Art
IN PICS | Graffiti artists take the Covid-19 fight to the streets
Public artists across the world - and even in SA under the strictest lockdown - are creating works that comment on the novel coronavirus
Image: Getty
From a striking mural with a single word, "Fight", in Moscow to a simple stencil of the Mona Lisa wearing a face mask in Catania, Italy, and an amusing depiction of a portly US President Donald Trump as the coronavirus in San Francisco, the novel coronavirus has caught the attention of graffiti and street artists worldwide.
Earlier this month, the Guardian published a gallery titled "Coronavirus in street art" - a collection of images of large-scale works by diverse artists with one central theme: the fight against Covid-19.
A celebrated artwork by the street artist Banksy, Girl with a Pierced Eardrum, in Bristol, England, inspired by Johannes Vermeer's The Girl with the Pearl Earring, has a new addition: a giant face mask. No-one is sure if this was added by the guerilla artist himself.
Image: Ben Birchall/PA Images via Getty Images
Image: Fabrizio Villa/Getty Images
Image: Kate Green/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Wherever there is crisis or turmoil, socially or politically aware graffiti and street art will appear. Take, for instance, the volume of message-driven graffiti in Palestine, specifically along the West Bank barrier wall. Or the prolific use of "Peace Walls" as a space of protest at the height of the struggle between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland.
The wall becomes part of the message, or even a unifying space rather than a barrier.
Arguably the biggest driving force of graffiti is the sub-culture born on the streets of New York in the early 1970s, still very much alive internationally and in SA today. It is impossible to speak for an entire community, but the message of these graffiti writers is often not overtly political. Though this was definitely not the case for the 2016 US presidential election, when graffiti artists began to create large-scale pro-Bernie Sanders murals.
But what about the relationship between Covid-19 and street art in Africa?
In Senegal's capital, Dakar, RBS Crew, a graffiti collective, has created a 10m-long artwork that includes public health messages about washing hands, a thank-you to healthcare workers and even the number of a hotline to call for information. Because of the low literacy level in the country, the artists made sure that their artwork had a clear picture-based message.
Image: Alaattin Dogru/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Jozi-based graffiti artist Luck Mr Empty has been spending his lockdown creating clever digital Covid-themed images, which he has been sharing on Instagram (@luck_mrempty).
They include messages like "Keep Washing Your F****n Hands" and "Don't forget to sanitise your attitude." He may not have a wall, but that isn't stopping him from spreading the anti-Covid-19 message one upload at a time.
He says: "This series was influenced by the global pandemic and the devastating effect it is having on the world, socially and economically. I felt the need to use my voice as an artist in spreading the message and also to vent my frustrations. Since we cannot go outside and paint on walls through murals, I had to use what was available, which is my stationery, art supplies, laptop, and social media.
"I am really excited about the moderate lift on the lockdown and hopeful that we'll be allowed to create public art soon, since that's how some of us make a living."