MONTREAL, Canada — A mysterious creature
playing piano, a white tiger baring its fangs, and a huge Batgirl: dozens of
artists are busy this June painting giant frescoes for the tenth edition of
Montreal’s Mural Festival.
اضافة اعلان
Started in 2012, the street art event is looking to
be crowned the “leader in urban art” in
North America, organizer Pierre-Alain
Benoit told AFP.
Visitors can view more than 100 past and new murals
in central neighborhoods of the French-speaking metropolis painted by artists
from Canada and around the world. Twenty-one artists painted new murals this
year.
Among them is Caroline Monnet, an Indigenous artist
who traces her ancestry to the Great Lakes region of
Canada and the
US.
A mural artist paints an artwork on Saint-Laurent Boulevard during the Mural festival in Montreal, Quebec on June 16, 2022.
The first timer here chose to paint geometric
patterns of repeating triangles or lozenges common in Ashininaabe textiles,
that have been “passed from generation to generation”.
This celebration of her culture, she said, is also a
political statement of sorts, admonishing the nation’s colonial past.
“We have been excluded from any cultural expression
for a very long time,” she explained. “So, to be able to have my art on a
platform as large as this one, and to have it accessible to a wide audience as
well... I think that’s great.”
“I think we’re taking a step forward,” she said,
cans of spray paint in hand.
For others, such as Kata Hull, a painter from
Boston visiting Montreal with her husband, the open-air exhibition poses an
opportunity to reach a wider art audience.
“I like seeing art anywhere, so outside feels more
accessible to more people. And not everybody’s interested in gallery,” she
said.
Natalie Capuano, who snapped more than 500 photos of
the murals, expressed pride at seeing so many of them, saying “it changes the
look of the city.”
People watch artists at work during the Mural festival in Montreal, Quebec on June 16, 2022.
“It’s such a pleasure to come and discover new
murals every year, we are often surprised and it’s much more beautiful than
bare walls,” says the local resident.
Among the more famous murals in Montreal are two
massive portraits of its most famous singer-songwriter
Leonard Cohen, who died
in 2016.
The festival is also showcasing 25 hip-hop artists
including American rapper Lil Yachty and French rapper Kaaris.
And passersby who download the festival’s app can check out
augmented reality installations at two nearby parks.
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