All posts tagged: Matt Fox-Tucker

Transforming Tafí Viejo: Argentina’s First International Street Art Festival in Tucumán

Transforming Tafí Viejo: Argentina’s First International Street Art Festival in Tucumán

The Circuito Mural: Encuentro Internacional de Arte Urbano just wrapped up its first run from October 1 to 5, 2024, in Villa Obrera, Tafí Viejo, Tucumán, Argentina. This aesthetically strong and community-powered event turned the neighborhood into a new open-air gallery, with new murals from 13 artists hailing from across Argentina and as far as Siberia, Russia. The lineup had both fresh talent and seasoned pros, creating a satisfying blend of styles and influences that gives the area a whole new vibe.

Local artist Vero Corrales and her collective, RUIDO, organized the festival with a clear vision: to make Tafí Viejo a street art hub. Their goal is to reflect Tucumán’s unique local history, culture, and natural beauty through the murals. Over five days, the artists didn’t just paint walls—they connected with residents, worked alongside them, and created art that resonated deeply with the people in the neighborhood. Organizers say the event was about cultural exchange, building community pride, and sparking a sense of identity through shared creative work.

Cíclope, Julián, and Pilar (Madariaga, Buenos Aires) painted a mural on a wall of a local school that includes native trees and plants such as the Yellow Lapacho, Bahuinia, and Goat’s Foot. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)

Matt Fox-Tucker from Buenos Aires Street Art captured the festival’s grit and color with photos that bring the murals to BSA readers to enjoy. He also shares his insights and knowledge about the genesis of some of these works and the artists who created them. Props to Vero Corrales and her team for pulling off an event that’s more than just paint on walls; a celebration of place, people, and stories, set right in the heart of Tafí Viejo.

RUIDO. (Tucumán, Argentina). The mural portrays 3 girls from the neighborhood of Villa Obrera in Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)

From Matt Fox-Tucker:
“Vero Corrales, from the artistic group RUIDO one of the organizers of the five-day event, said: ‘“’The reason for the festival was to invite some talented street artists to improve the public space while collaborating with the neighbors to put Villa Obrera on the map as one of the best places to see murals in the region or perhaps the country’.”

Coche (Tucumán, Argentina), and Ángel Taboada (Santiago del Estero, Argentina). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)
Lina Besedina. (Russian-Ukrainian). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)

From Matt Fox-Tucker:

“The work of art remembers the time of splendor when Tafí Viejo had one of the largest railway workshops in South America and exported lemons to all parts of the world.

Although the industry fell a few years ago, this legacy is still very present in the place almost as if it ran in people’s neighbors, Lina said. ‘I wanted to represent this bond through the arms of a hard-working person whose veins form the train tracks. The gesture of the figure is one of offering, holding a bouquet of the pink lapacho, which is a native tree very loved by the inhabitants of the town. The message I wanted to convey is that although past times cannot return, the persevering and fighting people will always manage to bloom something new and beautiful’.”

Lina Besedina. (Russian-Ukrainian). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)
Simon Jatip. (Ayacucho, Buenos Aires). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)
Cuore. (Ayacucho, Buenos Aires). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)
Soledad Moisas. (Ayacucho, Buenos Aires). Tafi Viejo, Argentina. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)

From Matt Fox-Tucker:

“The artist Soledad Moisas paints murals with images of scenes from everyday life and includes typical elements of the cities she visits such as the famous Tucumán empanadas, Gauchito Gil, the Virgin of Lujan, native flowers, and traditional drink bottles.

The event was organized by Vero Corrales, Fernando Gallucci, Leandro Fernández, Mariano Orell, in addition to the help of Florencia Vidal and Lucía Palenzuela.” 

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‘Homo Naledi’ in Baltimore Points to Our Modern De-Evolution

‘Homo Naledi’ in Baltimore Points to Our Modern De-Evolution

When you look at the corporate yellow journalism flashing across screens today, the shallow and sensational rhetoric may lead you to believe we are devolving as a race. In fact it is just the opposite in many quarters, so media literacy is more important now than ever to discern who is propagating this narrative, and to what ends?

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Alfredo Segatori and Pablo Machioli (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

Certainly many cultural observers deduct that man and woman have not progressed since prehistory and a new Baltimore mural by Street Artists Alfredo Segatori (Argentina) and Pablo Machioli (Uruguay) is a throw-back to our less-evolved selves. “I believe that cavemen still exist today and this mural is a like a mirror to look back at our roots,” says Segatori about the singular ‘Homo Naledi’ figure whose bones were discovered by anthropologists in South Africa in 2015  “We need to decide what future we want for our kids and if we want to move forward as a human race.”

The mural is part of a larger initiative including more than 20 street artists participating in a two continent cultural exchange between Baltimore and Buenos Aires, an outside component of a gallery show entitled “Roots”. The show is curated by Baltimores’ Richard Best of Section 1 Project and Matt Fox-Tucker of Buenos Aires Street Art along with local Gallery 788.

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Alfredo Segatori and Pablo Machioli (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

As Street Art and murals are continuing to bring more of the social and political themes to the streets in cities like Baltimore and Buenos Aires, traditional organizers of public art programming appear to be on the wane – perhaps because taxpayer funded initiatives have evaporated in most cities and more complex privately funded programs triangulate outcomes.

Actual grassroots organizers of programs like this, while still related to a gallery show, are more likely to respect intellectual rigor and are increasingly carving out their own curatorial niche. It is an interesting crack in the dialogue in public space where the final artworks often respond to society in more challenging ways, rather than producing only pleasing imagery and messages approved by committee or commercial interests.

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Alfredo Segatori and Pablo Machioli (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

For Segatori, this mural is a direct response to how we are behaving as a race – particularly toward one another. “I believe that in the world today there is still a lot of violence and intolerance so the idea of our mural is to show the reality of the society that we live in,” says Segatori of the new piece.

“There are people around us who are still forced to live in poverty, suffer from racism, discrimination and persecution due to the color of their skin.” Whether locals will take this message away from the mural is anyone’s guess, but the organizers of “Roots-Raices” say they hope to open the discussion between communities about how to assist in our collective evolution.

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Alfredo Segatori and Pablo Machioli (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori and Pablo Machioli (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

‘Roots’ brings together artworks by more than 20 street artists from Argentina and Baltimore exploring origins, cultural identities and social and racial history. Baltimore street artists who have created new artworks for the show include Gaia, Pablo Machioli, Paul Mericle, Billy Mode, Nether, Reed, Mas Paz, Ernest Shaw, Gregg Deal, Lee Nowell-Wilson and Toven plus photographs by Martha Cooper. Argentine artists represented are Alfredo Segatori are Nazza Stencil, El Marian, Luxor, Ice, Patxi Mazzoni Alonso, Maxi Bagnasco, Primo and Juan Zeballos.

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Alfredo Segatori Ready For 2018 Youth Olympics

Alfredo Segatori Ready For 2018 Youth Olympics

Buenos Aires is hosting the Youth Olympic Games in two years and Street Artist Segatori is already getting the word out with this new series of murals featuring athletes bolting across eight story high buildings. After his spring time feat of creating a mural some say is the longest in Latin America, the forty-five year old was selected by the city government to do this commission in a housing complex close to Parque Roca. The effect of seeing these giant athletes in action of course is meant to advertise the upcoming games but it may also just encourage people in general to exercise, if not to actually pole vault.

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Alfredo Segatori. Olympic Youth Games. Buenos Aires Argentina. August 2015. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker/BA Street Art)

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Marilyn as Missy “Works It” in Miami: New Shots from Art Basel 2013

Marilyn as Missy “Works It” in Miami: New Shots from Art Basel 2013

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Pete Kirill process shot of his work on Marilyn Monroe / Missy Elliot tribute. (photo © Matt Fox-Tucker)

Miami and the just-ended Art Basel 2013 is a holy magnet, a veritable showcase for big murals and pieces (and a few taggers here and there naturally) and we thought you’d like to see a few walls we missed before all the Miami excitement fades with the intense sun.  If you get a chance to tour the works in Miami in the next few months we recommend the trip – and a skateboard.

New stuff here from Peter Kirill, Bezt, Jaz, Entes y Pesimo, and Nychos. Dang!

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Show me how you work it. A Pete Kirill process shot of his work on Marilyn Monroe tribute depicts her in a seriously fly hoodie and style channelling Hip Hop Star Missy Elliot. (photo © Cesar Mieses)

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Bezt. Process shot. (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Bezt. Process shot. (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Bezt. Process shot. (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Bezt (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Bezt (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Entes  y Pesimo (photo © Entes y Pesimo)

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Entes  y Pesimo (photo © Entes y Pesimo)

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Entes  y Pesimo (photo © Entes y Pesimo)

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Jaz (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Nychos. Process shot (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

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Nychos. Process shot (photo courtesy © Inoperable Gallery)

 

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