Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.
Now screening :
1. Nuart 2017 – Re-Cap Fifth Wall TV
2. Carrie Richardt. Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
3. ±MAISMENOS± Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
4. Bahia Shehab. Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
BSA Special Feature: 4 Films from Nuart 2017
A glimpse inside the urban art/Street Art/graffiti/mural festival from earlier this month, which included a powerful collection of artists, interventionists, existentialists, activists, academics, and poets, this collection of NUART 2017 videos can only point to the individual aspects of the events. We start off with Doug Gillen’s brief overview and first impressions and feature three individual portraits of artists who took part in this years Street alt-fest.
Nuart 2017 – Re-Cap Fifth Wall TV
Carrie Richardt. Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
“For me art is just the way that I express myself. I think that we need to use all means possible,” says artist, activist and global citizen Carrie Richardt. In her opinion, we should all be activists in service of one kind or another, and art in the streets is one of a myriad ways that people can effect positive change. In her text messages via tile around town, she offers pithy and profound bonmots like “Civil disobedience is not the problem. Civil obedience is the problem.”
±MAISMENOS± Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
Portuguese artist Miguel Januário goes by ±MAISMENOS±, a sort of avatar of interventionism that presents a critical eye on models of our political, social, economic orders. By willfully rearranging signposts of accepted norms in the public space, his installations echo in their disunifying qualities and often comedic effects.
Bahia Shehab. Nuart 2017. Fifth Wall TV
“Art is wonderful. It inspires. But it does not push for action sometimes,” says Egyptian professor and Street Artist Bahia Shehab, whose international acclaim for speaking up against tyranny links the act of art with the struggle throughout the world for liberation.
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
Finishing up his bi-coastal tour of the US, Owen Dippie gave Los Angeles a dangerous mural before heading back to New Zealand. Complete with an official unveiling, the draping of US, Mexican, and New ...
Welcome the first BSA Images of the Week of 2022! How are you feeling? You’re looking great! The street art parade marches on, perhaps ever clearer in its intent to reflect the mood, the zeitg...
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities. Now screening : 1. "Nos Jardins" By Anais Florin for Bien Urbain #92. Vhils and his Work. A look into the Lisb...
Our Weekly Interview with the Street at BrooklynStreetArt.com El Sol 25 and Passenger Pigeon (photo Jaime Rojo) Cake with a Snack (photo Jaime Rojo) Hola, I'm Veronica and I...
Murals are making inroads into communities once again in ways that are meaningful and constructive, not only decorative. Evoca1. Rudy Daniels. Erie, PA. October 2019. (photo courtesy of Iryna Kan...