“I chose whales because despite of their size, so many are found on our beaches with the stomach full of plastic,” says Alessio Bolognesi about this new mural for the ST.ART festival in Italy. “It’s a symbol, in my mind, of how even the huge animals are so powerless.”
The image of large seafaring creatures washing up on shore starved of nutrition and bloated with plastic is becoming more common as we continue to poison ourselves and the world. Not surprisingly, similar images are also popping up in Street Art in other locations.
Originally from Ferrara in the north of Italy, the 3D graphic designer also once belonged to a graffiti crew as a kid, and he now balances professional design work with an increasing number of mural painting opportunities. Here in Provincia di Vicenza (Veneto region), he says he chose a whale drowning in plastic for this secondary school façade. But he didn’t want to be completely didactic, preferring to let the viewer make the connections themselves.
“I like to paint murals with a ‘multi-layer’ reading approach,” he explains. “You can look to the mural and just see the obvious image or you can try to go deeper and capture some more meaningful detail.”
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
This Sunday's Images Of The Week seems to have an overriding theme which wasn't really planned. It just happened. A preponderance of stencils, many of them miniature and most placed without permi...
Happy Holidays to all BSA readers, your family and dear ones. We're counting down some of our favorite photos to appear on BSA in 2020 taken by our editor of photography, Jaime Rojo. We wish each per...
As founding members of the Martha Cooper Library at the Urban Nation Museum in Berlin, Brooklyn Street Art (BSA) proudly showcases a monthly feature from the MCL collection, illuminating the extensiv...
Today, we find ourselves in Bergamo, Italy, a city pulsating with fresh artistic expressions. Amidst the city's cultural treasures, a captivating mural by the talented artist Fabio Petani has recentl...
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities. Now screening : 1. "REWILD" from Escif2. Guido van Helten in Faulkton, South Dakota by Brian Siskind3. How Art...