All posts tagged: AEC Interesni Kazki

Between Spires and Spray Cans: The Rise of Prague’s Street Art Biennial “Urban Pictus”

Between Spires and Spray Cans: The Rise of Prague’s Street Art Biennial “Urban Pictus”


Launched in 2022 and heading into its third edition in 2026, Urban Pictus is the mural festival shaping Prague’s public art future. Co-founded by Petr Hájek and Petr Kopal of The Chemistry Gallery, the biennial brings together the city’s cultural institutions, municipal partners, and an evolving network of post–Velvet Revolution creative districts. In a city defined by Gothic spires and Baroque curves, Urban Pictus doesn’t shy from the friction of graffiti and street art—it uses it. The festival has activated walls across Prague 1, 6, 7, 8, and 10, inserting large-scale muralism and street-rooted practices into the visual rhythm of a city known for its architectural legacy.

On our recent visit to the so-called City of a Hundred Spires (real count: more like 500), that energy was hard to miss. Prague’s street scene is compact but loaded, less sprawling than some but no less charged. Writers and muralists work tight: from industrial edges to sanctioned façades, they’re building a visual grammar that feels deliberate, hybrid, and defiantly local. You can see the push and pull—between reverence and rebellion, tradition and disruption. What’s emerging is a language that mixes studio finesse with graffiti instinct: abstract fields, narrative symbols, pop-text hits, and gestures that still carry the urgency of the street. The trains and tunnels haven’t gone quiet either—graffiti here still breathes fast, and the old codes hold.

Beyond being a wall project, Urban Pictus is a mural-driven platform with gallery exhibitions, guided tours, workshops, and crossover projects that build bridges between institutional and informal public-voiced scenes. Born out of The Chemistry Gallery’s commitment to newer voices in contemporary urban art, the festival walks both sides of the line between the street and the gallery.

Across its first two editions, Urban Pictus has hosted a sharp and varied roster: Innerfields (Germany), AEC / Interesni Kazki (Ukraine), M-City (Poland), Gorka Gil (Spain), Michal Škapa (Czech Republic), and Tim Marsh (France/Spain). More recent editions have added Toy_Box, YBR, Malujeme Jinak, Zeb One, and Matěj Olmer (Czech Republic), as well as Yessiow (Indonesia), expanding the festival’s reach across Europe and beyond.

With 2026 on the horizon, here are a few standout murals we caught on the ground this fall.

Toy Box. Detail. In collaboration with Urban Pictus. A portrait of Milada Horakova marking the 75th anniversary of her judicial murder. Prague, Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Toy_Box (Czech Republic) is known for blending classical painting, comic art, and street aesthetics. Her mural on Milady Horákové Street in Prague 7 honors the politician Milada Horáková on the 75th anniversary of her execution by the communist regime, depicting her portrait in fractured forms alongside a bilingual quote.

Toy Box. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tim Marsh. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Tim Marsh (France/Spain) works in geometric abstraction, using bold colors and masking-tape precision. His 22-meter mural in Holešovice portrays David Attenborough surrounded by animals, part of his ongoing series celebrating biodiversity.

Tim Marsh. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Innerfields. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Innerfields (Germany), a trio known for blending realism and symbolism, painted a mural in Karlín of a figure staring at a smartphone while a levitating Earth floats nearby, striking him in the head—a reflection on digital distraction and environmental neglect.

Innerfields. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Lukas Malujemejinak Vesely. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Lukáš Veselý / Malujeme Jinak (Czech Republic). The brothers use optical tricks and graphic design to bring kinetic energy to this university environment. Their Holešovice mural on a student residence features abstract dancing figures that celebrate youth and movement.

M-City. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

M-City (Poland) is recognized on many continents for his large-scale stenciled cityscapes with industrial themes. His mural in Invalidovna, “Road Ahead Closed,” presents a dense monochrome metropolis made from layered mechanical motifs and factory forms.

M-City. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
M-City. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
AEC – Interesni Kazki. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

AEC / Interesni Kazki (Ukraine) is known for surreal, mythic, sometimes epic murals. His piece “Chasing the Red Demon” in Holešovice allegorizes resistance to Soviet imperialism, referencing both Ukrainian and Czech histories.

AEC – Interesni Kazki. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
AEC – Interesni Kazki. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
AEC – Interesni Kazki. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Michal Skapa. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Michal Škapa (Czech Republic) brings a graffiti-rooted, semi-abstract style to murals, often with cosmic or social themes. His Vesmír medúz (“Universe of Jellyfish”) in Prague’s Karlín district for the 2022 edition of “Wall Street Prague”, the inaugural version of what would later become Urban Pictus. Škapa painted a vertical mural that depicts glowing, jellyfish-like forms ascending like spacecraft against a dark background. The piece reflects his signature fusion of street art energy and speculative futurism, creating a surreal visual field that floats somewhere between deep sea and outer space.

Michal Skapa. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Dede Bandaid. Detail. Collaboration with Urban Pictus. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Dede Bandaid (Israel) uses warm-toned urban illustration with metaphorical motifs. His mural “Ambitions” in Žižkov, created with poet Nitzan Mintz, pairs wooden animals with a Czech-language poem about creative drive and personal sacrifice.

EPOS257. Graffomat. Detail. The Chemistry Gallery. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

EPOS 257 (Czech Republic) is a conceptual street artist known for anonymous public interventions. His “Graffomat” installation—shown at Urban Pictus 2025—is a vending machine that dispenses spray cans, satirizing the boundary between sanctioned art and illegal graffiti.

EPOS257. Graffomat. The Chemistry Gallery. Czech Republic. November 2025. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Our thanks to Chemistry Gallery and the many folks who volunteer to make this festival a success. Our thanks to our partner Urban Nation Museum (UN) in Berlin for their support as we bring the art on the streets and people of Prague to BSA.

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“Victoria”; Exiled Ukrainian Aleksei Bordusov, aka AEC Interesni Kazki, Opens Show in Vienna

“Victoria”; Exiled Ukrainian Aleksei Bordusov, aka AEC Interesni Kazki, Opens Show in Vienna

“This show is dedicated to my home country, Ukraine, says Aleksei Bordusov, aka AEC Interesni Kazki’ from his place of exile in Spain. He’s been preparing for his show “Victoria,” which opens tomorrow in Vienna, Austria, at the AG18 Gallery.

“Ukraine was brutally attacked by Russia on February 24th,” says the artists who studied in Kyiv at the Academy of Fine Arts. “The war is going on. No end in sight. And every day we learn of new atrocities and crimes that Putin’s troops are committing against my people,” he says. “The title of the exhibition ‘Victoria’ represents what I believe in and wish for Ukraine.”

Aleksei Bordusov AKA AEC Interesni Kazki. “Victoria”. AG18 Gallery. Vienna, Austria. (photo courtesy of the gallery)

A muralist and fine artist who is known by many people for his works on the streets worldwide for the last decade – he prefers now not to think of himself as a “street artist,” says his press release. Indeed, his developed skills and aesthetic milieu are not often represented in the global street art scene. There simply isn’t a lot of old-school surrealism that makes it to the street unless it is flashy and with a commercial slickness. His work is of such quality and content that it’s now more often been compared with the surreal canon of Bosch, Goya, Dali, Riviera, and Moebius – here in Vienna, others mention Rudolf Hausner.

Whatever your passion, psychological or carnal, something is stirred in these canvasses – triggering the myths of your religious training perhaps, or the musical storytellers of 1970s post-psychedelia, or perhaps by looking at war told about and mediated on social media postings in your pocket. His figures are “heavily stepping forward, powerful, making their way through a mad world.” Maybe these mis-figures and their pungent palettes appear more familiar and make more sense today.

The new show opens tomorrow, and AEC says he will also be signing copies of his new book “Mythgazing.” Still, his feelings of utter displacement are only compounded by the normalcy of an art opening at a beautiful gallery. He’s named the new show “Victoria” because “it represents what I believe in and wish for Ukraine: Victory of the creation over destruction, good over evil, truth over lies. The Ukrainian people are defending themselves and fighting against pure evil.”

Aleksei Bordusov AKA AEC Interesni Kazki. “Victoria”. AG18 Gallery. Vienna, Austria. (photo courtesy of the gallery)
Aleksei Bordusov AKA AEC Interesni Kazki. “Victoria”. AG18 Gallery. Vienna, Austria. (photo courtesy of the gallery)
Aleksei Bordusov AKA AEC Interesni Kazki. “Mythgazing”. A limited number of copies will be available for purchase at the opening. If you wish to order the book online click HERE.

AG18 Gallery

Annagasse 18
1010 Wien, Vienna

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Spanish “El Konvent” Welcomes Street Artists and Nurtures Collective Culture

Spanish “El Konvent” Welcomes Street Artists and Nurtures Collective Culture

Typically you may expect to be praying the novena and asking God for absolution of your dastardly sins here in this sprawling compound called The Konvent near Barcelona. While no one would stop you today, you may also wish to check out a number of new installations throughout the many buildings by Street Artists.

Teo Vazquez (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)

The Roman Catholic former convent hosted 50 or so artists over the last couple of years to transform the space, perhaps to reinterpret its original charge in a modern light, perhaps just to ready the compound for commercial, cultural, and community pursuits of the owners.

Certainly the decaying spaces and austere aesthetic is inviting, calming, possibly frightening, depending on your associations. Now they are home for music, dance, theatre, film festivals, and artist residencies – often offered only in Catalan but some also in European Spanish.

Teo Vazquez (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)

As you walk through the spaces you are welcomed by these works by artists, many of them at one time or another categorized as Street Artists, whose voices now usher in a new era of contemplation and perhaps internal exploration.

Our thanks to photogapher and BSA contributor Lluis Olive Bulbena for sharing these images from El Konvent.

For more information about El Konvent please Click HERE

Jofre Oliveras (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Unidentified artist (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Samuel Aranda Studio (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
AEC – Interesni Kazki (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Valiente Creations (photo © Lluis Olive)
Holy Era (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Wedo . Slim (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Wedo (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Slim (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Slim (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Slim (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Mugraff (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Troy Lovegates (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Troy Lovegates (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Juanjo Surace (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Simon Vazquez . Sebastien Waknine (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
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