
Eye-popping street art illusions —
Street art across the globe strives to bring life to the dull concrete walls of our urban environments. But few artists manage to do it quite like this. A new generation of artists is transforming two-dimensional walls into 3-D monsters which burst from building-sides and into the streets.
From Louisiana to Lisbon, these artists are operating across the globe and have bags of tricks to confound the eye and make the impossible seem real.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
TSF CrewFrench crew TSF are masters of the hovering "anamorphic" image. In a Paris underpass they've summoned a crying ghost, grown a magnificent tree (and chopped it down), and created this: ghostly masks hovering in a slash of color.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
TSF CrewThe crew uses the same trick on a rockier surface to create this robot -- wrapping paint around walls, floors, and work surfaces to achieve the incredible illusion.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
TSF CrewWant to know how these are done? Moving sideways reveals how the trick is achieved. But this is just one of the skills our artists have in their arsenal.

Eye-popping street art illusions —
Mehdi GhadyanlooIranian Medhi Ghadyanloo's canvas is the skyline. His illusions make use of the vast blue expanses beyond to create windows to other -- more magical -- worlds.

Eye-popping street art illusions —
Mehdi GhadyanlooCareful on Tehran's roads: Ghadyanloo has painted over 100 murals across the Iranian capital, giving unsuspecting drivers good reason to do a double take, as the fantasy blends in with the real.

Eye-popping street art illusions —
Mehdi GhadyanlooContinued international sanctions against Iran restrict the availability of contemporary art in the capital, with Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art blaming the measures for preventing it from displaying its $2.2 billion "bunker" of Western art. Lucky, then, that Ghadyanloo's street-side works are available for all.

What's the secret behind these eye-popping street art illusions? —
Alexis FaccaBrussels-based Alexis Facca's clean, room-size shapes set her apart in a world of complex, curving designs. The French artist often creates tiny worlds from folding paper in her day job, but here she takes her art to a different scale.

What's the secret behind these eye-popping street art illusions? —
Alexis FaccaThe wall-filling geometric shapes resemble perfect origami creations but transplant them onto rough, crumbling buildings. The 3-D effect makes the simple shape appear to rise out of the rubble.

What's the secret behind these eye-popping street art illusions? —
Alexis FaccaShe can often be found working with friend and fellow artist Romain Bordes. Another clue, here, to how the duo create that "anamorphic" effect.

Eye-popping street art illusions —
MTONot much is known about French hyperrealist street artist MTO. Media reports list him as living in Berlin, but he says that's no longer true. He also rejects claims he's had famous celebrities sit for him as "pure BS."

Eye-popping street art illusions —
MTOWe do know that he's no stranger to controversy, though, with Kentucky residents claiming an MTO mural contained gang symbols (a claim rejected by the artist and local police). No questions over this Aldous Huxley-influenced piece -- an awesome, perception-transforming collaboration with compatriot Iemza, which uses the whole room to trick the eye.

What's the secret behind these eye-popping street art illusions? —
MTOHis most recent "No Art for poor kids" highlights the plight of Jose De Diego Middle School, on the edge of Miami's Wynwood gallery district, where last week's Art Basel parties kicked off. There, on the doorstep of the world's glitziest art-buying festival, a tight budget means there's no money to hire an art teacher and the 600 students are denied access to art.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
Odeith Sergio Odeith takes his talent into the city's dark corners. He is the Portuguese genius behind the crocodile-topped pop-up writing on the first slide, and a ton of other mind-bending 3-D tricks.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
Odeith The Lisbon-dweller has painted large-scale murals for Shell, Coca-Cola, Samsung and Portuguese football champions Benfica, but his personal projects -- often appearing to cut through a 90˚ corner and hang in midair -- have won the biggest praise online.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
Replete Leeds-based Replete was a video game artist for 10 years, working for Nintendo, Sega, Sony and Capcom on arcade classics including "Streetfighter 2" and "Road Rash." Having worked in almost every other artistic medium since then, he is now exploring street art using an unlikely canvas...

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
Replete Replete uses transparent plastic food wrap. He explains that the bombs are painted anamorphically on the floor and the jet is painted on several layers of plastic wrap spread across different layers, set up to 10 meters apart.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
Replete The Brit is capable of a mesmerizing corner of his own -- creating this with not a sheet of plastic wrap in sight.

Eye-popping 3D street art illusions —
PeetaItalian Manuel Di Rita is known for creating masterful, street-art styled PVC sculptures, so you'd be excused for thinking this is his latest plastic creation. But his spray paint creations match the 3-D craft.

Eye-popping street art illusions —
PeetaThe Venice-born artist -- who goes by the name Peeta -- started writing graffiti in 1993 and says he has long been inspired by Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid, whose iconic organic creations resemble his own.