The Spanish street art artist with the artist name Dulk and paints on a large, surreal moose on one end of a large apartment building.

At the next apartment building: A mural of a man in a mouth guard holding a newborn child, signed Belgian-American artist Nils Westergard.

Both are world-famous street art artists with several hundred thousand followers on social media who are now painting in little Hjorted, Västervik municipality.

Focus on small towns

This is what it has looked like the last three years when places like Edsbruk, Ankarsrum, Blackstad and Överrum have had enormous works of art created in the middle of the urban areas under Bank!

Street Art Festival.

- When you started working with it, you realized that this is something that will make a very big impression.

We have noticed that it is out in the small towns that the treatment is best, that is where it makes the biggest difference, says Albin Wiberg.

Paintings remain

Now the festival ends after three years and Albin Wiberg states that the municipality has gone from zero to a hundred when it comes to the view of the art form street art and public art in general.

- The interest has grown a lot.

In these guided tours, there are a lot of people who I know are not basically interested in art but who think street art is very cool.

The murals have a five-year building permit and go to the property owners when they are ready, and so far most people plan to keep the paintings for a long time to come.

See the murals emerge in Hjorted and Totebo in the clip.