ENAMUR ART returned this January to Les Franqueses del Vallès with its 4th edition, continuing to build a locally rooted, artist-led platform for graffiti, music, and shared experience. Hosted in a municipality in Catalonia, Spain, located in the province of Barcelona and situated along Carrer de la Serra, the jam once again activated a long concrete wall as a public canvas, reaffirming the event’s commitment to graffiti as a lived, social practice – and naturally, some spectacle. What began as a modest initiative has grown into a recurring meeting point for writers, painters, neighbors, and friends from across the region.
This year, 24 artists painted nearly 100 meters of wall, working side by side in a session that emphasized exchange, spontaneity, and presence. The visual production unfolded alongside a program of live music by emerging local acts, grounding the event firmly in its community context. A free tote-bag customization workshop opened the door to younger participants and curious passersby, while the presentation of “Tornar a lluitar”—a song created by local youth with support from the Dula project—underscored ENAMUR ART’s ongoing interest in youth voices and collective expression.
Among the standout moments was the collaboration between Boogie and MarcNone, a pairing that carried both personal history and mutual respect. “This is more than a collaboration — it’s two friends doing what they love most: painting and living life,” MarcNone reflected. “The good vibes we share are reflected on the wall, and the result is for all of you.” The piece reads less as a formal duet and more as a conversation in paint, shaped by trust, rhythm, and time spent together.
“Thanks for the invitation and all the crazy cats out there for the good time and the nice talks,” says Boogie on Instagram. “Spanish writers are on a different level!”
The event’s energy—part jam, part reunion—was carefully documented by photographer Lluis Olive and videographer Pol Casquett. As MarcNone and Boogie put it simply, “Graffiti connecting people.” With each edition, ENAMUR ART continues to prove that scale isn’t measured only in meters of wall, but in the strength of relationships built around them.
Freedom of expression is foundational in a democracy. Without it, it is not difficult for a culture to descend into authoritarianism, fascism, and dictatorship. By many standards, Spain’s democracy is still young, with a Parliamentary Monarchy since 1978. So it is curious and alarming to hear that this EU country has been silencing free speech in the last few years.
In 2018, we reported here on an initiative undertaken by more than two dozen artists from Spain called #nocallarem, a visual and musical protest inside a former prison to speak out against the Spanish Supreme Court ruling against the rights of an artist, a rapper, Pablo Hasel. In lyrics about the then-King Juan Carlos De Borbon deemed offensive, the young musician violated recently passed laws forbidding such speech.
Now, on the occasion of Mr. Hasel preparing to report to the authorities to begin serving his prison sentence, an outdoor art exhibition this month at Parque de las Tres Chimeneas (Three Chimneys Park) in Barcelona, a collection of artists gathered to paint works addressing what they see as an unjust attack on the freedom of a citizen and artist to express opinions in lyrics and writings. As you might expect at a graffiti/mural jam it was a celebratory Saturday of painting, music, dogs, kids, and the occasional soccer (fútbol) scrimmage.
But as soon as the mural paintings were up, the trouble began as well, according to artists and free-speech activists on the scene. “Less than twenty-four hours after doing their artistic actions, an NCNeta brigade escorted by a Barcelona Urban Guard van censored one of the works, covering it fully with paint,” says journalist and activist Audrey García in a Facebook posting.
The mural by artist Roc Blackblock featured the former king surrounded by words the rapper had used to describe him, including thief. Aside from being insulting to a public figure and calling out the rapper’s case, it is difficult for locals to understand why it was buffed.
García and others contend that the brazen act was evidence of an increasing level of silencing that targets some members of society for their speech but not others. “The city administration carried out a new act of censorship about our works, making our protest and denouncement of freedom of expression even more evident and necessary, adding a new case to the already too long, outrageous and constant violation of our rights and freedoms as creators and consequently of all society,” she says.
Eventually, the city apologized and offered solutions for restoring the piece, but the movement to free Mr. Hasel and protect free expression continues. About 15 artists participated in the painting jam, including Roc Blackblock, Antón Seoane, El Rughi, Magia Trece, Doctor Toy, El Edu, Galleta María, Kader, Maga, Owen, Reskate, Chamo San, Sigrid Amores, Tres Voltes Rebel, Arte Porvo y Elna Or, among others.
Since then, more demonstrations have taken place in the streets of Barcelona, Valencia, Lérida, and Hasel’s hometown of Segrià to protest his imprisonment. According to the BBC, “More than 200 artists, including film director Pedro Almodóvar and Hollywood star Javier Bardem, have signed a petition against Hasel’s jail term, while Amnesty International described his arrest as terrible news for freedom of expression in Spain.”
Our special thanks to photographer Fer Alcalá for sharing his fine work with BSA readers here.
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