
Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future
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Arab News
28-07-2025
- Arab News
Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future
SARAJEVO: Bullet holes still pockmark many Sarajevo buildings; others threaten collapse under disrepair, but street artists in the Bosnian capital are using their work to reshape a city steeped in history.A half-pipe of technicolor snakes its way through the verdant Mount Trebevic, once an Olympic bobsled route — now layered in ever-changing art.'It's a really good place for artists to come here to paint, because you can paint here freely,' Kerim Musanovic told AFP, spraycan in hand as he repaired his work on the former site of the 1984 Sarajevo his mural of a dragon, his painting's gallery is this street art hotspot between the most of his work, he paints the fantastic, as far removed from the divisive political slogans that stain walls elsewhere in the Balkan nation.'I want to be like a positive view. When you see my murals or my artworks, I don't want people to think too much about it.'It's for everyone.'During the Bosnian war, 1992-1995, Sarajevo endured the longest siege in modern conflict, as Bosnian Serb forces encircled and bombarded the city for 44 on the city left over 11,500 people dead, injured 50,000 and forced tens of thousands to in the wake of a difficult peace, that divided the country into two autonomous entities, Bosnia's economy continues to struggle leaving the physical scars of war still evident around the city almost three decades on.'After the war, segregation, politics, and nationalism were very strong, but graffiti and hip-hop broke down all those walls and built new bridges between generations,' local muralist Adnan Hamidovic, also known as rapper Frenkie, vividly remembers being caught by police early in his career, while tagging trains bound for Croatia in the northwest Bosnian town of 43-year-old said the situation was still tense then, with police suspecting he was doing 'something political.'For the young artist, only one thing mattered: 'Making the city your own.'Graffiti was a part of Sarajevo life even during the war, from signs warning of sniper fire to a bulletproof barrier emblazoned with the words 'Pink Floyd' — a nod to the band's 1979 album The Roses — fatal mortar impact craters filled with red resin — remain on pavements and roads around the city as a memorial to those killed in the he was young, Frenkie said the thrill of illegally painting gripped him, but it soon became 'a form of therapy' combined with a desire to do something significant in a country still recovering from war.'Sarajevo, after the war, you can imagine, it was a very, very dark place,' he said at Manifesto gallery where he exhibited earlier this year.'Graffiti brought life into the city and also color.'Sarajevo's annual Fasada festival, first launched in 2021, has helped promote the city's muralists while also repairing buildings, according to artist and founder Benjamin Cengic.'We look for overlooked neighborhoods, rundown facades,' Cengic team fixes the buildings that will also act as the festival's canvas, sometimes installing insulation and preserving badly damaged homes in the aim is to 'really work on creating bonds between local people, between artists.'Mostar, a city in southern Bosnia, will also host the 14th edition of its annual street art festival in unemployment nearing 30 percent in Bosnia, street art also offers an important springboard to young artists, University of Sarajevo sociology professor Sarina Bakic said.'The social context for young people is very difficult,' Bakic Radosevic, a researcher at Finland's Jyvaskyla University, said graffiti allowed youth to shake off any 'nationalist narrative or imposed identity.''It's a way of resisting,' Radosevic said.


Al Arabiya
19-07-2025
- Al Arabiya
Paris unveils mural of Josephine Baker to honor her legacy
Paris is reviving the spirit of US-French entertainer and civil rights activist Josephine Baker with a new mural. Fifty years after her death, Baker now gazes out over a diverse neighborhood of northeast Paris thanks to urban artist FKDL and a street art festival aimed at promoting community spirit. Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Baker became a megastar in the 1930s, especially in France, where she moved in 1925 as she sought to flee racism and segregation in the United States. In addition to her stage fame, Baker also spied on the Nazis for the French Resistance and marched alongside Martin Luther King Jr. in Washington. She died in Paris in 1975. 'I feel moved and I feel happy because this is part of a memory of my mother,' her son Brian Baker told the Associated Press at the unveiling of the mural Saturday. He was one of 12 children Josephine Baker adopted from around the world that she called her 'rainbow tribe' and what her son called a 'little United Nations.' The mural of Baker meant to symbolize freedom and resistance is among several painted in recent days in the neighborhood and organized by the association Paris Colors Ourq. The artist FKDL said he focuses on bringing women back into the urban landscape. 'Josephine Baker has always been for me a somewhat iconic figure of that era. Both wild and free-spirited but also deeply connected to music, musicals, and dance,' he said. 'She was an extraordinary character, an incredible woman.' Baker was the first Black woman inducted into France's Pantheon, joining such luminaries as philosopher Voltaire, scientist Marie Curie, and writer Victor Hugo. 'My mother wouldn't have liked words like 'iconic,' 'star,' or 'celebrity.' She would have said no, no, let's keep it simple,' her son said.


Al Arabiya
14-07-2025
- Al Arabiya
Pulitzer-winning novel 'James' is up for another major honor
Percival Everett's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel James is up for another literary honor. Everett's dramatic retelling of Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a fiction nominee for the 20th annual Dayton Literary Peace Prize, which comes with a $10,000 cash award. Besides the Pulitzer, James has also won the National Book Award and Kirkus Prize. David Greenberg's John Lewis, a biography of the late civil rights activist and congressman, is a nonfiction finalist, the Dayton prize foundation announced Thursday. Winners in both categories will be announced in September. The other fiction contenders are Priscilla Morris' Black Butterflies, Alejandro Puyana's Freedom Is a Feast, Kristin Hannah's The Women, Helen Benedict's The Good Deed, and Kaveh Akbar's Martyr! Besides John Lewis, the nonfiction nominees are Sunil Amrith's The Burning Earth, Leah Hunt-Hendrix and Astra Taylor's Solidarity, Annie Jacobsen's Nuclear War, Lauren Markham's A Map of Future Ruins, and Wendy Pearlman's The Home I Worked to Make. Established in 1995 and named for the historic agreements that ended the war in Bosnia, the Dayton prizes are given to authors whose work demonstrates the power of the written word to foster peace. Previous winners include Viet Thanh Nguyen's The Sympathizer, Edwidge Danticat's Brother, I'm Dying, and Ta-Nehisi Coates' We Were Eight Years in Power.