Unwritten Rules of Creation: Street Art Etiquette for Energy and Conscious Expression
By Anna Biela
Proper creating etiquette is something I understand in a very similar way to street art—there are no official rulebooks pinned on a wall, but there are unwritten codes that everyone in the space recognizes and respects. In street art, you don’t go over someone’s work without understanding the culture. You don’t disrespect another artist’s space. You don’t turn expression into harm or domination. There is freedom, but there is also awareness, timing, and respect. Energy works in exactly the same way.
In my understanding of conscious creation, there are clear but unwritten principles that guide how we create in life and in energy. The first and most important is that you cannot bend anyone’s free will. Just like you don’t override another artist’s wall in a disrespectful way, you don’t override another person’s life path, choices, or sovereignty. Creation is not control—it is expression. Alongside that, there is a second rule that sits just as strongly: you cannot harm anybody through what you create. Whether it is thought, intention, art, or action, if it carries harm, it is out of alignment with the etiquette of creation.
At the same time, I also see creation as something that becomes powerful when it is directed toward the greater good. In street art, the most impactful pieces are often the ones that shift something in the collective space—they speak to people, awaken something, or change perception. In the same way, creation that is aligned with the greater good is not limited to the individual; it naturally extends into something that can be good for all. But that only works when the intention is clean and not ego-driven.
This is where my own work comes in, especially the Heart Art Movement. For me, it is not about personal recognition or ownership. It is about using art as a language for consciousness—raising awareness, elevating emotional frequency, and contributing something that touches people beyond words. It is a creative expression that is meant to move through the collective rather than stay attached to the individual. In that sense, it follows the same street etiquette: you don’t create just for yourself in a shared space—you create with awareness of how it lives in the environment around you.
Because of this, I see that the artist has to become a conscious creator. Just like a street artist learns respect for walls, layers, timing, and space, a conscious creator learns to be aware of their inner state, their intention, and the energetic impact of what they put into the world. What is created externally always reflects what is happening internally.
So proper creating etiquette, for me, is simple but precise: respect free will, do no harm, be mindful of influence, and align creation with the greater good. Like street art, it is not about rigid rules—it is about awareness, respect, and responsibility in a shared energetic space where everything we create becomes part of the environment we all live in.