Three Catalan murals in running for global street art award
Artworks in Calafell, Lleida i Penelles make Street Art Cities Best of 2022 longlist
Artworks in Calafell, Lleida i Penelles make Street Art Cities Best of 2022 longlist
Modern, contemporary and street art displays aim to attract young people and newcomers in particular
Juan Carlos I left for the UAE in early August amid a string of corruption allegations while under investigation by Supreme Court
The Trafalgar space will be hosting 'The World of Banksy', with over a hundred replicas of the street artist's work
The artist replaced tiles removed in the protests across Barcelona with multicolored displays
Eatery of the celebrated Roca brothers just one of the venues in the northern city's annual Milestone Project festival
Catalonia’s international performing arts festival will take place from September 5 to 8
The first Street Art Festival sees 12 national and international artists decorating the small Catalan town of Torrefarrera
The Barcelona street art scene has been active for 30 years. Thanks to its diversity Barcelona street art distinguishes itself from other cities around the world. During recent years street art has become more popular, which has resulted in more art on the streets, a commercial focus and more legal walls around town. According to the street artist Debens, it was hard for artists in the 90s to find places to make street art because of strict conditions. But such authority also had a positive impact on the street artists in the beginning since it produced a “rebel spirit that is very important for them to create”, Debens states.
The Tàrrega Theatre Fair, in the county of Urgell, in Western Catalonia, lowered the curtain on this year’s festival this Sunday. Between the 8th and the 11thof September, the town welcomed a programme with 60 performances from 57 national and international companies and 263 sessions in 26 different exhibition spaces. More than 887 professionals, 547 of whom were Catalan, with 180 hailing from Spain and 190 from abroad, took part in this traditional event that every year fills with colour the streets of this city near Lleida. This 36th edition closed with a positive balance: 14,450 tickets sold, in comparison to the 13,000 visitors of last year, and an occupancy rate above 87% at the theatre shows. A total of 3,315 people stayed at the camping area of the event. The artistic director of FiraTàrrega, Jordi Duran, is satisfied with the results: “It was a show rich in content and we enjoyed the good weather”, he stated.
Street art is capable of addressing very different people and contexts, and this year’s edition of FiraTàrrega is marked precisely by an ambition to overcome differences and explore the intercultural potential of art. ‘Manifesta’, a large format coproduction of the festival, is the latest creation from Bobskené. A fun and festive song that celebrates difference while mixing text, music and circus, and which audiences will be able to enjoy for the first time on the 8th of September. The text is a multilingual manifesto, written in Catalan, Spanish, French and English, that reflects the seven nationalities of the artists that take part in the performance. “The manifesto makes us question the times that we live in and invites us to relax, to arrive to ecstasy and end up dancing”, said the director of the performance, Ricard Soler i Mallol.