All posts tagged: Memur Festival

MEMUR Part II:  Graffiti Jam Walls in Oldenburg, Germany

MEMUR Part II: Graffiti Jam Walls in Oldenburg, Germany

Today we have part two of our coverage of the MEMUR Festival in Oldenburg, Germany. More than 30 regional and international artists painted a 280-meter-long wall of the railway elevation on the Oldenburg federal railway path – street artists on one side, graffiti artists on the other. In addition to the aerosol action, there was a photo exhibition featuring our featured documentarians, Martha Cooper and Nika Kramer, film screenings, photography and art workshops, and an educational program in cooperation with the Oldenburg City Museum and the Oldenburg Prevention Council.

1Up Crew. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Nika Kramer)

Organizers say they needed 500 liters of wall paint just to prime the walls, and probably 1000 spray cans were used during the 3-day event. The 3D style is ruling the moment, but you can see bubble style and semi-wildstyle, some neofuturism, – as well as introductions of characters and brief fictional scenarios. Most importantly, most of the pieces get ample space to breathe and to stand on their own.

See Part 1 here: Evolution of a Revolution: MEMUR Part I in Oldenburg; Street Art

1Up Crew. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
1Up Crew. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Nika Kramer)
1Up Crew. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
1Up Crew. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Nika Kramer)
SANY. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
SANY. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Nika Kramer)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
TOKK. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
I am Awesome Mama/City Slickaz. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
I am Awesome Mama/City Slickaz. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Peser. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Rofiks. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Rofiks. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Rofiks. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Peser. Rofiks. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Peser. Rofiks. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Padio. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Padio. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Memorial Piece. Wasted Youth. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
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Evolution of a Revolution: MEMUR Part I in Oldenburg; Street Art

Evolution of a Revolution: MEMUR Part I in Oldenburg; Street Art

From environmental nightmares to the corporate war machine to social solidarity to identity politics to abortion to the isolation brought on by Covid, the muralists at the MEMUR Festival in Oldenburg, Germany are not muting their serious concerns about the modern world.

Amanda Arrou from San Sebastian, Spain. Chosen topic, Feminism. (photo © Martha Cooper)

For being the inaugural episode of a festival, you have to be impressed with it on many levels. First is the selection high-quality international and national artists from both the street art and graffiti world. Secondly, organizers devised an equitable solution for these two distinct, yet entirely related, subcultures to participate fully on the walls of their fair city – with respect for all. Finally, the true rebellious spirit of this organically grown and democratic global people’s art movement was preserved by encouraging artists to select a modern-day societal ill and address it with their work.

Amanda Arrou from San Sebastian, Spain. Chosen topic, Feminism. (photo © Nika Kramer)

It’s refreshing to experience a themed public exhibition like this that has not been censored by commercial interests but that endeavors to speak openly with its artworks about potentially difficult subjects to address the everyday passerby. “Street art has always been a means to criticize, reflect, and question,” says an online description of the scenes’ nascent beginnings, and that couldn’t be more true from our perspective. MEMUR 2022 calls it ‘Evolution of a Revolution,’ and since there is a widespread notion across developed world countries that leaders are not representing citizens anymore, you can imagine that these works may get people talking together and realizing that we are not polarized left-right, but top-bottom.

Amanda Arrou from San Sebastian, Spain. Chosen topic, Feminism. (photo © Nika Kramer)

Today we’ll show you images from the street art muralists’ walls on one side of the 280-meter-long wall of the railway elevation on the Oldenburg federal railway path, and tomorrow we’ll show you the ‘Wall of Fame’ created on the other side by a stunning array of graffiti writers. In both cases, we extend our heartfelt thanks to two of the main participants in the event, photographers Martha Cooper of New York and hometown superstar/international photographer Nikka Kramer. Thanks to both for sharing their images with BSA readers.

Arsek & Erase, from Sofia, Bulgaria. Chosen topic: Hyperinflation. (photo © Martha Cooper)

Bulgarian muralists Arsek & Erase may have chosen one of the hottest current topics to address in their mural; the fear of hyperinflation and the severe damage it can do to individuals. The illustration-style painting features a vicious snake enveloping a jar of “savings”, preparing to consume it whole. Here in Oldenburg, where German inflation rose to its highest level in almost 50 years in August (8.8%), people are familiar with the topic. In their hometown of Sofia, Aresek & Erase are experiencing a 17% rate of inflation as of last month. Technically the term “hyperinflation” is somewhere above 50%, and 60 or so countries have fallen into it in the last hundred years, including Argentina today, and rather famously, the Weimar Republic (of which Oldenburg was a federated state) exactly 100 years ago, from 1921-23.

Arsek & Erase, from Sofia, Bulgaria. Chosen topic: Hyperinflation. (photo © Nika Kramer)

Suffice it to say that today many of the world’s currencies are in danger of inflationary pressures, including the dollar and Euro. There was talk amongst participants and organizers of MEMUR that the costs of the festival itself had to be recalibrated a few times because of increased costs in lodging, transportation, labor, and art materials.

“Thanks to everyone who came despite the heat to watch the artists paint, participate in the graffiti workshops and try their luck at the raffle,” said the organizers in their Instagram posting.

“All the positive feedback on the festival and the exhibition “Evolution of a Revolution” in the Kulturhalle am Pferdemarkt has only strengthened our belief that Oldenburg is ready for street art and that we definitely want to continue!’

Kitsune Jolene from Ghent. Belgium. Chosen topic: Roe vs. Wade overturning women’s rights. (photo © Martha Cooper)
        
Kitsune Jolene from Ghent. Belgium. Chosen topic: Roe vs. Wade overturning women’s rights. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Yara Jacobs from Hamburg, Germany. Chosen topic: NRW flood catastrophe. (photo © Martha Cooper)
“A Valley Doesn’t Give Up” “Don’t talk, but do” Yara Jacobs from Hamburg, Germany. Chosen topic: NRW flood catastrophe. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Robin Holthaus from Oldenburg, Germany. Chosen topic: Millionaires in Space. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Robin Holthaus from Oldenburg, Germany. Chosen topic: Millionaires in Space. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Devin Liston from California. The USA. Chosen topic: Wars and military conflicts due to corporate greed. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Devin Liston from California. The USA. Chosen topic: Wars and military conflicts due to corporate greed. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Jack Lack from Groningen, Netherlands. Chosen topic: Climate change. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Jack Lack from Groningen, Netherlands. Chosen topic: Climate change. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Tayla Broekman from Melbourne, Australia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Tayla Broekman from Melbourne, Australia. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Kartel from Berlin, Germany. Chosen topic: Ukraine war. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Kartel from Berlin, Germany. Chosen topic: Ukraine war. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Philipp Pulkowsky, from Bremen, Germany. This is a memorial RIP mural in honor of Daniel Orwoll. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Klara Schöell, from Hamburg, Germany. Chosen topic: Effects of social isolation due to the pandemic. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Klara Schöell, from Hamburg, Germany. Chosen topic: Effects of social isolation due to the pandemic. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Bolados, from Hannover, Germany. Chosen topic: Solidarity. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Bolados, from Hannover, Germany. Chosen topic: Solidarity. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Flood Shack. A sad but contemporaneous topic that responds to the immediate community; Various artists constructed this installation using salvaged materials found when the waters receded from the recent devasting floods in Oldenburg, Germany. The building in the background houses the offices of an insurance company… (photo © Martha Cooper)
Flood Shack. Various artists. (photo © Nika Kramer)
Memur Festival. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Memur Festival. Nika Kramer and Martha Cooper. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Olly H.)
Memur Festival. Nika Kramer and Martha Cooper. Oldenburg, Germany. (photo © Olly H.)
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