Italian painter Fabio Cuffari Dialley has made a remarkable entry into mural art with his latest project in Charvensod, Valle D’Aosta. Known for his deep engagement with the interplay of light and darkness, Cuffari’s mural “Buio” (Darkness) is a powerful metaphor for resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic. This 16×3 meter mural, painted entirely by brush with acrylic colors, depicts a wayfarer illuminating a dark forest with a torch, symbolizing hope amidst adversity.
This mural is Cuffari’s first translation of a canvas painting into a large-scale mural. He collaborated with renowned street artist Fabio Petani, whose distinctive style and environmental themes have been widely celebrated here on BSA.
Cuffari’s work is deeply influenced by Flemish, Renaissance, and Baroque styles, with Caravaggio being a significant inspiration. His fascination with the interplay of light and darkness is evident in his powerful contrasts, evoking strong emotions and intricate narratives. His original painting “Buio,” which won first prize in the Southeastern Pastel Society’s international “Luminosity” competition, drew attention to his meticulous process and artistic dedication. Alongside his mural endeavors, Cuffari’s recent exhibition chronicled only three years of his creative evolution and a meteoric burst into the art world. Now, also the street art world.
There is so much more to say, but gotta run. New York streets are full of art to see.
Here is our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Pear, Qzar, XSM, Max Grax, HOPES, Zoot, Gen Molloy, Ana Fish, SYE5, Miss 17, Kerrie Hanna, Shlumper, Batola, Crespo, KM9, ELNO, WOM Collective, LOURS, VANE MG, and Lucie Flyn.
French-Swiss artist Saype continues enthralling the world with his ambitious “Beyond Walls” project, which aims to create the largest global symbolic human chain. This project, initiated in 2019 in Paris, uses biodegradable pigments to paint massive, intertwined hands, symbolizing unity and solidarity.
Saype has chosen the Pyramids of Giza for the twentieth installment, an iconic site representing eternity. This location highlights the beauty of the ancient structures and renews the dialogue between the past and present. Saype’s eco-friendly art connects civilizations and promotes values of togetherness and mutual aid.
Regarding his project at Giza, Saype remarked, “This encounter between ephemeral art and millennia-old constructions symbolizes the continuity and interconnection of humanity through time.” His work emphasizes the importance of kindness and unity in a polarized world, using art as a bridge across cultures and epochs.
The “Beyond Walls” project has traveled to various locations, including Brazil, Japan, and South Africa, each time bringing a commentary on human connection and environmental responsibility.
From where you are, you may not be able to hear the tremendous sound of a falling 100-meter thick iceberg…
Vegan Flava continues to merge environmental activism with his striking street art in his latest mural, “Falling Mountains,” situated in Snösätragränd, Stockholm. Created during the Spring Beast Festival‘s 10th anniversary, this piece strikingly depicts the dramatic ice loss of the Thwaites glacier in West Antarctica. The mural features a breaching humpback whale, its body cracking like a calving glacier, symbolizing the impending threat of rising sea levels due to melting ice.
The artist’s commitment to spotlighting urgent climate issues is powerfully evident in “Falling Mountains.” He employs the same compelling narrative techniques seen in his earlier works, utilizing natural elements and endangered species to highlight the fragility of our ecosystems. The whale, with its exposed roots, underscores the interconnectedness of life forms and the environment—a recurring theme in Vegan Flava’s art.
Reflecting on his intent, Vegan Flava says, “From where you are, you may not be able to hear the tremendous sound of a falling 100-meter thick iceberg, but you can witness the melting of the Thwaites at any coast towards the sea.”
His mission is to make distant ecological phenomena tangible and urgent for urban audiences. Piece by piece, mural by mural, Vegan Flava seeks to inspire action and awareness about the profound impacts of climate change on our planet.
Vegan Flava extends his sincere thank you to all the people who supported my mural project, to Highlights store and Loop colors for the paint and to Snösätra Kultur for providing the wall and an unforgettable mural festival, and to all artist friends and colleagues whom he painted alongside.
We were looking at the description and lineup of this new Punk exhibit and thinking about how it extends to the early and current mural/street art scene at play today… Opine, as one may, about the roots of this scene and our rigorous academic attempts at qualitative mastery, but the average street artists cares nary a whit what you think, for the most part. It isn’t just our anti-intellectual age; it may simply be antithetical to what street art was ever intended to be. There are those who construct gates to enclose a favored few to make pronouncements about what street art is or isn’t, but the artists who produce work on the streets may not bother climbing the fence to get in their club.
It’s the ironic, rebellious, spirit of D.I.Y. that makes street art and graffiti most attractive for us —not its ability to make money for some nor burnish the reputation of another but to draw us together. The open access to self-expression is so alluring, and it is a testament to how truly innovative artists know how to seize a moment, transform a space, begin a dialogue, or weigh in on one. Create camps? Attempt to consolidate power? It is a folly. Why reject a corrupted and unfair pecking order only to reconstruct one? As we see more anniversary shows heralding punk and its origins, we recall that it was the liberty promised that was so appealing and the destruction of corrupt institutions that was most needed. The aesthetics may have become commodified. It’s spirit, never.
Here is our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Alice Pasquini, Homesick, Judith Supine, Mike King, WERC, Pussy Power, Kane, Kone, Chris Haven, 6147, SLASH FTR, Geraluz, Coes Sneakers, AIC, and Skribblz.
Superhero or superfan, there is something here for everyone, and usually high quality. Street Art festivals worldwide have become dull and safe, perhaps because some are funded by tax dollars or their curators lack vision. The selections at the Bushwick Collective may not make a cohesive story, it’s true.
However, a sense of history, respect for graffiti’s roots, community, narrative, and free-wheeling organic creativity cuts a through-line that still feels fresh as a summer breeze in the shade of a tree. We have so many images of this year’s block party celebration that we had to split the collection into two parts.
On this Summer Solstice, we wish you strength and the wisdom to see the truth. The false will fall away.
Summer in the city with the hot asphalt, the humming of air conditioners, the tantalizing tune of the ice cream truck, the delightful shrieks of children in the playground, the BBQ smells on the sidewalks, the breeze coming from the ocean, the cacophony of songbirds, and the desires that long days bring.
Who can conjure a more intoxicating feeling than the feeling of summer? We let ourselves feel free from layers of woolen clothes and stiff limbs. When only a pair of shorts and a tattered T-shirt will do, we lay down and look at the sky, the grass soft beneath us. We hold court on rooftops, fire escape stairs, and front stoops. We celebrate the outdoors and soak in the summer rain. We are all children again, refusing to come back inside.
Joe Ficalora’s Annual Bushwick Collective Block Party is one of our official summer parties in New York City. This block party is unique, with a perfectly balanced combination of art, music, performance, and food trucks. This year’s edition was no different. International, national, and local artists came prepared to get up and get it done. Graffiti writers and street artists took over blocks and walls, bringing a vibrant palette of color, forms, ideas, icons, idols, themes, thoughts, and games with them. The public who came to see them painting live spent a full day enjoying art being made and dancing to the energy of hip-hop performers. We invite you to enjoy Part 1 of the offerings on the street, with Part 2 coming soon.
There is a lot of activity on the street right now, and despite the rain in Florida and the upcoming Heat Dome we’re promised here in the Northeast, the graffiti and Street Art never stop. Here, we mix some pieces from Belfast with Brooklyn. See if you can tell regional differences in style.
Here is our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Veng RWK, Praxia VGZ, Below Key, Fanakapan, Christina Angelina, Reme821, BK Ackler, WRDSMTH, KVLR, Staylo, CHAZ, Visual Graficalia, NEVOC, Voyder, REGOR, AMC, ESTEME, and Rob Hilken.
The 7th edition of the RUA Mural Festival arrives in Estonia’s Elva Municipality, changing the visual landscape of Elva and five surrounding villages: Rõngu, Annikoru, Valguta, Puhja, and Aakre. Running from May 27th to June 1st, this annual event brings together a diverse group of artists from various corners of the world to create murals that play to the tastes and everyday surroundings of the local communities.
This year’s festival features an impressive lineup of muralists, including Lily Brick from Spain, Pablito Zago from France, Ola Kalnins from Sweden, Viktoria Berezina from Ukraine, and several local artists such as Greete Okas and Robin Nõgisto from Estonia, as well as Karolis Desutaje and Tadas Vincaitis from Lithuania. These artists, each known for their distinct styles and illustrative techniques, reflect a broad spectrum of artistic perspectives and cultural backgrounds.
Organized by the Elva Municipality in collaboration with the Cultural Endowment of Estonia, the European Capital of Culture Tartu 2024, the Embassy of Spain, and the Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania to the Republic of Estonia, the RUA Mural Festival is not only about improving urban spaces. It emphasizes community engagement, with activities including a youth camp for local Estonians and Ukrainians, and a community wall painting workshop. These initiatives aim to foster a deeper connection between the artists and the residents, ensuring that the murals resonate with and reflect the local culture and environment.
In its commitment to accessibility and inclusivity, the festival has also incorporated art into social facilities over the years, including schools, orphanages, and care centers. This year’s program continues this tradition, ensuring that art’s transformative power reaches all community members. The RUA Mural Festival thus stands out for its artistic excellence and dedication to making art an integral part of everyday life in Estonia’s small towns.
In the quiet embrace of rural Estonia, street artists find a harmonious refuge. With the century’s turbulent past, its break with Moscow in the 90s and its joining with NATO and the EU in the 2000s, Estonia today enjoys political stability, economic growth, a thriving tech sector, and a progressive social welfare that enhances the
Today we have a new exhibition of stencil art by the UK duo Snik at Franklin Park Zoo. Nicholas Ellis and Laura Perrett have made a name for themselves with hyper-realistic stencil work, now showcased in the “Handle With Care” project. This series of murals, situated along the Tropical Forest Pavilion, reflects the delicate balance between humanity and nature, featuring animals like the western lowland gorilla and the Panamanian golden frog.
Through this collaboration, Zoo New England spotlights its conservation efforts and One Health initiatives. The artwork underscores the importance of biodiversity and the critical role of community engagement in preserving ecosystems. By merging public art and conservation, Snik’s murals aim to provoke thought and inspire action toward environmental stewardship.
This project isn’t just about pretty portraits of gorgeous natural models; it’s about making a statement, a visual reminder of the interconnectedness of all life and the urgency of protecting our planet. The Franklin Park Zoo’s partnership with Snik is a call to action, challenging viewers to consider their impact on the world and encouraging them to contribute to conservation efforts.
Explore the murals, absorb their message, and understand the significant conservation work being done locally and globally.
When surveying the current crop of street art here and in other cities around the world, we wonder where the political will has gone – the one that seemed much more confrontational and conflicted in earlier years of the modern movement. The once fiery, in-your-face spirit seems to have mellowed and become pleasant and pleasing. One theory that pops up regularly when surmising why there is a lack of conviction in street messaging, even as wars break out and the wealth gap widens everywhere you look, is that there is no such thing as anonymity as there once was. Privacy has almost completely been allowed by the citizenry to be eroded.
With a default Digital ID following your every movement and transaction, the means for someone to triangulate a particular data point are so sophisticated that if you speak out or actually challenge the status quo, you will probably be traced. Hell, any Twitter storm can produce an army of motivated detective volunteers to doxx someone who has offended social media “norms,” and we use that term loosely.
Your 13-year-old nephew Lucas can easily unearth someone’s personal details without breaking a sweat, and he doesn’t even have a laptop. 20 years ago, a graffiti or street artist could assume some modicum of anonymity, but in practice, the current crop uses the streets as a marketing extension of their Instagram account, an expression of their online personas, studiously and clearly spraying @ tags and websites on their street pieces to make sure you can find them.
So if you are pissed off at the system, you probably think twice before you put it on the streets these days unless it is a screed sprayed with a fire extinguisher that is largely untraceable – or something like that. In the case of whoever sprayed “Rishi Sunak is a Rat-Faced C*nt” on a wall, you may even inspire a punk ditty.* For many right now, activism is not even the point.
Here is our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring David Puck, Shok1, Epic Uno, Par, Kitsune Jolene, Smug One, Trasher, V. Ballentine, Inker, P.T., King57, FUP One, and Cope Doz.
“The Crypt of St Pancras Church, now THAT was an underground gallery”—showcasing alternative and experimental art for the cool kids before it got popular, or not. Who can forget City Racing and The Approach in London? DIY outposts full of promise and feigned contempt for the blue-chip buyers, most of whom never came. New York’s Fun Gallery was hardly hidden, and Alleged Gallery nearly ushered in Shepard Fairey faster than Andre the Giant.
Oh, the fun of going where art shouldn’t be, discovering new ideas, minds, and manners of self-expression against a backdrop of modernity. It became a 20th-century tradition that kooky/angry white kids with art degrees always considered themselves avant-garde, living on the ‘edge’, stirring up a menagerie of pills, powders, and discontented privilege surprisingly well – before eventually growing up and moving on to the suburbs. Nonetheless, that early-mid-20s freedom from a need to make money often produced some of the most outrageous, angst-ridden, technicolor, jarring, and sometimes subversive art and shows.
These particular off-beat gallery spaces may or may not have directly inspired the conceptual/street artist Biancoshock’s latest act of buried treasure, making it truly underground. However, his critical eye on the unsubtle gallery caste system at large and the perverting reach of commercialism on subcultural movements is not completely subterranean. More likely, his critique is directed at current events and accepted practices that all point to the commodification and blanding of street art culture.
“Current street art has become a media phenomenon,” he complains in his press release. “Many brands and institutions use this art to promote products or initiatives of fake redevelopment.” Certainly, you’ve seen moribund downtown areas transformed by mural projects and Street Art festivals hundreds of times in the last decade and a half. The soaring aerosol-painted results are often a far cry from the subversive, uncomfortably political, or anti-authoritarian sentiments more common during street art’s earlier years.
“My ‘Underground’ project highlights the main features on which my way of experiencing street art is based: independence, its clandestine nature, and the ability to talk about social issues without having to censor oneself to promote brands or get permission from an entity.”
True to the word, Biancoshock’s ‘Underground Show’ takes place beneath the surface of the abandoned ex-Arsenale of Pavia. Transforming a grimy trap door used for machinery repairs into a mini-gallery, the artist created a hidden exhibit featuring photographs of his four site-specific installations. The pièce de résistance (for all you art-school kids)? The entire exhibition was buried forever, making it the most literal—and cleverly concealed—underground art show imaginable.”
“ArchitectureSculpturePaintingMusicPoetryDancePerformingVandalism” At first glance, these forms diverge, yet the broader realm of the arts and culture cannot deny that street …Read More »