sustainability, to us, isn’t a trend—it’s a concrete way of being in the world.
So it’s no surprise that we feel close to those who, like these street artists, use public art to raise awareness, tell the stories of our fragile times, and restore value to the bond between humans and nature. Their walls speak of nature, justice, identity, and borders. Themes that affect us all, yet are too often overlooked.
These five artists don’t make compromises: they work on the margins, for those who live on the margins. And they do so with an aesthetic force that breaks through the surface of cities and reminds us that change is still possible.
Milu Correch (Argentina) – Mythology, Feminism, and Nature
Milu Correch paints female figures as tall as buildings. Naked bodies, powerful gazes, ancient symbols. Her work draws from mythology, oral traditions, and untold stories. Each mural is a meeting point between memory and visual strength: women who do not bow, but transform.
She often places her work in peripheral or forgotten neighbourhoods, giving them a new identity. Her palette—ochre, rust, deep green—feels like it comes from the earth itself. There’s nothing decorative in her art: every detail carries symbolic weight, every visual choice speaks of freedom and rootedness.
Milu Correch's official website
Above: Huir De Las Estatuas Y Las Mareas Sin Rabia © Milu Correch
Above: Que Solo Quede El Verbo En El Medio De La Jungla © Milu Correch
Above: Sur © Milu Correch
Saype (France) – Ecology, Ephemerality, Humanity
Saype creates gigantic artworks directly on grass, mountains, and sand. He uses natural, biodegradable pigments: his artworks are meant to disappear. That’s not a limitation—it’s the heart of his message. His artistic gesture is an act of respect toward the environment and a reflection on our impact.
His project, Beyond Walls—in which interlocked hands appear in cities around the world—tells of the importance of human cooperation in an era of division. The message is clear: we are connected, we are vulnerable, we are temporary.
His art doesn’t shout, and maybe that’s why it reaches so far.
Above: Beyond Walls, Step 21: Vilnius 2024 (eco-responsible paint on grass) © SAYPE
Above: Bridges? (eco-responsible paint on grass) © SAYPE
Above: Trash (eco-responsible paint on grass) © SAYPE
Icy and Sot (Iran/USA) – Human Rights, Borders, Environmental Crisis
Icy and Sot, brothers from Iran, began with stencil work on the streets of Tabriz. Today, they work out of Brooklyn, but their message hasn’t lost its edge. Their art tackles the most urgent issues: migration, militarisation, surveillance, climate inequality.
They use simple yet intense imagery: children flying over walls, figures behind shadowy bars, oceans turned into barbed wire. There’s no visual indulgence—only a communicative urgency that imprints on the mind.
Through installations and repurposed materials, they constantly blur the line between art and activism. Their artworks are messages that cannot be ignored.
Icy and Sot's official website
Above: Untitled, Brooklyn, New York, 2017 © Icy and Sot
Above: Let Her Be Free, New York, 2014 © Icy and Sot
HERA (Germany) – Dreamlike Worlds, Resilience, Emotion
HERA builds an imaginary world that looks dreamlike but carries very real truths. Her characters—often children, animals, or hybrid creatures—have large eyes, disproportionate bodies, unsteady stances. They speak of vulnerability, childhood, emotional survival.
Beside their faces, she draws short handwritten phrases, like diary entries: intimate, sharp, sometimes poetic. The walls become pages that tell personal yet universal stories.
Her style is raw, layered, with visible brushstrokes and imperfect lines. And that’s exactly why it strikes deep chords—no explanation needed.
HERA's official instagram account
Above: My Dark Thoughts © HERA
Above: A Brain That Rarely Forgets Needs a Heart That Readily Forgives © HERA
Andreco (Italy) – Climate, Science, Territory
Andreco is both a visual artist and a scientific researcher. He brings these two worlds together to address environmental and climate issues through a minimalist visual language. His works depict melting glaciers, shifting waterways, breaking natural balances.
He often works in public spaces, with murals based on real scientific data. But the form is never didactic—it’s symbolic, clean, geometric.
Andreco doesn’t try to move you emotionally—he wants to make you aware. His images don’t plead; they urge. This is art that looks forward and reminds us that there’s no more time to waste.
Above: Climate 05, Reclaim Air and Water, Delhi, India © Andreco
Above: Cave © Andreco
Above: Watercrisis © Andreco