Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune

Discussing his 1971 urban art installation, Les Gisants de la Commune de Paris, Ernest Pignon-Ernest stated he felt it necessary for art dedicated to the Paris Commune to be created in the street. Only there could it do justice to a movement built on popular seizure of urban space. In recent years,...

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Main Author: Smith, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: University of Nebraska Press 2021
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author Smith, M
author_facet Smith, M
author_sort Smith, M
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description Discussing his 1971 urban art installation, Les Gisants de la Commune de Paris, Ernest Pignon-Ernest stated he felt it necessary for art dedicated to the Paris Commune to be created in the street. Only there could it do justice to a movement built on popular seizure of urban space. In recent years, as 'street art' has emerged as a significant artistic movement, the affinity Pignon-Ernest asserted between art in the street and the Commune has continued to make itself felt. This article discusses three Paris-based street artists who have referenced the Commune: A2, Morèje, and Rue Meurt d'Art. Their work resists the Commune's erasure from collective memory. However, their strategies sometimes risk relegating it to the past, stripping it of its political radicalism. This, combined with street art's growing commercialization and institutionalization, poses questions about urban art's capacity to engage the Commune on an ideological—not just iconographic—level.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ec016285-a661-4b78-99a1-72e14e5e960c2022-03-27T11:14:10ZBetween memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris CommuneJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ec016285-a661-4b78-99a1-72e14e5e960cEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordUniversity of Nebraska Press2021Smith, MDiscussing his 1971 urban art installation, Les Gisants de la Commune de Paris, Ernest Pignon-Ernest stated he felt it necessary for art dedicated to the Paris Commune to be created in the street. Only there could it do justice to a movement built on popular seizure of urban space. In recent years, as 'street art' has emerged as a significant artistic movement, the affinity Pignon-Ernest asserted between art in the street and the Commune has continued to make itself felt. This article discusses three Paris-based street artists who have referenced the Commune: A2, Morèje, and Rue Meurt d'Art. Their work resists the Commune's erasure from collective memory. However, their strategies sometimes risk relegating it to the past, stripping it of its political radicalism. This, combined with street art's growing commercialization and institutionalization, poses questions about urban art's capacity to engage the Commune on an ideological—not just iconographic—level.
spellingShingle Smith, M
Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title_full Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title_fullStr Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title_full_unstemmed Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title_short Between memory and mobilization: the graffiti and street art of the Paris Commune
title_sort between memory and mobilization the graffiti and street art of the paris commune
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