Thursday, 10 August 2017

Viva Campobasso Viva Molise

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What do you think of GRAFFITI?????????????????????????


I am a great fan of art in all its forms, which includes GRAFFITI and STREET  ART

WHAT IS  the definition of GRAFFITI?


Graffiti (plural of graffito: "a graffito", is writing or drawings that have been scribbled, scratched or painted illicitly on a wall or other surface.

If it is legal by definition then it is not technically GRAFFITI but STREET ART.
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These amazing pieces of street art bedecks the walls of the bus station in Campobasso, the largest city in the Molise region.
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We are told as young children only to draw on paper, and not to scribble on the walls or furniture. 
I agree with Picasso, sadly as we grow up we become more inhibited and less able to express ourselves freely. Image result for picasso children and  art quote

In school, we are taught to stay inside the lines of a drawing when we are colouring it in. Our parents and teachers question us continuously about the pictures we paint. If we draw a house they remind us to add doors and windows. If we colour the sky yellow they tell us it should be blue. But why?
Because that is just the way it is. The sun is yellow, the sky is blue and grass is green.

Art is EXPRESSION, and in GRAFFITI and other forms of STREET ART  the artist is free to express himself without boundaries.

Campobasso, the regional capital of Molise has allowed the GRAFFITI artists to paint with a great deal of freedom around the city.

Some people are not terribly keen on the GRAFFITI emblazoned across buildings throughout the city here in Molise, or indeed anywhere.


Ban it, legalise it, put it behind glass ... no matter what  councils do, graffiti remains the scapegoat for all manner of urban ills, from burglary on one extreme to gentrification on the other. But it may have another effect on cities entirely

In villages, towns and cities across the world graffiti is used to express frustration, make political statements and to communicate openly.

In London more than a billion pounds sterling is spent every year cleaning GRAFFITI off walls and buildings throughout the city.
http://www.penningtons.co.uk/news-publications/latest-news/graffiti-clean-up-cost-or-windfall/

In my opinion this money would be better spent on ART and culture.

Here in EUROPE we live in a democracy, so we have FREEDOM of SPEECH and FREEDOM of EXPRESSION, don't we ?


Should there be boundaries or should we allow people the opportunity to express themselves freely and openly with no boundaries or rules?

Is part of the appeal of painting GRAFFITI on walls merely an opportunity to make a stand against the establishment.


Perhaps,  that is to some degree it's appeal.


There are many buildings which would benefit hugely from being emblazoned with images like these..

Campobasso

Image result for murals campobasso bus stationCivitacampomarino, a village I have written about before is already fairly well known for its murals and they hold a street art festival there every year.

Retracing our steps to Campobasso, just wandering around the city you will find street art, and graffiti in disused alleyways, empty shops, apartment buildings, and walls.

Some are political statements, slogans and tags, others brighter more colourful and intricate pictures.
Sadly many buildings here in Campobasso and in fact throughout the whole of Molise have fallen into disrepair.

Even many of the buildings just below the historical Monforte, the fortress which sits majestically on the hill overlooking the city, have been adorned with colourful fairly explicit Graffiti.

In the park which runs up the side of the hill to the fort, there are the stations of  the cross set out
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ViVa CAMPOBASSO
ViVa MOLISE


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