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Colombian street artists graffiti for peace

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A pineapple that looks strikingly like a grenade is spray-painted on one wall, while another is splashed with carnations sprouting from rifle barrels.

As Colombia seeks a historic peace agreement to end five decades of conflict with the FARC rebels, war and peace are increasingly popping up as themes in the graffiti around the capital Bogota, where street art is booming.

"I wanted to send a message that would open people's minds," says DjLu, a graffiti artist known for dotting the city center with black-and-white images such as soldiers shooting heart-shaped bullets.

DjLu, who prefers not to give his real name, doubles as an art professor at Catholic University of Colombia when he isn't out spray-painting public spaces as a self-described "servant of peace."

"I'm not a guy who's been uprooted by the conflict, let's be clear about that. I'm simply human, and as a human I think the conflict is absurd," he told AFP.

The Colombian conflict has killed more than 220,000 people and forced six million from their homes.

But after more than three years of negotiations, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the government appear to be close to a peace deal.

Last week they asked the United Nations to set up an observer mission to oversee an eventual ceasefire and rebel disarmament.

The two sides have set a self-imposed deadline of March 23 to sign a final accord.

A man walks past graffiti that reads:
A man walks past graffiti that reads: "Peace for the people, human rights" in the Chipichape neighbourhood in Cali, Colombia on January 9, 2016
Luis Robayo, AFP

The prospect of turning the page on more than half a century stained by violence is increasingly fueling street artists' creativity in Bogota, where graffiti is surging as an artistic medium.

The city's mayor from 2012 to 2015, former guerrilla fighter Gustavo Petro, actively promoted graffiti as a public art form.

That stance helped counter the stigma of graffiti as vandalism, and giant murals sprouted up in iconic spots throughout the city.

Today, visitors and fans can even take a graffiti tour, created by Australian expatriate Christian Petersen.

Toxicomano ("Addict"), a graffiti artist known for works protesting atrocities committed by the Colombian army, said the medium is well-suited to politically engaged art.

"The mere fact of painting in the street is a political act," he said.

A pineapple that looks strikingly like a grenade is spray-painted on one wall, while another is splashed with carnations sprouting from rifle barrels.

As Colombia seeks a historic peace agreement to end five decades of conflict with the FARC rebels, war and peace are increasingly popping up as themes in the graffiti around the capital Bogota, where street art is booming.

“I wanted to send a message that would open people’s minds,” says DjLu, a graffiti artist known for dotting the city center with black-and-white images such as soldiers shooting heart-shaped bullets.

DjLu, who prefers not to give his real name, doubles as an art professor at Catholic University of Colombia when he isn’t out spray-painting public spaces as a self-described “servant of peace.”

“I’m not a guy who’s been uprooted by the conflict, let’s be clear about that. I’m simply human, and as a human I think the conflict is absurd,” he told AFP.

The Colombian conflict has killed more than 220,000 people and forced six million from their homes.

But after more than three years of negotiations, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and the government appear to be close to a peace deal.

Last week they asked the United Nations to set up an observer mission to oversee an eventual ceasefire and rebel disarmament.

The two sides have set a self-imposed deadline of March 23 to sign a final accord.

A man walks past graffiti that reads:

A man walks past graffiti that reads: “Peace for the people, human rights” in the Chipichape neighbourhood in Cali, Colombia on January 9, 2016
Luis Robayo, AFP

The prospect of turning the page on more than half a century stained by violence is increasingly fueling street artists’ creativity in Bogota, where graffiti is surging as an artistic medium.

The city’s mayor from 2012 to 2015, former guerrilla fighter Gustavo Petro, actively promoted graffiti as a public art form.

That stance helped counter the stigma of graffiti as vandalism, and giant murals sprouted up in iconic spots throughout the city.

Today, visitors and fans can even take a graffiti tour, created by Australian expatriate Christian Petersen.

Toxicomano (“Addict”), a graffiti artist known for works protesting atrocities committed by the Colombian army, said the medium is well-suited to politically engaged art.

“The mere fact of painting in the street is a political act,” he said.

AFP
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