Postcard from San Miguel de Allende: Redirecting Grafitti Artists, Part Two

(Link to Part One)

Blank walls are magnets for graffiti, but treating those walls as a canvas for public art projects commands respect even among taggers.

To try to halt the spread of random graffiti and alter the urban landscape, Colleen Sorenson joined with Federico Vega to launch Muros en Blanco in San Miguel de Allende. They met with city leaders, including Mayor Mauricio Trejo Pureco, and convinced them to establish Colonia Guadalupe as the city’s first arts district.

Enthusiasm was so high, they were given virtually no time to throw together the new arts district’s first event and public art projects in March of 2013. First, the pair had to identify walls appropriate for the murals and obtain permission from property owners for the project. Then they turned to the internet to solicit lead artists from throughout Mexico and beyond – Germany, Argentina, the United States. The chosen artists were housed with neighbors, neighbors who also rose to the occasion to prepare potluck feasts spread out as buffets for the starving teams of artists who gathered for meals in Colleen’s patio. Youths of the community were given the opportunity to join and work under the tutelage of more experienced artists.

Here are some of the results:

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Look for more photos of murals in Colonia Guadalupe in Part Three.

 

Postcard from Oaxaca: Art of the Streets, Chapter 2

Still taking photos of random artistic encounters on walls around Oaxaca.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

One of these murals, the featured one by Kelly Peyton, was installed only this week. Read her blog here.

To view more street art, visit an earlier post….

Postcard from Oaxaca: Art of the streets

Wandering the streets of Oaxaca, we keep encountering urban art transcending youthful graffiti.

When we entered the Museum of Contemporary Art, or MACO, our belief the caliber of the art is far from serendipitous was confirmed. Some of the street art is part of an external and internal exhibition, Hecho en Oaxaca, and was commissioned for the July opening.

I’m posting a few random shots, including some commercial signage, separately from those taken inside the museum because a few, by the same artists, would be indistinguishable.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.