While jobhunting a couple of weeks ago, I found myself with the odd few hours of downtime in between traveling to and attending interviews and faffing around with my CV. I decided to finally check out the Bogotá graffiti tour, which I'd read about and which sounded like a cool way to pass a few hours and hopefully see a different side to the city.
We set off from Las Aguas in the city centre, and mainly wandered around the Candelaria district. The whole tour took around two and a half hours and was very well presented and informative. It was led by an Aussie physiotherapist and street artist who knows a lot of the artists represented on the tour personally and has witnessed the rise of graffiti and street art in the Colombian capital first hand after coming here a few years ago.
Unfortunately I didn't take notes during the tour, so I've forgotten who painted most of the art work shown in the photos, but there was a great mix of local artists like Stinkfish (see first photo below) and DJ LU and international graffiteros like Pez (Barcelona) and our tour guide himself, who paints under the nom de plume Crisp.
Pez's signature character - a really fucking creepy fish
On Calle 12B with Carrera 4, near where I did my CELTA course
A restaurant near the Chorro, where the local students go to get pissed
One of the dozens of hostels in the Candelaria neighbourhood
A collaborative mural by a local crew and some individual artists
Another Stinkfish stencil piece. He apparently works from photographs he takes of people in the street.
A massive mural by Bastardilla, one of the few openly feminist voices in the graffiti scene. Her work often focuses on violence against women as well as poverty and environmental concerns.
One way the street artists make money here is to take on commercial commissions like film posters. There is a massive one on my way into the city centre for The Expendables 2, which actually looks alright.
Toxicomano are probably the most punk bunch of graffiteros in Bogotá. Their work is a lot less playful and more frontloaded with critical statements about the media, politicians and the corporate 'elite'.
Another collaborative mural, this time with the Monserrate church in the background.
A socio-critical, collaborative mural made by DJ LU, Toxicomano, Stinkfish and a guy called Lesivo on Calle 20 with Carrera 5.
Since the tour, I've been keeping my eyes open for more street art and graffiti, and it's true - there seems to be a very healthy scene in Bogotá, aided by a somewhat muddled legal situation and the creativity and persistence of the artists involved.
Check out work from Stinkfish, Pez, Bastardilla, and DJ LU.