Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide

REVIEW · PARIS

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide

  • 4.539 reviews
  • 1.5 hours
  • From $47
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Operated by Memories France · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.5 (39)Duration1.5 hoursPrice from$47Operated byMemories FranceBook viaGetYourGuide

Paris street art looks better when someone points.

This 90-minute walk is led by a former street artist guide, so you’re not just spotting cool images—you’re learning the story behind them and how artists work in the city today. I really like the way the tour balances old and new Paris, and I also like the specific artist-style stops, from Twotma’s glued paper works to Gregos’ 3D faces. One thing to consider: it involves significant walking, and Montmartre includes hills.

If you’re the kind of traveler who likes to understand what you’re seeing, this tour is built for you. You’ll get context on Paris street art history, then watch it in action across recognizable neighborhoods. A possible drawback is simple: you’ll miss some street-art details if you expect this to be a quick photo loop—this is more about slow looking.

In other words, bring comfortable shoes, show up ready to walk, and let the guide do the explaining. You’ll leave with a better eye for the city’s walls, and you’ll know which styles to look for next.

In This Review

Key Things You’ll Notice on This Paris Street Art Walk

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Key Things You’ll Notice on This Paris Street Art Walk

  • Former street artist guide: you’re getting artist-to-artist context, not generic trivia
  • Two neighborhood options: Montmartre (art-history energy) or La Butte aux Cailles (quieter streets)
  • Artist-style highlights: Twotma, Gregos, Swed Oner, The End, plus Space Invader
  • Past meets present: Picasso, Van Gogh, Renoir addresses alongside today’s works
  • French Touch technique: le pochoir and how stencil art shaped street output
  • Hidden work hunting: you’ll search for less obvious pieces, not just famous ones

Paris Street Art Walk With a Former Artist: What This Really Feels Like

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Paris Street Art Walk With a Former Artist: What This Really Feels Like
Street art in Paris can look like random decoration until you learn how artists think, where they place work, and why certain styles spread. That’s exactly what this tour does well. Instead of just telling you what you’re looking at, your guide connects the dots between the city’s creative past and the present scene—so your photos end up with meaning, not just color.

The other big strength is that the guide is a former street artist. That matters. An artist guide tends to notice details you’d otherwise ignore: the materials behind a wheat-pasted piece, how a 3D illusion is built, or why a stencil approach like le pochoir became so central to the French style of street art.

The walking is the only real trade-off. This is a 90-minute street tour, so you should expect to keep moving and to look up often. If you hate hills, choose carefully—Montmartre is hilly.

You can also read our reviews of more walking tours in Paris

Picking Your Neighborhood: Montmartre vs La Butte aux Cailles

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Picking Your Neighborhood: Montmartre vs La Butte aux Cailles
This tour gives you two different Paris moods. Pick based on what you want your street art experience to feel like.

Montmartre option: art history plus modern street walls

Montmartre brings two things together: steep streets and a deep artistic legacy. Here, you’re not far from the places tied to iconic painters—your route includes addresses connected to Picasso, Van Gogh, and Renoir, including workshop locations you’ll learn about along the way.

But the best part is that Montmartre isn’t treated like a museum neighborhood. You’ll also see where modern-day Montmartre artists work in the present, and you’ll spot current pieces by famous and emerging creators.

What makes it special: the contrast. Old-school artist history is literally built into the streets, and street art becomes another layer of that story.

What to watch for: hills. You’ll be walking up and down.

La Butte aux Cailles option: quieter streets, tiny houses, and street-art hunting

If you want a calmer feel, La Butte aux Cailles is the choice. This area often feels like a village inside the city: cobbled streets, tiny houses and gardens, and a “you might miss this if you don’t look” vibe.

Instead of leaning on famous museum-style addresses, the tour emphasizes discovery. You’ll search for murals, wheat-pasted papers, and stencil graffiti—the kind of pieces that reward close attention rather than quick sightseeing.

What makes it special: it helps you step away from the busiest energy and focus on the street art itself.

What to watch for: because it’s more of a hunting route, you’ll benefit from slowing down and letting the guide steer your eyes.

90 Minutes of Seeing More: How the Tour Flows

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - 90 Minutes of Seeing More: How the Tour Flows
You’re out for about 90 minutes with a live English-speaking guide. Since the exact starting point can vary by option, you’ll be watching for the meeting instructions tied to the booking you choose.

In practice, the flow is straightforward:

  1. You start with context on Paris street art—where it came from and where it’s going.
  2. Then you move through streets where the guide points out specific works and techniques.
  3. Along the way you’ll see a mix of artists—internationally known names plus emerging voices.
  4. You finish with a clearer sense of what’s happening right now on Paris walls, not just what happened in the past.

The pace is one of the tour’s best assets. People consistently highlight that the guide takes time, keeps a good rhythm, and knows when to slow down so you can actually see what’s in front of you.

Montmartre Stops Worth Looking For (and Why They Matter)

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Montmartre Stops Worth Looking For (and Why They Matter)
If you choose Montmartre, you’re basically walking between three layers: historical painting addresses, street art styles, and today’s artists building on all of it.

Picasso, Van Gogh, Renoir addresses as context

The tour doesn’t just name-drop. You’ll follow the footsteps of famous artists and learn addresses of workshops connected to Picasso, Van Gogh, and Renoir. That gives the street art pieces a deeper “why” behind them: this neighborhood has long been a magnet for artists, so street expression doesn’t feel random—it feels like it belongs.

It’s a smart move for first-timers. Even if you don’t know every detail of fine art history, having place-based context helps you read the neighborhood like a living studio district.

Twotma’s glued paper works: the texture you can’t fake

Twotma’s work is highlighted as glued paper art. This matters because paper-based street art carries physical clues: you can often sense layers, edges, and weathering. The guide helps you look past the image and notice the method.

If you love materials and craft, this is one of the stops that really clicks.

Gregos’ 3D faces: street art with stagecraft

Gregos is known here for 3D faces, and that description is doing more than sounding cool. 3D street illusions rely on perspective and placement, so the guide’s job is to show you the right angles and the right distance to appreciate the illusion.

If you’ve ever seen a 3D mural in a photo and wondered why it looks flatter in person, this is the kind of stop where a guide helps you see it correctly.

Swed Oner frescoes and The End: street art as wall-scale storytelling

Swed Oner’s frescoes are another featured highlight. Fresco-style work has a different vibe than wheat paste: it tends to feel more integrated into the wall surface and bigger in presence.

The tour also flags works by The End, plus you’ll spot Space Invader along the way. Space Invader is a well-known element of Paris street culture, and it works as a quick “you’re in the right place” moment.

Hidden works by a secretive artist

One part of the Montmartre experience is the hunt for hidden works by a secretive artist. You’re not just looking for obvious pieces; you’re learning how street artists choose visibility, corners, and sightlines.

That’s a useful skill. Once you learn how to search like a local eye, you’ll start noticing street art even when you’re not on the tour.

The guide’s extra value: modern Montmartre through an artist’s lens

What people love most about this tour isn’t only the artworks—it’s the guidance style. Since the guide is a street artist himself, the tour tends to be more informative than a typical walking tour. Expect explanations that feel practical: how styles travel, how techniques connect, and why certain artists became part of the street art conversation.

La Butte aux Cailles: Wheat Paste, Stencils, and Village-Scale Charm

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - La Butte aux Cailles: Wheat Paste, Stencils, and Village-Scale Charm
Choose La Butte aux Cailles if you want the street art experience to feel more intimate and less “big neighborhood landmark.” The streets here are cobbled, the houses are small, and the gardens soften the edges of the city.

Murals, wheat-pasted papers, and stencil graffiti

The tour highlights a mix of formats:

  • Murals that carry bigger compositions
  • Wheat-pasted papers that read like posters you can sometimes see layered
  • Stencil graffiti and related techniques, including le pochoir, which is a cornerstone of the French street art “French Touch” look

If you’re a visual person, you’ll likely notice how each format changes what you can do on a wall—paper tends to add texture and timing, while stencils can hit with speed and repeatable style.

Le pochoir (French Touch) as a technique lesson

If you’ve heard of le pochoir and wondered what it means in real life, this tour gives you that connection. You’ll see how stencil work became part of street art identity in Paris—fast, graphic, and strongly tied to the look people associate with French street output.

Artists you may see: from classics to emerging voices

The tour namechecks key street art figures across eras, including Jeff Aérosol and Miss Tic. It also points to other names such as Le Long and Princess Ecchymose, plus artists from the 1980s through today’s emerging scene.

That time range is part of the value. You’re not only seeing who’s famous—you’re also seeing how the culture evolved, stylistically and technically.

Tiny houses and gardens: why the setting matters

In a quieter neighborhood, street art feels less like an attraction and more like part of daily life. That makes your viewing experience more relaxed. You also get better chances to notice small works, since the streets aren’t so geared toward constant foot traffic.

The Price: Is $47 Worth 90 Minutes With an Artist Guide?

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - The Price: Is $47 Worth 90 Minutes With an Artist Guide?
At $47 per person for about 90 minutes, you’re paying for two main things: time and expertise.

Time matters because street art rewards patience. This isn’t a “walk fast, snap, move on” situation. You’ll spend most of the experience on slow looking and guidance on how to read details.

Expertise matters because technique is the real story. When your guide is a former street artist, you’re more likely to get useful explanations about materials, styles, and how the past connects to current production. That’s hard to reproduce with a standard guide who doesn’t work in the medium.

Is it cheaper than a self-guided walk? Yes. But self-guided walks don’t usually hand you the context of Twotma’s glued paper work, Gregos’ 3D method, or the meaning behind le pochoir. If you care about understanding, the pricing feels fair.

Who This Tour Is Best For (and Who Should Skip)

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Who This Tour Is Best For (and Who Should Skip)
You’ll love this tour if:

  • you like street art more when you understand the technique
  • you want a guided route that blends big names with emerging artists
  • you enjoy walking neighborhoods like Montmartre and La Butte aux Cailles
  • you’re curious about how Paris street art connects to earlier artist communities

You might want to skip or choose carefully if:

  • you don’t handle hills well (Montmartre is hilly)
  • you want minimal walking and maximal sitting
  • you prefer fully self-paced sightseeing with no guidance

Practical Tips Before You Go

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Practical Tips Before You Go

  • Wear comfortable shoes. Cobblestones and hills are a real combo.
  • Bring a phone with enough battery for photos, but don’t treat it as the whole point. Look first, photograph second.
  • If you’re choosing between neighborhoods, use your mood: Montmartre for art-history context and big names; La Butte aux Cailles for village calm and detailed street-art hunting.

Should You Book This Paris Street Art Walking Tour?

Paris: Street Art Walking Tour with a Street Artist Guide - Should You Book This Paris Street Art Walking Tour?
Book it if you want street art with context and you like learning from someone who actually understands the craft. The strongest reason to book is the guide: an artist-led walk where you see specific works like Twotma, Gregos, and Swed Oner, plus familiar icons like Space Invader and plenty of modern and emerging work.

Skip it if you’re not up for walking, or if you only want casual photos without learning anything. Also, if Montmartre hills are a problem, pick La Butte aux Cailles instead.

If you’re on the fence, my advice is simple: choose the neighborhood that matches your walking tolerance and your preferred vibe, then lean into the slow-looking part of the experience.

FAQ

How long is the street art walking tour?

It lasts about 90 minutes.

Is the tour led by a guide in English?

Yes, there is a live tour guide and the language is English.

What neighborhoods can I choose between?

You can choose to explore Montmartre or La Butte aux Cailles.

Is hotel pickup included?

No, hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.

What should I bring?

Wear comfortable shoes.

Is there a lot of walking?

Yes. The tour involves significant walking, and if you choose Montmartre you’ll deal with hills.

What can I see on the tour?

You’ll see street art works by artists such as Twotma (glued paper works), Gregos (3D faces), Swed Oner (frescoes), Space Invader, and other works including frescoes and stencil graffiti, plus some hidden works.

Does the tour include both famous and emerging artists?

Yes. You’ll discover works by internationally known artists and emerging artists, including pieces spanning from the 1980s to today.

Will I be able to learn about Paris street art history?

Yes. The tour covers the history of Parisian street art and also shows what’s happening right now.

Where do I meet the guide?

The meeting point may vary depending on the option booked.

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