All posts tagged: Tamara Alves

Nice Surprise Festival / Re-Cap

Nice Surprise Festival / Re-Cap

As the ‘Nice Surprise’ Street Art Festival wrapped up, Pobel’s impressive mural on Stavanger silos brought a bit of theater and activism to the fore. With a short lead time and a lot to learn, this first-time run festival was a heartfelt invitation to twelve talented artists from around the world, asking them to share their creativity from a variety of different vantage points in the street art/graffiti parlance with folks in Stavanger. It’s been a journey of unveiling and discovery, and here at BSA, it’s been our pleasure to travel alongside, capturing every mural and sharing it with you. Today, we give you a one-stop recap of all the pieces from the first ‘Nice Surprise’ festival.

Tito Ferrara (Brazil). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

We want to say thanks to Atle Østrem, Pøbel, Tore Pang, Izabell Ekeland, and Stine Oliversen for their gracious hospitality, enthusiasm, and attention to detail. We also wish to express our gratitude to Ian Cox, Tor Ståle, and Ludvig Hart for sharing their photographs with us. Thank you also to the great people we talked with on the streets and at our formal presentation at the theater. Perhaps we’ll see you next year!

Tito Ferrara. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Pøbel. (Norway). Nice Surprise Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Ian Cox)
Pøbel. Detail/WIP. Nice Surprise Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Ian Cox)
Kjell Pahr Iversen (Norway) & Atle Østrem (Norway). Nice Surprise Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Ludvig Hart)
Kjell Pahr Iversen & Atle Østrem. Nice Surprise Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Kjell Pahr Iversen & Atle Østrem. Detial. Nice Surprise Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Ludvig Hart)
Gary Taxali (Canada). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gary Taxali (Canada). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gary Taxali (Canada). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tamara Alves (Portugal). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tamara Alves. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tamara Alves. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Doze Green. (USA). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Doze Green. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
TelmoMiel. (The Netherlands). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
TelmoMiel. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Belin. (Spain). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Sofles (Australia) Mathis (Norway). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Sofles & Mathis. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Sofles (Australia). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Sofles. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Sofles, Smug One, Milliana, and Norse. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Sofles, Smug One, Milliana, and Norse. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Sofles, Smug One, Milliana, and Norse. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Sofles, Smug One, Milliana, and Norse. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Nychos. (Austria). Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Nychos. Detail. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

In case you missed any of them, here are our postings from the festival:

Nice Surprise! Stavanger, Norway – Sofles & Friends Paint a Train for New Festival

Sofles & Mathis – Nice Surprise – Stavanger

Nychos Surprises Surreally – Nice Surprise Festival, Stavanger, Norway

Doze Green Spirits – Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

Belin and Ragnar Lodbrok: Tribute to a Viking in Battle at Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

Tamara Alves, a Car Engulfed in Flames – Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

“Re-Shaping Reality” with Telmo Miel at Nice Surprise Festival in Stavanger

Toilet Paper, Sparrows, and Neighbors: Telmo Miel Pt 2 in Stavanger

Gary Taxali at the Podium and on the Wall at Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

Tito Ferrara, Two Jaguars, and a Brazilian in Stavanger – Nice Surprise Festival

Faces from the Streets of Stavanger

Taxali Sails Into Street Art at “Nice Surprise” – Part 2

Unveiling Atle Østrem: A Fusion of Urban Narratives and Personal Expression

Unveiling Atle Østrem: A Fusion of Urban Narratives and Personal Expression

Modest Stencils to Towering Facades: Pøbel’s Path to Creation, Curation, Community

A Surprise Collab on Three Walls: Kjell Pahr Iversen & Atle Østrem in Stavanger

Norwegian Generations: Kjell Pahr Iversen & Atle Østrem Create Triptych in Stavanger :Part II

From Grain Silos to Grand Canvases: Pøbel’s Tribute to Norway’s Farming Frontline

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Tamara Alves, a Car Engulfed in Flames – Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

Tamara Alves, a Car Engulfed in Flames – Nice Surprise Festival – Stavanger

Graffiti history and contemporary creativity merge this summer during the inaugural run of the Nice Surprise street art festival in the Norwegian city of Stavanger. Join BSA as we celebrate the city’s 900-year milestone with a new cadre of artists and programming that continues the modern heritage of this city on the North Sea with a season of new street art and graffiti.

Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)

“go on baby… burn a while”

Born in 1983, Tamara Alves is a Portuguese visual artist and illustrator based in Lisbon. Holding a degree in Arts from ESAD-IPL and a master’s in Contemporary Artistic Practices from FBAUP, she considers her figurative work as a form of activism in the streets.

Here in Stavanger, for the Nice Surprise festival, she creates a monochromatic scene enlivened by a burning car – an object she has used before to symbolize love, a relationship, a mutilating crash of the heart. The body is engulfed in flames while the figure stares at it dispassionately, possibly with red-rimmed eyes. Alves gives this mural the name “go on baby… burn a while”.

Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)

Her artwork weaves a visceral narrative, celebrating the raw, primal vitality of intense emotions and the transformation of connections. Through interactions between human and animal figures and natural landscapes, her universe embodies love in its rawest form – intertwined with wounds, pain, tears, but also pleasure, joy, and ecstasy. At times, her visual soliloquies resemble wildflowers thriving in the wilderness.

Since the early 2000s, Tamara Alves has participated in numerous projects, group and solo exhibitions, and impactful street art interventions. Her unmistakable presence has established her as one of Portugal’s most notable street artists, and her schedule of mural painting is seemingly overflowing.

Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
Tamara Alves. Nice Surprise! Festival. Stavanger, Norway. (photo © Tor Ståle Moen)
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“Urban Revolution” Offers a Graff/Street Art Installation Survey in Lisbon

“Urban Revolution” Offers a Graff/Street Art Installation Survey in Lisbon

Urban Revolution. On view from July 21 / December 03. Lisbon, Portugal.

“Urban[R]Evolution: A Journey from Graffiti to Contemporary Art” is a large exhibition that marks the rise and popularity of urban art and features original installations by 18 renowned Portuguese and international artists. Curated by Pauline Foessel and Pedro Alonzo, this showcase takes place at Cordoaria Nacional in Lisbon, running from June 21st to December 3rd.

Nuno Viegas. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)

The historic and iconic building that once served as the National Rope Factory during the late 18th century, catering to the needs of the Portuguese Navy by producing ropes for naval purposes, is situated near the scenic Tagus River. With its imposing neoclassical and industrial design, the building stands as a testament to the city’s cultural heritage and is now a versatile venue for hosting events after its meticulous restoration. With free-standing booths carefully built not to endanger the historic structure, the flow of the exhibition offers a pod-like adventure to visitors to experience individual artists’ work and visions. Some utilize the spaces fully with installations, while others choose the homey quality of an artist’s studio with work in progress.

The exhibition brings together a lineup of artists whose work was featured in early graffiti images by photographer Martha Cooper, second-wave western street artists who have burnished their names in the commercial urban contemporary art milieu, and a collection of names more locally known – each with profound ties to the graffiti and street art scene. Among them are esteemed names such as Barry McGee, Futura, Shepard Fairey, Swoon, Vhils, and Obey SKTR, to name a few. The curators thoughtfully selected these artists to narrate the fascinating development of urban art, tracing its origins from early tags, graffiti, and subway pieces to its current expression as street art and mural art.

Nuno Viegas. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)

Many of the artists are associated with previous projects of the curators and with one of Lisbon’s anchors of the street art scene, the artist and businessman Vhils. Aside from these connections and the common roots of early graffiti culture, it may be difficult for ticketed visitors to the show to discern the commonalities of the works on display. The connective tissue between the booths will be the many iconic photographs of North American photographer Martha Cooper, whose lens has captured the human experience in urban areas for about 50 years, immortalizing the origins and evolution of graffiti, street art, and urban art – when the scene was viewable directly on the train cars and streets of major cities like New York.

Nuno Viegas. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)

Another nerve center for the show is the installation by conceptual street artist ±MaisMenos± , known for his thought-provoking art pieces and street activations that sublimely challenge social norms and provoke critical thinking. Within this kinetic electronic display, a phalanx of screens emulates a bustling stock trading floor, listing street artists and graffiti artists and their market line charts bumping up and down alongside various commercial, academic, institutional, and cultural influencers and influences that have coalesced to foster their success.

Vhils. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)

In this exhibition’s composition of artistic expressions, each artist has the opportunity to tell their unique story through their installations and accompanying texts, reflecting on their journey from the streets to the contemporary art world. “Urban[R]Evolution” is a testament to the significance of Lisbon as a vital city for urban art, with the show embracing a dynamic mix of international pioneers and established/emerging talents from Portugal.

This major exhibition, presented by Everything is New and Underdogs Gallery, invites visitors on a dreamlike, poetic, and moving journey, oscillating between light and shadow, the humor and rancor of the street, expressing the heart of urban art’s evolution. It is an immersive experience into urban art’s origins and possible future, exemplifying a sample of the boundless creativity and diverse voices that have emerged from the graffiti and street art scene.

Our sincere thanks to exhibition participant and famed photographer Martha Cooper for sharing here her photos exclusively with Brooklyn Street Art, and to Vasco Vilhena, one of the exhibition’s official photographers.

Vhils. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Futura in action preparing his booth. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Futura. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Martha Cooper. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Martha Cooper. Urban Revolution. (photo © Ana Pires & Fransica Capelo)
Revok fine tuning his machine. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Revok in action. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Revok. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
The multi-layered Akacorleone. Urban Revolution. (photo © Ana Pires & Francisca Capelo)
Akacorleone. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Lee Quinones perched atop a ladder at Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Lee Quinones. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Add Fuel and assistant prepare a show local color and the reworking of traditions. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Add Fuel. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Swoon continues her European tour with some greatest hits. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Swoon. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Swoon & Shepard Fairey discuss inside-outside theories and strategies. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Swoon shimmering gold. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Barry McGee set up shop in his booth. Snacks anyone? Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Barry McGee. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Shepard Fairey presented a dense and graphically satisfying survey inside – in addition to some outside installations. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Shepard Fairey. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Shepard Fairey. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
As if the aesthetic energy could not be contained within the exhibition space, this outburst of rich colorplay and graphics exploded out the window. Shepard Fairey. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Felipe Pantone. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Felipe Pantone continues to explore inside the digital world, balancing on the trespass with the physical. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Maya Hayuk. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Maya Hayuk. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Maya Hayuk. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Lisbon king on the streets Obey SKTR talks about his new burners for the contemporary art fan. See an interview with him last year HERE. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Obey SKTR. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
±MaisMenos± Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)

The artist presented a video installation addressing the “market” for graffiti and street art, the intersection with art and commerce in a brilliant display.

“This took me to what is my thesis subject, where my work is the centerpiece of an eventual (or questionable) dichotomy between street art and the art market, the evolution from illegal, interventive and subversive work into a continuous institutionalization, mercantilization and commoditization, normalized with the (before pursued) but now consecrated and valuated (street) artists.

All of this materialized in an art industry (or market) of artist-companies, studios, galleries, festivals, fairs, museums, curators, collectors, political and media attention, touristic tours, financialization, etc, as so it is with the art world as a whole. Being this specific show, for its size, importance, where it is, its public, a realization of this “evolution”, or this stage of the urban arts. So I thought of an installation as a self-critique and self-awareness of this stage and present context of urban art (one of which myself and my work makes part), how capitalism kidnaps, agglutinates and transforms its (possible) critique and counter-culture, commodifying, massifying and selling it.”

±MaisMenos± Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
±MaisMenos± Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Curator Pauline Foessel stands by curator Pedro Alonzo as he describes the work of Wasted Rita during a tour. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Wasted Rita. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Andre Saraiva. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Andre Saraiva. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Andre Saraiva. Urban Revolution. (photo © Vasco Vilhena)
Tamara Alves. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Tamara Alves. Urban Revolution. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Urban Revolution. Lisbon, Portugal. (photo © Ana Pires & Francisca Capelo)

Artists include @maismenos [PT]; @addfuel [EN]; @akacorleone [PT]; @andresaraiva [SE-FR]; Barry McGee [US]; @felipepantone [AR-ES]; @futuradosmil [US]; @_revok_ [US]; @leequinones [PR-US]; @marthacoopergram [US]; @mayahayuk [US]; @nunoviegas.pt [PT]; @obey_sktr [PT]; @obeygiant [US]; @swoonhq [US]; @tamara_aalves [PT]; @vhils [PT]; @wastedrita [PT]

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