All posts tagged: Hopare

From Mine to Mural: MurMurs Transforms Decazeville, France 2020 – 2026

From Mine to Mural: MurMurs Transforms Decazeville, France 2020 – 2026

Out in the former mining basin of Aveyron in southern France, the Decazeville Communauté Street Art / “MurMurs” Festival has been rewriting the script on what a mural program can be. Not a quick-hit weekend of lifts and ladders, it has been a slow-build, six-year accumulation of images, ideas, and relationships spread across a cluster of towns that still carry the weight of coal, labor, and collective memory. Here, organizers say that walls aren’t simply blank canvases waiting to be decorated—they’re already loaded with meaning, culture, and history. When artists arrive, they find that they are stepping into a conversation that started long before the first spray can was shaken.

Wild Drawing (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

Across these half dozen years, a strong roster of international and European names has passed through—Saype, Astro, Isaac Cordal, Oakoak, Bom.K, Ememem, Pantonio, Hera (Herakut), WD (Wild Drawing), and Hopare among them—each bringing a distinct visual language to a place that doesn’t flatten difference. The appeal is in the vast range and scales: optical abstraction, miniature interventions, sculptural installation, figurative critique, and nature-respecting land art. The through-line isn’t style; it’s responsiveness. The better pieces feel less “placed” than absorbed, shaped by the terrain, the architecture, and the stories still circulating among residents who remember what this region once was—and still is.

Hera of Herakut (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Hera of Herakut (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

Just as important, the program isn’t running on imported names alone. There’s a visible effort to root the work locally, to keep a thread tied to the region through artists like Ratur, Bault, and Vinie, along with others from Aveyron and nearby, folding their perspectives into the broader mix. That balance—between recognized figures and regional voices—gives the project a different rhythm. It’s less about parachuting in and more about building a layered, evolving route where the global and the local sit side by side without one erasing the other.

Vinie (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Vinie (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

What sets Decazeville apart is the way it gives time and space for artists to engage deeply with the place and its people. Artists stay, meet residents, walk the terrain, and often collaborate with schools, associations, and local groups, creating work that reflects shared experience as much as individual vision. The result is a body of work rich with narrative, context, and connection, where each piece carries a sense of dialogue with the territory.


BSA spoke to the project manager and cultural mediator for the Street Art ‘MurMurs Festival’, Nicolas Viala, about the festival:

BSA: Why is this project so important for Decazeville Communauté, and what has it generated?
Nicolas Viala: Located in southwestern France, far from the saturated circuits of major art capitals, Decazeville Communauté has established itself as one of the most distinctive destinations for contemporary urban art in Europe. Over the past six years, this initiative has evolved into a powerful artistic, cultural, social, and territorial project—at the crossroads of mining heritage and the current pulse of the global art scene.

A former territory shaped by social struggles, labor, diversity, and solidarity, Decazeville Communauté carries a strong collective memory. That history, still very much alive, is now expressed on its walls. Here, street art does not decorate—it reveals the soul of the territory. Like the miners of the past, urban artists capture society, its hopes, and the contradictions of our time.

Pantonio-I (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

Designed to democratize access to culture, the project offers artistic programming that is free, accessible, and long-lasting. The results are tangible: a poetic reinterpretation of the territory, expanded access to culture, national and European visibility, and renewed local appeal. Over six editions, more than 240,000 visitors have been welcomed, while numerous school groups and students take part in educational visits each year.

Today, the project stands as a true driver of transformation, generating economic impact, tourism momentum, and a strong sense of local and regional pride.

Pantonio-II (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Pantonio-III (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

BSA: What has your experience been in organizing this project?
NV: Our approach has always been guided by a strong conviction: urban art is not decorative. It is a unique cultural movement—narrative, demanding, meaningful, and deeply human. Organizing the festival involves a long-term commitment combining artistic rigor, curatorial coherence, and strong territorial grounding. The goal is to build connections between international, national, and local artists, residents, and local history. The mining past, rooted in social engagement, resonates directly with the practices of contemporary artists, who are often socially engaged themselves.

Within this project, mediation plays a central role. It allows the artworks to be sustainably embedded in the territory and gives them a dimension that is at once artistic, social, and human.

Veks Van Hillik (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

BSA: How has the community responded to the murals, and what kind of support have they provided?
NV: Community involvement has been essential from the very beginning. While there were initial questions, they quickly gave way to genuine support.

Residents have gradually changed the way they view their environment, shifting from an industrial legacy to a vibrant cultural territory. Today, the murals have become a source of local pride.

Support from the community takes many forms: exchanges with artists, active participation, and a strong sense of ownership of the artworks. The walls have become shared surfaces, carrying identity and collective memory. This human dimension is one of the foundations of the festival’s success.

Arnaud de Jesus Gonçalves (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

BSA: How did the artists experience their stay in the village while painting?
NV: The artists’ experience in Decazeville Communauté is unanimously described as intense, immersive, and deeply human.

Unlike major urban centers, the creative timeframe here allows for true immersion. Artists meet residents, discover the territory’s history, and absorb its atmosphere and natural surroundings. This proximity directly influences their work, often resulting in more sensitive and engaged pieces.

Drawn by the authenticity of the territory, the quality of the walls, and the uniqueness of the project, more than sixty artists from twelve different nationalities have already taken part in the festival. Their presence creates a strong dialogue between artistic practices and local identity.

Arnaud de Jesus Gonçalves (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)

BSA: A project recognized beyond the territory
NV: The festival’s singularity has been widely recognized by European media specializing in contemporary art (Italy, Deutschland, England). This recognition confirms that innovation in urban art and culture does not depend on a city’s size but rather on vision, coherence, and commitment.

Today, Decazeville Communauté asserts a unique model, without seeking to imitate major metropolitan areas. Across its seven municipalities, urban art in Decazeville Communauté is a continuation of history, a reflection of the present, and a projection into the future.

Bom.K (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Veks Van Hillik (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Isaac Cordal (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Isaac Cordal (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Isaac Cordal (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Isaac Cordal (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Philippe Echaroux. Pense à rêver – Think about dreaming. (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Kouka (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Bom.K (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Monkeybird (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Monkeybird (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Hopare (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Hopare (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Koga One (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Koga One (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Astro (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Astro (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Ememem (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Ememem (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Ratur (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Bault (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)
Bault (photo courtesy of Nicolas Viala)


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El Raval In Barcelona: A Magnet Of Small Treasures

El Raval In Barcelona: A Magnet Of Small Treasures

Las Ramblas is a good place for rambling foot tours on a Saturday afternoon before reaching the ocean at El Raval. This neighborhood of Barcelona champions the small one-off Street Art piece – the antithesis of the large splashy murals that popular in other cities.

Rice (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

A barrio of narrow streets adorned with mysterious and grandly heavy wooden doors keeps the throngs of tourists at arms length. Windows and balconies with intricately and beautifully crafted iron work create an old world charm and invite smaller thoughtful portraits by Street Artists looking for a setting with character.

Turn the corner and there’s a genteel plaza buzzing with seniors in their golden years sitting on benches or at sidewalks cafes nursing a coffee or a brandy.

Rice (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Here in these secret niches, doorways, sidewalk level windows, lampposts, and just about any other surface you’ll discover small pieces of Street Art installed illegally. Multi-layered or one color stencils, one-of-kind, hand-painted wheat pastes, sticker multiples, fully realized acrylic portraits and posters; all small works waiting for a small audience.

BSA contributor and Barcelona native Lluís Olivé Bulbena recently took a stroll through the winding streets and found this treasure trove of goodies. Thanks to him and enjoy!

Hopare (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Guaté Mao (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Guaté Mao (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Ecloz (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Raf Urban (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Nenao (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Pat Brazill (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Ozzy (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Ozzy . Fatal Fake (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Fake Banksy (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Bronik . Utah . Ether. (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Bronik (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

Cane (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

El Rughi (photo Lluís Olivé Bulbena)

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BSA Images Of The Week: 07.02.17

BSA Images Of The Week: 07.02.17

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4th of July weekend here in New York so we are headed to a barbecue and a frisbee game. Maybe to the Jersey shore for some sun. Happy 4th ya’ll! Looks like the country needs to take itself back from the corporate overlords – if we want to declare the US to be independent ever again.  Right now we’re in trouble, gurl – and everyone knows it!

So here’s our weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring Banksy, Clint Mario, Crash, El Sol 25, Felipe Pantone, FinDAC, Hopare, Hot Tea, Invader, John Ahearn, Logan Hicks, Mark Jenkins, Resistance is Female, SaxSix, and Sonny Sundancer.

Top image: Sonny Sundancer (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hopare. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

John Ahearn(photo © Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Crash. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Clint Mario (photo © Jaime Rojo)

SacSix for Welling Court 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Mark Jenkins. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Logan Hicks. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

#resistanceisfemale (photo © Jaime Rojo)

#resistancisfemale (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Banksy’s corner at Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

FinDac. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Felipe Pantone. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Felipe Pantone (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hot Tea tribute to Laser Burners (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Invader. Urban Art Fair NYC. June 2017. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Invader (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Untitled. Summer 2017. Manhattan, NYC. June 2017.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Paris Street Art Update : “Je Suis Charlie” and “Pochoirs à Vendre”

Paris Street Art Update : “Je Suis Charlie” and “Pochoirs à Vendre”

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Cash For Your Warhol.  (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

Street Artist Combo says he was beaten for his street art advocating religious tolerance and naturally there has been a series of Je Suis Charlie variants appearing in the streets of Paris since we last checked in with this hot spot on the Street Art scene, so you know that many newly appearing works are charged with socio-political relevance. In these new images you will also see some fresh ideas from new names as well as long-term players, so those are encouraging signs of a vibrant scene as well.

You may also note an increase in the professional/commercial quality of some of these pieces and murals and begin to question how long a free-wheeling organic Street Art scene can last before low level opportunists cash in on it and turn it into a sad strip mall selling tchotchkes or derivative works by anonymous artists like a machine. Ah, capitalism, of thee we all sing.

The London scene has elements of this, so do New York and Melbourne, but we didn’t see it so obviously until photographer Geoff Hargadon returned from Paris with these excellent photos for BSA readers and gave us his account of a store he wandered into.  Enjoy his account further along in this posting.

In the mean time, long live Paris and it’s many players on the street!

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Love or money? Mygalo (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Philippe Herard (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Philippe Herard (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Kashink . Bault (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Philippe Vignal (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Don’t slip! Not a Clet banana peel, but it easily could be. Cash For Your Warhol (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Ender (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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VHILS (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Jerome Mesnager (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Combo (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Invader (It is a fake Invader we heard) . Mega Matt (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Invader (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Invader (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Una Vida (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Graffity…sans graffiti  (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Bault (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Bault . Artist At Ome AKA Atom (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Fred le Chevalier (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Alaniz . Sebr (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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C215 (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Berns . FKDL (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Michael Beerens (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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We couldn’t ID this artist. It bears a certain resemblance to ALIAS but we can’t say for sure.  (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Tragic Optimist . Gzup . Le Diamantaire . Mega Matt . Monsieur BMX (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Tragic Optimist (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Suriani (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Sebr (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Sara Conti (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Nemo (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Madame Moustache  (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Michael Kershnar  (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Monkey Bird . Le Diamanataire (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

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Hopare (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

Geoff’s account of his discovery in a heavily trafficked area known for Street Art in Paris recently. “Rue Déyonez is an active street for street art, with de facto legal walls on each side showing work from the most prolific Parisian artists. So I was walking up Rue Déyonez and this door was half open. I would not say it was exactly inviting but somehow I wiggled my way in. This guy named Pedro was in there with a friend, drinking tea.”

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A quick scan reveals Warhol, Hendrix, Obama, Woody Allen at the clarinet, Freud, and of course Rosa Parks. Rosa Parks? Pedro’s Gallery (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

“I looked around and saw that the room was completely filled with stenciled paintings of (mostly) American figures such as Warhol, Obama, Hendrix, Marilyn Monroe, and lots of Jimi Hendrix. The smell of aerosol was intense, and I quickly concluded my host had never worn a protective mask in his working life. Pedro probably set up camp to capitalize on the flow of visitors to this concentrated display of street art. I didn’t quite catch where he was from originally and I don’t think it was France. He was certainly cordial. I poked around his rooms full of literally hundreds of stencils while he allowed me to ignore the PAS DE PHOTOS sign on the pole. I left with a (overpriced) stencil on a Paris map.”

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Pedro’s Gallery (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

 

Our sincere thanks to Geoff Hargadon for his contributions and for sharing with BSA readers his unique perspective and talent.

 

For more Street Art from Paris:

Paris Street Art : Spencer Elzey in Europe

Towering Gallery Full of Art to Be Demolished : “La Tour Paris 13″

Paris: A Mid-Summer Mural Art Dispatch

 

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