Previous
Next
logo logo
logo logo
  • Discover Art
    • Trending
    • Most Recent
    • Most Faves
    • Most Views
    • Curated Galleries
  • Drawing Challenges
    • See All Challenges
  • Drawing Prompts
  • Artists
    • Most Popular
    • Most Recent
    • Available For Hire
    • Artist Spotlight
  • More
    • Marketplace
    • Art Discussions
    • Resources
    • News + Blog
Login
Most Relevant
Select an option
  • Most Relevant
  • Most Faves
  • Most Views
  • Most Comments
  • Most Recent
SEARCH RESULTS FOR

street

Maja Rasic Maja Rasic
Enlarge
Doors

Watercolors sketch.

  • 80
  • 2
  • 0
Sharon Birch Sharon Birch
Enlarge
Street Birds

Street Birds, digital

  • 12
  • 2
  • 0
Sanna Pyykkö Sanna Pyykkö
Enlarge
A real life snufkin

Streetstyle from Helsinki Finland. You know the Moomin tales by Tove Jansson. The friend of Moomin is Snufkin. A wanderer that has all the belongings with him. This fellow feels like real life Snufkin.

  • 523
  • 2
  • 0
Mariana H Mariana H
Enlarge
Untitled

Might be obsessed with street or park lamps, the fancier the better.

  • 834
  • 2
  • 0
Marika Mihalache Marika Mihalache
Enlarge
Untitled

Experimenting with one-line sketching #quicksketch @barcelonastreetsketch

  • 675
  • 2
  • 1
Sanna Pyykkö Sanna Pyykkö
Enlarge
Untitled

Street Style Helsinki. When I went to the city by bus 65, this lovely redhead sat opposite to me. Divine red hair flows under the good mood hat with small cute ears. What more? You can image the rest in your mind.

  • 1,399
  • 2
  • 0
Sanna Pyykkö Sanna Pyykkö
Enlarge
Untitled

Street Style illustration from Helsinki Finland. I like the idea of a bomber jacket combined with a long shirt. Small details like rolled pant legs and rolled beanie seal the style.

  • 1,254
  • 2
  • 0
Simsim Simsim
Enlarge
Untitled

That boy, take me away, into the night Out of the hum of the street lights and into a forest..

  • 691
  • 2
  • 1
Ross Hendrick Ross Hendrick
Enlarge
Can of Peace

  • 118
  • 1
  • 4
Ross Hendrick Ross Hendrick
Enlarge
street crew

  • 145
  • 1
  • 0
Sabina Hahn Sabina Hahn
Enlarge
Louise Bourgeois

Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010) “My life has been regulated by insomnia,” Bourgeois told an interviewer in 1993. “It’s something that I have never been able to understand, but I accept it.” Bourgeois learned to use these sleepless hours productively, propped up in bed with her “drawing diary,” listening to music or the hum of traffic on the streets. “Each day is new, so each drawing—with words written on the back—lets me know how I’m doing,” she said. “I now have 110 drawing-diary pages, but I’ll probably destroy some. - From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey “I am not what I am, I am what I do with my hands...” ― Louise Bourgeois “Every day you have to abandon your past or accept it, and then, if you cannot accept it, you become a sculptor.” ― Louise Bourgeois #dailyrituals #inktober #LouiseBourgeois @masoncurrey

  • 174
  • 1
  • 0
Marta Marta
Enlarge
Yellow

People from street and fashion daily

  • 5
  • 1
  • 0
Ziggy Dribbler Ziggy Dribbler
Enlarge
Bloodstained self-portrait.

Mirror self-portrait a few Minutes after a brutal streetfight... I was bleeding heavily from a skull fracture, broken nose, multiple cuts already... to add Insult to Injury, I was scarred with a "Glasgow-smile" after I got beaten to a pulp... I felt the urge to capture my emotions (and inevitable bodily fluids...) on paper after I carried myself home and looked in the mirror.

  • 13
  • 1
  • 0
shaun marmion shaun marmion
Enlarge
street

  • 137
  • 1
  • 0
Bobcomics Bobcomics
Enlarge
Street Doodle in Ilford

  • 171
  • 1
  • 0
Anna Anna
Enlarge
In the streets of Napoli

made with gel ink pen for a future art book about mediterranean way of life. In the streets of Napoli we can find these little virgo statues in every corners and big men shirtless

  • 233
  • 1
  • 0
Barrie J Davies Barrie J Davies
Enlarge
Naughty Bird Painting by Barrie J Davies

Naughty Bird Painting by Barrie J Davies 2023, Mixed media on Canvas, 50cm x 75cm, Unframed and ready to hang.

  • 3
  • 1
  • 0
Irina Uva Irina Uva
Enlarge
Go Girl

Streetstyle fashion illustration

  • 3
  • 1
  • 0
Richard Olsen Richard Olsen
Enlarge
My turn!

Street Chess Player

  • 11
  • 1
  • 0
crais robert crais robert
Enlarge
The House of Ryman: A Family of Artists

Take the Rymans, for instance. There is Robert Ryman (1930 – 2019), the patriarch whose paintings are indisputable icons of the modernist canon. Then there are his wives and children. Ethan Ryman (b. 1964) is the oldest of Robert’s three artist children. Though his mother was not an artist, Lucy Lippard (b. 1937) was still a scrappy and eloquent art critic, a feminist, a social activist, and an environmentalist. Ethan’s meticulously considered and crafted artworks might be characterized as somewhere between photography and sculpture, the abstract and the (f)actual. Though Lippard and Ryman divorced just six years after their 1961 marriage, their son is arguably the closest to his father’s methodologies if not his medium, and was certainly the last to become a visual artist. Robert Ryman went on to marry fellow artist Merrill Wagner (b. 1935) in 1969 and they had two sons. Though Wagner is more quietly acknowledged than Ryman, her boundless practice includes sculpture, painting, drawing, installation, and more. With an emphasis on materiality, her sites are indoors and out, her styles alternating. Will Ryman (b. 1969) is the elder son of Robert and Merrill. He started out as an actor and playwright though he too eventually assumed a visual art practice to become a sculptor. He is best known for his large-scale public artworks and theatrical installations that focus on the figurative and psychological, at times absurdist, narratives. Cordy Ryman (b. 1971) is the youngest, and the only one of the three who knew that he was going to be a visual artist early on. His work is abstract, the sophistication understated, and his output is prolific. With his mother’s DIY flair, his homely materials seem sourced from the overflow of construction projects, lumberyards, and Home Depot. Ethan Ryman said that, when he was young, he didn’t want to be a visual artist. Instead, he pursued music and acting, producing records for Wu-Tang Clan, among others, getting “my ears blown out.” But he was always surrounded by artists—Sol LeWitt, Carl Andre, Jan Dibbetts, William Anastasi, and countless others at his mother’s place on Prince Street in SoHo and at the Rymans’s 1847 Greek Revival brownstone on 16th Street in Manhattan, where everyone was often seated around the family dinner table. He would spend part of most weekends in the highly stimulating chaos that reigned there—birds, dogs, plants, toys, art, people, everywhere. “While nowhere near as overwhelming, I was also constantly exposed to artists, writers and other creative folks at my Mom’s place.” “While nowhere near as overwhelming, I was also constantly exposed to artists, writers and other creative folks at my Mom’s place.” Ethan Ryman Lippard was “a powerhouse.” She took Ethan on her lecture tours, readings, conferences, galleries, studios, wherever she had to go. And while that almost always breeds rebellion, at some point, he began noticing all the art around them—both what it looked like and how it was made. He began to take photographs of buildings and realized that “abstract color fields were all around us.” He also began to notice his father and Wagner’s work more carefully—how sensitively it was executed and how reactive it was to its surroundings. “Once you’re interested, you notice. When I asked my dad questions, I would most likely get a one-word response. I had to go to his lectures for answers where he broke down modern art for me. After listening to him, it seemed to me we should all be painting, otherwise what were we doing with our lives?” Will Ryman, on the other hand, said that all his work has a narrative component. His background is in theatre and his interests have always been film and plays, his narratives about New York City and American culture and history. “It’s a city I love,” he said. “I try to observe culture in a bare-bones way and I’ve always been interested in telling stories—we’re the only species that tells stories to each other. It comes from an intuitive, cathartic place in me. I want to stay away from preconceived notions, although that’s not completely possible. I have no plan except to do something honest, with a little bit of a political bent and humor but I’m not an activist. I’m interested in exploring a culture and its flaws as an interaction between human beings.” His interests and his work are very different from his last name. There is no connection to minimalism. He didn’t go to art school, drawn instead to theatre workshops and theatre troupes. “I didn’t become involved with the visual arts until my mid-thirties. It’s easy to say what I make is a reaction, but I dismiss that. And I also wouldn’t say it’s rebellious after twenty years.” Of his family, he said, “we’re a normal family, a close family, with all the dynamics and complications that go along with that. And while everyone who came to 16th Street were artists, they were also just family friends. I have no other measure for how a family interacts. It was just the way it was.” Cordy Ryman was the only one of the three who went to art school, earning a BFA from the School of Visual Arts, but it was reportedly awkward for him, since all his teachers knew his parents. “When I started making abstract paintings, it was kind of push and pull but it became more interesting to me than my earlier figurative or narrative work. That’s when I started to know where I came from. I realized that I had a visual memory, and the language was there, a language I didn’t know I knew. We all had different ways of working; our processes are very different and it’s hard to compare us. Ethan and I use a similar inherited language but he thinks about what he does more. I work very fast, the ideas come from the process itself. I work in two or three modes simultaneously and bounce around.” At home, they were around Wagner’s work since her studio was there. “Will and I were always in her studio, helping her, going to her installation sites with her, adjusting her boulders or whatever the project was she was working on. That was special and made a deep impression, but I didn’t realize it then.” All five Rymans have in common an acute consciousness of space and of place as an integral component of their work. For the brothers, part of that consciousness might stem from their parents, but also from their attachment to their family home, which was a crucible of sorts for them, where everyone was an artist. To Cordy, the house was a “living, breathing thing, and the art in it felt alive, growing, and occupying any space that was available. It was the structure of our world. When I’m making work, it doesn’t need to be the most beautiful thing ever, but it needs to have its own life, its own space, like the art we grew up with.” And the next generation of Rymans, also all sons—what about them? Will said his son is still too young to know. Cordy thought the same about his two younger children; his oldest is in the art world, but not as an artist—so far. Ethan perhaps summed it up best: my two sons are artists; they just don’t know it yet.

  • 12
  • 1
  • 0
Ginger Ginger
Enlarge
Louis Sign Man costume

Much like the comic, I had Louis dress up as the sign guy.

  • 164
  • 1
  • 0
KAYE J. FOSTER KAYE J. FOSTER
Enlarge
TWO STORE FRONTS ON GINGERBREAD MAIN STREET

TWO STORE FRONTS ON GINGERBREAD MAIN STREET

  • 57
  • 1
  • 0
KAYE J. FOSTER KAYE J. FOSTER
Enlarge
STORE FRONT ON GINGERBREAD MAIN STREET

STORE FRONT ON GINGERBREAD MAIN STREET

  • 48
  • 1
  • 0
Trần Minh Tiến Trần Minh Tiến
Enlarge
Inspiration for the book came from COVID 19

The work was launched on the 5th anniversary of World Reading Day to help people better understand reading.   My artwork is based on the 147-page book "The Sorrow of Books" in simple, harmonious but profound colors. In the picture are the entertainment devices that help relax the everyday human beings that I was inspired by reading. The picture is of the current situation when people are at home trying to prevent COVID 19. We have spent most of our time online, using electronic devices. We have forgotten the presence of books and have made books buried by more advanced things. Books are still something that has a lot of meaning in people's lives because of the fact that we have more useful knowledge.   My contact information:   Owner: Trần Minh Tiến   Mail contact work: tranminhtien.contactwork@gmail.com   My home address (if necessary): 15/9A, Vo Van Kiet Street, District 2 of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.   My phone number: +84948574598   THE WORK ABOVE IS PART OF MY PROPERTY. THE OFFER IS NOT COPIED ON ANY OTHER PLATFORM.

  • 24
  • 1
  • 0
Nguyen Tuan Kiet Nguyen Tuan Kiet
Enlarge
The girl standing on the Canadian street in 2019 by Nguyen Tuan Kiet

"The Girl Standing on the Canadian Street in 2019" is a work about the beauty of young girls and the streets of the United States in recent years, owned by me - Photographer Nguyen Tuan Kiet and posted on October 15, 2019. 2019 - Work email: TuanKiet.2010@outlook.com - Address: Chicago, Illinois, USA - Phone number +1 (802) 213-0273 - This is my own work - Reproduction in any form is strictly prohibited © ️ Nguyen Tuan Kiet © ️ No Re-up

  • 39
  • 1
  • 0
Roger Warn Roger Warn
Enlarge
Paul

This was my very first attempt at the grid. I restarted drawing about October or November of 2020. I was watching something on YouTube and a video came up about a street artist who uses the grid method when scaling up their artwork for the sides of buildings. It got me thinking ... and drawing ... and learning. Its so much fun to watch something slowly come to life from the paper. This was done in a sketchbook. After that I went and got a 9 x 12 inch Strathmore drawing pad - series 300. I have researched paper and I found a great deal on the Strathmore Series 500 roll. 40 inches (or something) by 8 yards! I can't wait to see how the projects improve when the quality of the paper increases. I am currently working on a gift for a friend. Its a drawing of their baby in a little piggy outfit. Unfortunately - I won't post it because its a picture of someone's baby ( I don't have permission - yet) ... but I am super happy with it so far!

  • 16
  • 1
  • 0
Josh Gee Josh Gee
Enlarge
Word on the street

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzyJOln6GqE

  • 267
  • 1
  • 0
Mariana H Mariana H
Enlarge
Old Toronto Streetcar

I love doodling Toronto transit

  • 320
  • 1
  • 0
Ginger Ginger
Enlarge
Dolly minus Dylan

It's the same drawing but this time it's Dolly going solo.

  • 243
  • 1
  • 0
Shoker Shoker
Enlarge
Mural graffiti infinite baseball by Shoker

#Shoker #Shoker_Art1 #shokerstyle #graffiti #graffitiart #linestyle #letterart #mural #graffitiartist #muralartist #graffitiletters #graffitilife #graffitiwriter #spraypaint #sprayart #graff #instagraff #streetart #instagraffiti #styleinspiration #instaartist #urbanwalls #letters #artlife #graphic #art #design #artlife #letters

  • 7
  • 1
  • 0
« Previous
Next »

Doodle Addicts

Navigate
  • Discover Art
  • Drawing Challenges
  • Weekly Drawing Prompts
  • Artist Directory
  • Art Marketplace
  • Resources
Other
  • News + Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Newsletter
© 2026 Doodle Addicts™ — All Rights Reserved Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Community Guidelines
Add Doodle Addicts to your home screen to not miss an update!
Add to Home Screen