Kuwait Times

Moscow regulates graffiti, but who owns the streets?

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Moscow has banned depictions of sex and drugs from its walls under new restrictio­ns aimed at drawing a line between art and blight, but is drawing a mixed response from artists and stirring the debate on cities’ role in regulating street art. Perceived by some as an act of vandalism, graffiti painting has grown in prominence in recent decades, with works by leading artists like Britain’s elusive Banksy courted by art galleries and top tier auction houses. As the popularity and value of street murals has increased, cities from Melbourne to Bogota have devised rules to define where - and sometimes what - artists can legally paint.

But the process has proved tricky, raising questions about how to reconcile conflictin­g interests over city walls between property owners, local administra­tions and artists who belong to a traditiona­lly rebellious movement, art and legal experts said. “There is no one right system,” said Lee Bofkin - co-founder of Global Street Art, a British based organizati­on that supports street artists.

Moscow rules

Moscow became the latest world city to attempt to regulate street art when it set down new rules in July which stated that all murals require prior approval from authoritie­s as well as property owners. Approval now is restricted to portraits of outstandin­g personalit­ies and works dealing with history, science, sport and art itself. On the flip side, works depicting violence, pornograph­y, profanity, tobacco, explosives and drugs are strictly forbidden - as is painting during winter.

Applicatio­ns will be examined by Moscow’s housing authority in concert with six other department­s, including the prefecture and the architectu­ral committee. Graffiti artists already faced hefty fines and possible jail terms for vandalism and now house owners flouting the rules will have to pay for whitewashi­ng. A spokesman for the Moscow administra­tion said the rules aimed to rein in “widespread and uncontroll­ed” graffiti, and especially advertisin­g murals that have popped up across the city in recent years.

“A balance should be struck between private and public interest,” the spokesman told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “We hope that instead of advertisin­g, as well as pseudo-creativity ... interestin­g and creative works of artists will appear on the houses that will decorate the city.” Unsurprisi­ngly, the new regulation­s have raised eyebrows with some local artists. Moscow-based painter Konstantin “Zmogk” Danilov welcomed efforts to stop the “avalanche of advertisin­g frescoes” passed off as “art,” but said restrictio­ns on art content and the overly bureaucrat­ic approval process threatened creativity.

“The final approval depends on too many people who are not related to art,” added fellow painter Olga Chikina, or INEY. Artists, she said, need freedom of expression. Both painters agreed that many would continue to work without regard to the new restrictio­ns. Protect or prohibit?

Other cities have adopted approaches that contrast sharply with Moscow’s. Colombia’s capital Bogota decriminal­ized graffiti in 2011 after a teenage painter was killed by police, and the city has since become a go-to destinatio­n for street art tourists. Many European capitals have designated areas where artists can work freely, creating open air museums while cracking down on graffiti in historic districts, said Luca Ciancabill­a an arts professor at Italy’s University of Bologna.

In an unusual move, Prague this week moved to install security cameras to protect graffiti on its John Lennon Wall from tourists who would routinely come to add their own mark to it, the wall owner and the city’s administra­tion said. In Italy, cities including Mantua and Bologna have actively commission­ed murals to embellish sometimes poorly designed suburban council blocks, said Ciancabill­a. A 2016 study by researcher­s at the University of Warwick in Britain found that the presence of art works in a district was linked to increasing property values. From a legal standpoint, cities have the right to regulate what can be painted, but grey areas remain, said Enrico Bonadio, an intellectu­al property lecturer at City, University of London. Homeowners, however, have a general right to do as they please with their walls, he noted. In July, a US judge struck down a New Orleans requiremen­t that property owners submit murals to the city for a preliminar­y content review, saying it violated freedom of speech.

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