All posts tagged: Reka One

In Fanzara After Censorship and Cuts, the People Bring MIAU Back to Life

In Fanzara After Censorship and Cuts, the People Bring MIAU Back to Life

Sometimes street art festivals run headlong into battles with local politics or corporate brands that believe murals should only be decorative—certainly not inclusive of certain communities or certain politics. To be clear: all art is political. If you like a mural, chances are it aligns with your worldview. Don’t make the mistake of believing otherwise.

Fio Silva. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)

Last year, MIAU Fanzara ran squarely into that truth. In early 2024 the local council introduced a “facades ordinance” demanding prior approval of sketches—an a priori filter on themes and imagery that organizers publicly rejected as censorship. With organizers refusing to comply, the 2024 edition was “paused.” Over the summer, it appears that the dispute widened, drawing criticism from cultural bodies and press coverage that framed the rule as a curb on artistic freedom. In September, the council rescinded the ordinance—but it also withdrew the long-standing €6,000 municipal subsidy, a small but symbolically vital line that had helped the festival function, according to new reports and locals.

Fio Silva. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)

This year, the money didn’t return—but the people did. In 2025, neighbors opened their walls, volunteers handled logistics, and artists worked without fees. MIAU’s ninth edition went ahead without public subsidies, sustained by community energy and a shared conviction that public space is for public voices. All of this sounds rather like the vox populi itself — unruly, creative, and unwilling to be managed by decree. The result wasn’t just a program; it was a popular mandate painted on stucco and brick.

Santa Gross. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)

What follows is a selection from this year’s walls: pieces that speak in bright, unvarnished tones about memory, ecology, migration, gender, and the everyday. Funding can be cut. A festival can be paused. But when the people choose color over silence, the paint somehow finds a way.

Thank you to photographer Lluis Olive for sharing new shots of MIAU 2025


To read more about the censorship battle at the Fanzara “MIAU Festival”:

Laura Merayo. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
  1. “Fanzara se queda sin festival de grafiti tras 10 años por la nueva norma municipal del PP”El País (July 6, 2024). A report on the 2024 cancellation after the facades ordinance imposed prior screening of murals. (El País)
  2. “Fin al bloqueo del MIAU de Fanzara nueve meses después: el Ayuntamiento aprueba por unanimidad retirar la Ordenanza municipal de fachadas”Cadena SER, Radio Castellón (September 7, 2024). On the council’s vote to withdraw the ordinance and the simultaneous end of municipal funding. (Cadena SER)
  3. “El festival de grafitis de Fanzara sobrevive al intento de censura previa con la solidaridad de vecinos y artistas”El País (July 5, 2025). Coverage of the 2025 edition returning without subsidies, powered by residents and volunteers. (El País)

(Additional context: El País summarized the ordinance’s withdrawal and loss of the €6,000 grant on Sept. 7, 2024; local outlets like Castellón Plaza and NMPNU documented the 2025 edition proceeding “a pecho descubierto,” without public funds. (El País))

Laura Merayo. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Lluisa Penella. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Lluisa Penella. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Lluisa Penella. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Iris Serrano. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Lluisa Penella. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Tony Gallo. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Tony Gallo. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
MurOne. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Digo Diego. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Digo Diego. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Costi AMC. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Costi AMC. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Bifido. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)

We wrote about Bifido’s contribution to MIAU 2025 back in July. Click HERE to read the article.

Maria Otal. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Reka One. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Marie Balbinot. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Marie Balbinot. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Deith. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Deith. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Hombre Lopez. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Hombre Lopez. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Hombre Lopez. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)
Hombre Lopez. Detail. MIAU Festival 2025. Fanzara, Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive-Bulbena)

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MURAL Festival in Montreal Stakes a Claim for Street Art North

The MURAL Festival in Montreal took over Saint-Laurent Boulevard over the weekend with the work of more than 25 local, national and international Street Artists working separately and in concert across large walls for this first ever event, and many have taken notice. Nevermind the gossip on the street about mayoral corruption and an ongoing rancorous debate here about a perceived graffiti problem in the city, MURAL and its supporters clearly are staking a claim on a growing world Street Art stage with a strong show that can legitimately brag about a solid mix of talent and styles.

Judging from the attendance, the hashtag enthusiasm, and the cameras hoisted into the air, there should be no debate about how much the kids actually love this stuff – and how many non-kids are also fueling the current explosion of art in the public sphere. “From 5 to 80 years old, the crowd discovered amazing talents and learned to appreciate a public art form that had been cast aside and misidentified as vandalism for the past 20 years,” says Fred Caron, one of the organizers and a cultural worker in the public art milieu. “The cultural values and power of murals is finally back in the North thanks to a crazy bunch of young Canucks.”

ROA (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas). Another view of this wall with the artists’ description appears below.

For an expansive event like this to succeed right out of the gate, it doesn’t hurt that Montreal is a relatively homogenous city with a very strong tax base, an engaged business sector, and a vibrant arts culture chock full of ideas, performances, and participatory aspirations. With an appreciative audience thronging into the four day festival for fun and culture, the numerous large mural walls in multiple locations were accompanied by body painting, a paint battle, painting with your feet, block parties, live music, djs, a photo booth, tours on foot and bike, skateboard lessons, kite making, urban “street” inspired dance troupes, night time projections, and naturally, beer.

“What captivated me most about this trip was the level of community, cross pollination and camaraderie shared between the different artists groups, institutions and organizations in the city,” enthuses LNY, a New Jersey based Street Artist who has been part of a few of these city-centric festivals over the last couple of years. Rather than cheaply plugging a downtown area with a momentary hype, a sort of “Ghetto Olympics” that fades quickly, leaving no real value to a community, LNY notes that the main organizers of MURAL continued to be engaged with the needs of the artists and were involved with the various satellite organizations to make sure they were thriving.

“This to me is the perfect gauge for healthy communities and for worthwhile festivals that can transcend their original novelty and spectacle to really give something back,” he remarks.

Reka One. Detail. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

For Street Art photographer Daniel Estaban Rojas, whose work here displays most of the finished pieces at press time, MURAL was an inspiring opportunity to meet many new artists and to be proud of the city. “The face of Montreal has changed with this festival and I think that Street Art will be a lot more accepted in this city. Most people that I spoke to while shooting on the streets had one thing in common to say, and that was ‘thank you’,” he reports with some relief and pride. “Knowing that people were so grateful and being surrounded by such positive vibes made it all the better.”

Included in the MURAL Festival lineup (though not all represented here) were A Squid Called Sebastion, A’Shop, Chris Dyer, Christina Angelina, En Masse, Escif, Fin and Christina, Gaia, Jason Botkin, Labrona, Le Bonnard, LNY, Omen, Other, Other (aka Troy Lovegates), Paria Crew, Phlegm, Pixel Pancho, Reka One, Ricardo Cavolo, ROA, Shantz Brothers, Stare, Stikki Peaches, Troy Lovegates, and Wzrds GNG, among others.

Reka One (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

A Squid Called Sebastian (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Phlegm. Detail. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Phlegm (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

For his first visit to Montreal, the Belgian Street Artist named ROA says that he had a great time creating this “still life” with a bison and a bear. When talking about his inspiration, ROA says that he was impressed with the history of the so-called American bison, which was incredibly abundant in the early 19th century, numbering more than 40 million. After being hunted almost into extinction with a population of 200 a century later, the bison slowly have reestablished their numbers in Canada to 700,000. He decided to add a bear laying on top because it tells a similar story of a native mammal in the region.

ROA (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas).

A’Shop (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

 “I decided to speak about the Americas and the aspects that unite us though history and conflict,” explains Street Artist LNY about his portrait of his cousin Leslie.  He chose her because he considers her, “a person who represents the unification of north and south in an individual; a sort of cultural hybridism.” She is handling maiz, or corn, “as a metaphor for PanAmerican unity; as a crop that has sustained the continents since ancient times and that is now a shell of it’s former self after being thoroughly genetically modified for gain and profit.”

LNY (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

OMEN (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

En Masse (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Escif (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

 

Pixel Pancho (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Pixel Pancho (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Chris Dyer (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Paria Crew (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Ricardo Cavolo (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

For his participation in the MURAL Festival, it was primarily about coming home for the Canadian artist named Other (AKA Troy Lovegates). “All my spare moments were playing frisbee and catching up with old friends,” he says as he describes the events.

But what about the fellows he painted for the wall? Actually, they are two representations of one man, a troubled sort of guy he met recently.

“The painting I did is of a man I met in Ottawa a few days before the festival who was lost and homeless and wanted to return home to Montreal. But he was scattered, laying in a parking lot talking nonsense. He seemed very gentle and I hope I brought back a part of him to Montreal.”

Other (AKA Troy Lovegates) (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Gaia (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Jason Botkin (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Wzrds GNG (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

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Montreal Has The Spotlight: MURAL Festival, Day 1

DAY 1 at #MuralFestival

Starting today in Montreal is MURAL, a four day open-air market on Saint-Laurent Boulevard that turns into a Street Art party. Running June 13-16, the 2 km street will be clobbered by about 20 Street Artists during the day, and dancing and cavorting at night.

BSA is proud to bring you exclusive shots of the action you can only find here as these walls go up for the full four days.  ROA, GAIA, Labrona and others have already started killin’ their spots and folks are already wandering through the closed streets to get a free show of art-in-progress. As is happening more often, Street Artists are getting their own walls and not hitting up the big collaborative cacaphonic multi-piece walls that we used to associate with festivals like these. Unless you count En Masse, who specialize in just that, but only in black and white.

ROA. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

So dial up MURAL on your Instagram machine here http://instagram.com/muralfestival# for quick flix of whatever is happening and check back at BSA every day because we’ll be bringing you a dope mix of shots from some of these artists who are making the MURAL scene; Jason Botkin, Omen, Escif, Labrona, ROA, Pixel Pancho, Other, A’Shop, Le Bonnard, Paria Crew, Phlegm, Reka One, Ricardo Cavolo, LNY,WZRDS GNG, Chris Dyer, Christina Angelina, Squid Called Sebastian, Stare, GAIA, and of course, local heroic collaboratists En Masse.

In the meantime enjoy these beauties just for BSA readers by talented photographer Daniel Esteban Rojas.

ROA (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Labrona. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Labrona. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

GAIA. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

le Bonnard. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Paria Crew. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Paria Crew. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

A’Shop. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Wzrds GNG. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Wzrds GNG. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Stare. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Chris Dyer. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

Chris Dyer. Detail of work in progress. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

The helping hand of volunteer Nathan Balaga. (photo © Daniel Esteban Rojas)

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LNDMRK Presents: Muralistes / Mural Street Art Festival (Montreal, Canada)

Mural Festival

MURAL réunira plus de 35 artistes locaux et internationaux sur 2 km de marché à ciel ouvert sur le Boulevard St-Laurent, fermé à la circulation pour l’occasion. Le festival présentera la création de près de 20 murales uniques qui redéfinieront l’image de la Main pour la prochaine année, en plus de présenter un évènement spécial chaque soir qui permettra aux festivaliers de se réunir en un lieu différent afin de poursuivre la fête créative.

Festival international d’art public déterminé à célébrer la créativité et démocratiser l’art urbain, MURAL transformera l’espace d’une semaine le boulevard Saint-Laurent en véritable musée à ciel ouvert où s’unissent créativement les talents d’artistes locaux et internationaux.

Rendez-vous unique dans le nord-est américain, l’événement annuel rassemble l’avant-garde en arts visuels afin de concrétiser Montréal comme pôle artistique incontournable en Amérique du nord.

Participating Artists: Jason Botkin, Omen, Escif, Pixel Pancho, ROA, Labrona, Le Bonnard, A’Shop, Other, Reka One, Paria Crew, Phlegm, Wzrd GNG, Ricardo Cavolo, LNY.
http://muralfestival.com/
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