Posted by Eliza Coleman on April 29, 2010 · Leave a Comment 
                    
                 
                
			
            
            
 Living walls + silhouette art + random acts of creativity + street art = just too much.  In the best way.  
Living (or green) walls, also called 
vertical gardens, are such a cool  concept, and 
Mosstika, an “Urban Greenery” collaboration between Edina Tokodi and Jozsef Valyi-Toth, has turned them into silhouette art using grasses and moss, and then, even better, they put their pieces on public  walls.
 I love how their work challenge the traditional notion of graffiti and the  effect someone can have on a public space when “making their mark”– both through the content and the medium.  
I love that it is something living on the wall, and reminds you of the  nature that might have been there before all the buildings were. 
Rather than just leaving a tag or a cryptic design, their street art gives   something to the passerby– just a small moment in which he or she  gets to stop and marvel at the fact that an anonymous stranger spent  their time making something beautiful  for them to see.
It’s an experience that is capable of making you feel more hopeful about  the world for a moment, knowing that someone put that there expecting  nothing in return. 
Mosstika website here.
via twig and thistle