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Blu (artist)

Blu is the pseudonym of an Italian artist who conceals his real identity.[1] He was born in Senigallia. He lives in Bologna and has been active in street art since 1999.

Blu's logo

Places edit

Central and South America edit

Blu's nomadic spirit peaked in 2005. From the end of that year, Blu spent most of his time jumping from place to place in self-guided travels, linking his itineraries to the festivals to which he was invited. During that time, he collaborated with Ericailcane and several artists from Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Honduras in a festival in Managua called "Murales de Octubre." During the festival, he painted a wall, significant in the history of South American murals, on the Avenida Bolivar where, in 1979, Victor Canifrù celebrated the Sandinista revolution.[2] This mural was then dubbed "Hombre Banano" (Banana Man) by the locals, referring to the protest of the workers on banana plantations.[3]

The following year, from October 2006 to December 2006, he returned to Central and South America for a long circuit of murals that included Mexico City, Guatemala City, Managua, San José (Costa Rica), and finally, Buenos Aires (Argentina). He was followed during the trip by filmmaker Lorenzo Fonda, who documented the experience and turned it into the documentary film Megunica, for which Blu created a series of animated segments using digital software. The film also includes the first documented painted stop-motion animation by Blu.[4] A year later he was again in South America, in São Paulo, Brazil, participating in the festival "A Conquista do Espaço" (Conquering Space). On that occasion he came up with a new interpretation of the "Christ of Corcovado" of Rio de Janeiro. In Blu's version Christ is literally submerged by tons of guns and rifles. From the Fall of 2007 to the Spring of 2008, he lived in Buenos Aires, creating a video called Muto[5] (Silent), which received the Grand Prix 2009 from the Festival of Clermont-Ferrand.[6] This video is composed of hundreds of paintings on walls, made throughout many streets of Buenos Aires and, frame by frame, creates more than seven minutes of an animated mural.

In 2009 Blu started his umpteenth tour around South America visiting Bogotá for the festival "Memoria Canalla", then to Montevideo, Uruguay, back to Buenos Aires and, for the first time, to Lima, Peru, where he painted the entire façade of an historical building in the central Avenida Arenales. In this huge mural Blu seems to reinterpret the history of South America, a continent that has been violated by both ancient and modern conquistadores.

In 2013 he participated in the Bienal de Arte Urbano (BAU) in Cochabamba, Bolivia.[7]

North America edit

In 2008 Blu accepted an invitation from the Deitch Gallery in New York to paint the exterior of their Long Island location. After being invited by the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles to paint an exterior wall of the museum for its "Art in the Street" exhibition, its director Jeffrey Deitch ordered the resulting mural to be whitewashed the day after it was finished, probably due to its political content. The mural represented two rows of coffins each draped with a one-dollar bill in place of the American flag.[8]

West Bank edit

In 2007 Santa's Ghetto,[9] a London-based art collective which organises annual happenings of painting performances and print trade fairs, invited Blu to a festival that took place in the West Bank. Blu was part of a group of artists, including Banksy, Mark Jenkins, Ron English, Swoon, and Faile who painted on the wall around Bethlehem that separates the West Bank from Israel.[10] On a watchtower border Blu painted a figure of a person trying to tear down the walls with his finger.[11]

Europe edit

Austria edit

 
Vienna, Albern harbour mural, 2010-2013

In 2010 Blu was invited to Vienna to paint a mural at the Danube River harbour near Albern in the city district of Simmering. First suggested in 1923 as one possibility for the expansion of Vienna's harbour facilities, Albern was selected for realisation by the German Reich Ministry of Transport (Reichsverkehrsministerium) in 1939, a year after the "Anschluss" of Austria to Nazi Germany. The project was to serve as a logistic node of a future geo- and biopolitical order, designated for the transshipment of grain from the annexed or economically colonized regions of eastern and south-eastern Europe to the heartlands of the German Reich. For the construction of the harbour basin and its five granaries between 1939 and 1942 the Nazi regime employed forced labour. Realized on one of the granaries, Blu's mural called upon the overdue historical and social commemoration of the place's charged history and the unknown fates of the forced labourers who built it. The commissioned piece was destroyed in autumn 2013 in the course of renovation works.[12][13]

England edit

In 2007 Blu went to London for the first time where he made many pieces around Camden Town and Willow Street, and at the former headquarters of art-gallery website Pictures on Walls.[14] That same summer he took part in a two-man exhibit with Ericailcane at the Lazarides Gallery.[15] The following year, the Tate Modern[16] presented an exhibition on the phenomenon of street art and invited Blu,[17] along with JR,[18] Faile, Sixeart, and Os Gêmeos[19] e Nunca, to paint its entire main façade.[20]

Germany edit

 
Murals in Cuvrystraße, 2007-2014.

Blu worked in Germany on many occasions between 2006 and 2009, mostly in Berlin, and always around Cuvrystraße in a multi-ethnic neighborhood called Kreuzberg. Thanks to his participation in several of the festivals "Backjump"[21] and "Planetprozess,"[22] he had the opportunity to create some of his works, one of which was painted in combination with gigantic photos by the French artist JR.

In 2006, during one of these trips, Blu made his first digital animation from images painted directly on a wall, a technique that would be a recurrent theme of many of his future videos such as "Muto."

In consultation with Blu the two murals at Cuvrystraße were covered with black paint in 2014 by a group of people as a sign of discontent with the city's urban development policies in the area.[23]

Italy edit

Italy, above any other country, can boast of having the majority of Blu's graffiti, both illegal and legal. Among the public projects worth noting are the façade of PAC[24] (the Contemporary Art Pavilion) in Milan, finished in 2008; the murals in that city's Bicocca and Lambrate train stations, done in 2008 and in 2009; three editions of "Spina Festival" in Comacchio (2005, 2006 and 2007); two editions of "Fame Festival a Grottaglie[25]" (2008 and 2009). In this last one, Blu completed a video-animation with the New York-based artist, David Ellis. Blu has also taken part in many editions of the festival "Icone[26]" in Modena and in Ancona's "Festival Pop Up" in 2008 where he painted along with Ericailcane a gigantic silos next to the harbor waterfront. Other Italian cities where Blu has left his mark are varied, among which are Prato, Florence, Grosseto, Turin, Ancona, Rovereto, Verona and Pesaro. In Bologna there were most of his first works because of his studies in the city's University. In 2016 he deleted all murals painted in Bologna due to the decision taken by the municipality who made an exhibition trying to profit from Blu's graffiti without his permission.[27][28]

Blu has also painted in several "Centri Sociali", places that are between squats and self-managed cultural centers. In Bologna his work is visible at XM24, TPO, Livello 57, Crash; in Rome at Forte Prenestino and Collatino; in Milan at Cox 18 and Leoncavallo and in Pisa at Cantiere San Bernardo.

Spain edit

 
Ordes, 2012.

Blu has frequently visited Spain. At the festival "Segundo Asalto" in Zaragoza, he, along with the artists San, Eltono,[29] Nuria,[30] and Nano, painted a mural of a colossal minotaur picking up an astonished man. Blu's murals can also be found in Valencia, Linares, Madrid and Barcelona. In Barcelona's Barrio Carmelo neighborhood, Blu took part in the 2008 edition of the festival "The Influencers".[31] With the global economic crisis looming, Blu painted a threatening shark whose skin is completely covered in euro bills.

US censorship edit

Bibliography edit

  • Backjumps (2007). The Live Issue #3: Urban Communication and Aesthetics, William Stratmann, ISBN 978-3-937946-27-6[33][34]
  • Dietrich, Lucas (2009). 60: Innovators Shaping Our Creative Future, Thames & Hudson.
  • Hundertmark, Christian (2006). The Art of Rebellion 2: World of Urban Art Activism (No. 2)
  • Iosifidis, Kiriakos (2009). Mural Art, Volume 2: Murals on Huge Public Surfaces Around the World from Graffiti to Trompe L'Oeil, Gingko Press.
  • Lazarides, Steve (2009). Outsiders: Art by People
  • Lewisohn, Cedar, editor (2008). Street Art: The Graffiti Revolution, HNA Books.
  • Manco, Tristan (2007). Street Sketchbook: Inside the Journals of International Street and Graffiti Artists, Chronicle Books.
  • Tschiedl, Roman (2014). BLU - Untitled/it is obvious, In: Taig, Maria [Ed.]: Kör vie 07-10: Public art Vienna 2007 - 2010, Verlag für moderne Kunst

Editions edit

  • Blu (2018). Minima muralia, Special edition, Zooo Print and Press[35]
  • Blu (2018). Minima muralia, Zooo Print and Press[36]
  • Blu (2008). Blu 2004-2007, Studio Cromie[37]
  • Blu (2006). Nulla, Zooo Print and Press.
  • Blu (2005). 25 disegni (with Ericailcane), Zooo Print and Press.

References edit

  1. ^ "Artist Retrospective: Blu". StreetArtNews. 2021-12-15. Retrieved 2023-09-01.
  2. ^ David Kunzle, The murals of revolutionary Nicaragua, 1979-1992, University of California Press, 1995.
  3. ^ Henry J. Frundt, Fair Bananas, Farmers, Workers, and Consumers Strive to Change an Industry, University of Arizona Press, 2008.
  4. ^ Blu's First Stop-Motion Street Art Experiments in 'Megunica'
  5. ^ Blu, Muto, 2008, via Youtube March 26, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Clermont-Ferrand Film Festival Website
  7. ^ "Blu-BAU". BAU-mARTadero. Retrieved 25 March 2020.
  8. ^ "Los Angeles MOCA Censors Street Artist's Commissioned Mural". Huffington Post. 10 December 2010.
  9. ^ Santa's Ghetto's Website
  10. ^ Sheera Claire Frenkel, "Let us spray: Banksy hits Bethlehem", The Times, December 3, 2007.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-03-04. Retrieved 2010-03-06.
  12. ^ Roman Tschiedl: BLU - Untitled/it is obvious, in: Maria Taig, Barbara Horvath (Hg.): Kör vie 07-10: Public Art in Vienna, 2007-2010, Verlag für moderne Kunst, Nuremberg 2014, p 206; see also Untitled/it is obvious, koer.or.at, 2010
  13. ^ Ortrun Veichtlbauer: Braune Donau. Transportweg nationalsozialistischer Biopolitik, in: Christian Reder, Erich Klein (Hg.): Graue Donau – Schwarzes Meer, Springer, Vienna/New York, 2008, p 240 f (in German)
  14. ^ Pictures on Walls’ Website
  15. ^ Lazarides Gallery's Website
  16. ^ Tate Gallery, Street Art Exhibition's Website March 23, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Francesca Gavin, "Street art is now mainstream, The Guardian, April 8, 2008.
  18. ^ J-R's Website
  19. ^ Gemeos’ Website[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ Backjump Festival's Website
  21. ^ Planetprozess’ Website
  22. ^ ”When the finger points to the moon… “, Blog, blublu.org, retrieved 6. June 2015
  23. ^ Padiglione dell’Arte Contemporanea di Milano (PAC) Website
  24. ^ Fame Festival's Website
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-03-04. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  26. ^ "Street Artist #Blu Is Erasing All The Murals He Painted in #Bologna - Giap". Giap. 2016-03-12. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
  27. ^ "BLU blog March 12th, 2016". blublu.org. Retrieved 2018-02-18.
  28. ^ El Tono's Website
  29. ^ Nuria's Website
  30. ^ The Influencers Festival's Website
  31. ^ Censorship at MOCA
  32. ^ "Book Backjumps – The Live Issue #3, Kunstraum Kreuzberg, kunstraumkreuzberg.de". Retrieved 2021-05-02.
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-17. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
  34. ^ "Book MINIMA MURALIA / SPECIAL EDITION". Retrieved 2021-05-02.
  35. ^ "Book MINIMA MURALIA". Retrieved 2021-05-02.
  36. ^ "Book Blu 2004-2007, Studio Cromie". Retrieved 2021-05-02.

External links edit

  • buenosairesstreetart.com: Blu
  • Blu

artist, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, tone, style, reflect, encyclopedic, tone, used, wikipedia, wikipedia, guide, writing, better, art. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Blu is the pseudonym of an Italian artist who conceals his real identity 1 He was born in Senigallia He lives in Bologna and has been active in street art since 1999 Blu s logo Contents 1 Places 1 1 Central and South America 1 2 North America 1 3 West Bank 1 4 Europe 1 4 1 Austria 1 4 2 England 1 4 3 Germany 1 4 4 Italy 1 4 5 Spain 2 US censorship 3 Bibliography 4 Editions 5 References 6 External linksPlaces editCentral and South America edit Blu s nomadic spirit peaked in 2005 From the end of that year Blu spent most of his time jumping from place to place in self guided travels linking his itineraries to the festivals to which he was invited During that time he collaborated with Ericailcane and several artists from Costa Rica Nicaragua Guatemala and Honduras in a festival in Managua called Murales de Octubre During the festival he painted a wall significant in the history of South American murals on the Avenida Bolivar where in 1979 Victor Canifru celebrated the Sandinista revolution 2 This mural was then dubbed Hombre Banano Banana Man by the locals referring to the protest of the workers on banana plantations 3 The following year from October 2006 to December 2006 he returned to Central and South America for a long circuit of murals that included Mexico City Guatemala City Managua San Jose Costa Rica and finally Buenos Aires Argentina He was followed during the trip by filmmaker Lorenzo Fonda who documented the experience and turned it into the documentary film Megunica for which Blu created a series of animated segments using digital software The film also includes the first documented painted stop motion animation by Blu 4 A year later he was again in South America in Sao Paulo Brazil participating in the festival A Conquista do Espaco Conquering Space On that occasion he came up with a new interpretation of the Christ of Corcovado of Rio de Janeiro In Blu s version Christ is literally submerged by tons of guns and rifles From the Fall of 2007 to the Spring of 2008 he lived in Buenos Aires creating a video called Muto 5 Silent which received the Grand Prix 2009 from the Festival of Clermont Ferrand 6 This video is composed of hundreds of paintings on walls made throughout many streets of Buenos Aires and frame by frame creates more than seven minutes of an animated mural In 2009 Blu started his umpteenth tour around South America visiting Bogota for the festival Memoria Canalla then to Montevideo Uruguay back to Buenos Aires and for the first time to Lima Peru where he painted the entire facade of an historical building in the central Avenida Arenales In this huge mural Blu seems to reinterpret the history of South America a continent that has been violated by both ancient and modern conquistadores In 2013 he participated in the Bienal de Arte Urbano BAU in Cochabamba Bolivia 7 North America edit In 2008 Blu accepted an invitation from the Deitch Gallery in New York to paint the exterior of their Long Island location After being invited by the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles to paint an exterior wall of the museum for its Art in the Street exhibition its director Jeffrey Deitch ordered the resulting mural to be whitewashed the day after it was finished probably due to its political content The mural represented two rows of coffins each draped with a one dollar bill in place of the American flag 8 West Bank edit In 2007 Santa s Ghetto 9 a London based art collective which organises annual happenings of painting performances and print trade fairs invited Blu to a festival that took place in the West Bank Blu was part of a group of artists including Banksy Mark Jenkins Ron English Swoon and Faile who painted on the wall around Bethlehem that separates the West Bank from Israel 10 On a watchtower border Blu painted a figure of a person trying to tear down the walls with his finger 11 Europe edit Austria edit nbsp Vienna Albern harbour mural 2010 2013In 2010 Blu was invited to Vienna to paint a mural at the Danube River harbour near Albern in the city district of Simmering First suggested in 1923 as one possibility for the expansion of Vienna s harbour facilities Albern was selected for realisation by the German Reich Ministry of Transport Reichsverkehrsministerium in 1939 a year after the Anschluss of Austria to Nazi Germany The project was to serve as a logistic node of a future geo and biopolitical order designated for the transshipment of grain from the annexed or economically colonized regions of eastern and south eastern Europe to the heartlands of the German Reich For the construction of the harbour basin and its five granaries between 1939 and 1942 the Nazi regime employed forced labour Realized on one of the granaries Blu s mural called upon the overdue historical and social commemoration of the place s charged history and the unknown fates of the forced labourers who built it The commissioned piece was destroyed in autumn 2013 in the course of renovation works 12 13 England edit In 2007 Blu went to London for the first time where he made many pieces around Camden Town and Willow Street and at the former headquarters of art gallery website Pictures on Walls 14 That same summer he took part in a two man exhibit with Ericailcane at the Lazarides Gallery 15 The following year the Tate Modern 16 presented an exhibition on the phenomenon of street art and invited Blu 17 along with JR 18 Faile Sixeart and Os Gemeos 19 e Nunca to paint its entire main facade 20 Germany edit nbsp Murals in Cuvrystrasse 2007 2014 Blu worked in Germany on many occasions between 2006 and 2009 mostly in Berlin and always around Cuvrystrasse in a multi ethnic neighborhood called Kreuzberg Thanks to his participation in several of the festivals Backjump 21 and Planetprozess 22 he had the opportunity to create some of his works one of which was painted in combination with gigantic photos by the French artist JR In 2006 during one of these trips Blu made his first digital animation from images painted directly on a wall a technique that would be a recurrent theme of many of his future videos such as Muto In consultation with Blu the two murals at Cuvrystrasse were covered with black paint in 2014 by a group of people as a sign of discontent with the city s urban development policies in the area 23 Italy edit Italy above any other country can boast of having the majority of Blu s graffiti both illegal and legal Among the public projects worth noting are the facade of PAC 24 the Contemporary Art Pavilion in Milan finished in 2008 the murals in that city s Bicocca and Lambrate train stations done in 2008 and in 2009 three editions of Spina Festival in Comacchio 2005 2006 and 2007 two editions of Fame Festival a Grottaglie 25 2008 and 2009 In this last one Blu completed a video animation with the New York based artist David Ellis Blu has also taken part in many editions of the festival Icone 26 in Modena and in Ancona s Festival Pop Up in 2008 where he painted along with Ericailcane a gigantic silos next to the harbor waterfront Other Italian cities where Blu has left his mark are varied among which are Prato Florence Grosseto Turin Ancona Rovereto Verona and Pesaro In Bologna there were most of his first works because of his studies in the city s University In 2016 he deleted all murals painted in Bologna due to the decision taken by the municipality who made an exhibition trying to profit from Blu s graffiti without his permission 27 28 Blu has also painted in several Centri Sociali places that are between squats and self managed cultural centers In Bologna his work is visible at XM24 TPO Livello 57 Crash in Rome at Forte Prenestino and Collatino in Milan at Cox 18 and Leoncavallo and in Pisa at Cantiere San Bernardo Spain edit nbsp Ordes 2012 Blu has frequently visited Spain At the festival Segundo Asalto in Zaragoza he along with the artists San Eltono 29 Nuria 30 and Nano painted a mural of a colossal minotaur picking up an astonished man Blu s murals can also be found in Valencia Linares Madrid and Barcelona In Barcelona s Barrio Carmelo neighborhood Blu took part in the 2008 edition of the festival The Influencers 31 With the global economic crisis looming Blu painted a threatening shark whose skin is completely covered in euro bills US censorship editHe was invited in Los Angeles for the exhibition Art in the Streets but his work on the side of the Geffen Contemporary Wing of MOCA was censored 32 Bibliography editBackjumps 2007 The Live Issue 3 Urban Communication and Aesthetics William Stratmann ISBN 978 3 937946 27 6 33 34 Dietrich Lucas 2009 60 Innovators Shaping Our Creative Future Thames amp Hudson Hundertmark Christian 2006 The Art of Rebellion 2 World of Urban Art Activism No 2 Iosifidis Kiriakos 2009 Mural Art Volume 2 Murals on Huge Public Surfaces Around the World from Graffiti to Trompe L Oeil Gingko Press Lazarides Steve 2009 Outsiders Art by People Lewisohn Cedar editor 2008 Street Art The Graffiti Revolution HNA Books Manco Tristan 2007 Street Sketchbook Inside the Journals of International Street and Graffiti Artists Chronicle Books Tschiedl Roman 2014 BLU Untitled it is obvious In Taig Maria Ed Kor vie 07 10 Public art Vienna 2007 2010 Verlag fur moderne KunstEditions editBlu 2018 Minima muralia Special edition Zooo Print and Press 35 Blu 2018 Minima muralia Zooo Print and Press 36 Blu 2008 Blu 2004 2007 Studio Cromie 37 Blu 2006 Nulla Zooo Print and Press Blu 2005 25 disegni with Ericailcane Zooo Print and Press References edit Artist Retrospective Blu StreetArtNews 2021 12 15 Retrieved 2023 09 01 David Kunzle The murals of revolutionary Nicaragua 1979 1992 University of California Press 1995 Henry J Frundt Fair Bananas Farmers Workers and Consumers Strive to Change an Industry University of Arizona Press 2008 Blu s First Stop Motion Street Art Experiments in Megunica Blu Muto 2008 via Youtube Archived March 26 2010 at the Wayback Machine Clermont Ferrand Film Festival Website Blu BAU BAU mARTadero Retrieved 25 March 2020 Los Angeles MOCA Censors Street Artist s Commissioned Mural Huffington Post 10 December 2010 Santa s Ghetto s Website Sheera Claire Frenkel Let us spray Banksy hits Bethlehem The Times December 3 2007 Santa s Ghetto Bethlehem Art Das Kunst Magazine Dec 12 2007 Archived from the original on 2009 03 04 Retrieved 2010 03 06 Roman Tschiedl BLU Untitled it is obvious in Maria Taig Barbara Horvath Hg Kor vie 07 10 Public Art in Vienna 2007 2010 Verlag fur moderne Kunst Nuremberg 2014 p 206 see also Untitled it is obvious koer or at 2010 Ortrun Veichtlbauer Braune Donau Transportweg nationalsozialistischer Biopolitik in Christian Reder Erich Klein Hg Graue Donau Schwarzes Meer Springer Vienna New York 2008 p 240 f in German Pictures on Walls Website Lazarides Gallery s Website Tate Gallery Street Art Exhibition s Website Archived March 23 2010 at the Wayback Machine Francesca Gavin Street art is now mainstream The Guardian April 8 2008 J R s Website Gemeos Website permanent dead link Street art to adorn Tate s walls BBC April 2 2008 Backjump Festival s Website Planetprozess Website When the finger points to the moon Blog blublu org retrieved 6 June 2015 Padiglione dell Arte Contemporanea di Milano PAC Website Fame Festival s Website Icone Festival s Website Archived from the original on 2010 03 04 Retrieved 2019 10 18 Street Artist Blu Is Erasing All The Murals He Painted in Bologna Giap Giap 2016 03 12 Retrieved 2018 02 18 BLU blog March 12th 2016 blublu org Retrieved 2018 02 18 El Tono s Website Nuria s Website The Influencers Festival s Website Censorship at MOCA Book Backjumps The Live Issue 3 Kunstraum Kreuzberg kunstraumkreuzberg de Retrieved 2021 05 02 Backjumps The Live Issue 3 Kunstraum Kreuzberg fromheretofame com Archived from the original on 2008 05 17 Retrieved 2021 05 02 Book MINIMA MURALIA SPECIAL EDITION Retrieved 2021 05 02 Book MINIMA MURALIA Retrieved 2021 05 02 Book Blu 2004 2007 Studio Cromie Retrieved 2021 05 02 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blu artist buenosairesstreetart com Blu Blu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blu artist amp oldid 1185531251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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