The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, May 22, 2013
 
Anonymous masked artist the Urban Maeztro protests violence in Tegucigalpa, Honduras
In this July 29, 2012 photo, an artist who calls himself the Urban Maeztro and prefers to remain anonymous for security reasons, works on a black-and-white reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" holding a pink gun at his studio before hanging it in a public space in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. The 26-year-old graphic artist left his day job at an advertising agency to work on pieces like this one, to encourage Hondurans think about how violent their country has become. AP Photo/Fernando Antonio.

By: Alberto Arce, Associated Press

TEGUCIGALPA (AP).- In the capital of one of the world's most dangerous countries, a hooded, masked man jumped out of a car on an assault mission.

His target: a crumbling wall on a garbage-strewn corner. With his accomplice acting as lookout, the man plastered a giant black-and-white reproduction of Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" — wielding a pink pistol. In minutes he was gone.

The city's self-proclaimed Urban Maeztro had struck again with another artistic "intervention" designed to make Hondurans think about the violence that has traumatized Tegucigalpa.

"The level of how common guns have become in this country has passed what is rationally admissible," said the 26-year-old graphic artist, who left his day job at an advertising agency to become the masked crusader. "It doesn't seem to surprise anyone, but for me it continues to be madness."

The artist uses the street name Urban Maeztro, a stylized translation of "Urban Master," to shield his true identity because the work is both dangerous and illegal.

The Honduran lacks the fame of the elusive British graffiti artist known only as Banksy, who has gained notoriety in Europe in recent years. Urban Maeztro said only his closest friends know that he launches the artistic assaults, dressed in a hoodie, his face covered with a kerchief depicting a skull.

The artist arrests passing viewers by defacing posters of artistic masterpieces, such as the Mona Lisa, with guns, grenades and other iconic tools of violence. He also employs more traditional graffiti, painting sections of metal light poles to look like bullets.

"There is a parallel between the brutal violation of a work so beautiful by adding a firearm and the violence and guns in Tegucigalpa, which could also be a beautiful city without them," he said.

His canvas is the streets of the Central American city of 1.2 million, which he describes as "captive, fearful and closed by a mixture of violence, poverty and an absence of public services." About 1,149 people were murdered in the Honduran capital last year, more than 87 for every 100,000. That's 10 times the rate considered an epidemic of violence by the World Health Organization — a number that has doubled in the last five years.

As a result, Tegucigalpa's streets are typically empty, as are public squares and other traditional meeting spots. Most people congregate in giant, indoor American-style shopping malls guarded by men with automatic rifles.

During a recent graffiti assault, even passing motorists swerved at the sight of the hooded artist in a Honduras tourist T-shirt and paint-speckled cargo pants drawing on the city's walls.

A security guard watched as he plastered Grant Wood's "American Gothic" on a wall In front of the National University, completely absorbed.

"Who pays you to do that?" the guard asked.

"No one," the artist answered.

"Then why do it?"

"To help you think."

It worked, as the guard stood contemplating whether the old farm couple was holding M-16 rifles instead of pitch forks.

During a recent interview, the commando artist smiled easily and never raised his voice as he described his mission with Zen-like tranquility. He said he started the guerrilla attacks in October when he got tired of working a high-pressure agency job creating art for advertisements.

"In a country that's sinking, using art to boost consumption rather than to provoke social change became unbearable for me," he said.

Now working fewer hours at a cultural center, he has more time and greater flexibility for his project.

Standing over a gas stove in the outdoor garden of a friend's home in Tegucigalpa's historic center, the artist stirred a boiling pot of the glue he uses to affix his posters. Laundry dried in the sun on a nearby clothesline.

The artist said the catalyst for his mission as an anonymous urban artist came when he entered a UNESCO poster contest on cultural diversity. When he lost the contest, he decided that the institutional doors for supporting his idea were closed.

"The natural place for art is the street, forget the middleman," he said.

Since then he's created a dynamic that includes making his own glue by boiling wheat and water, which he said is "the best adhesive and cheap," and roaming the city on Sunday afternoons seeking vacant walls and inspiration. His accomplice, the documentarian Junior Alvarez, keeps watch while he works, then photographs the final piece.

"At first I had anxiety when I went into the streets," the artist said, "but now I'm used to the adrenaline."

Art critic Bayardo Blandino, curator of the Women in the Arts museum, said that Urban Maeztro's style of graffiti is new to Honduras, and that he is pushing the limits on the country's freedom of expression.

"If he continues with perseverance, he will get a loyal following and have an effect," said Blandino, who does not know Urban Maeztro's true identity.

During a social gathering on a recent Saturday night, traditional graffiti artists criticized his work for mixing formats and material and not sticking to pure graffiti art. Unknown to them, the man who paints as Urban Maeztro was among them.

He doesn't want his interventions to seem naive. He knows art won't diminish the number of weapons or improve education in his country.

But it's possible, he said, to "provoke reflection about these problems, the first step for citizens to develop a critical awareness. Everything in street art is context."

In an area of the city that houses some of Tegucigalpa's most elegant hotels, the Urban Maeztro plastered an image of Rene Magritte's "Son of Man," substituting a grenade for the apple covering the face of the suited subject in a bowler hat.

Three students smoking marijuana under the trees didn't hesitate to comment.

"Those responsible for the violence in Honduras are hidden, we don't know their faces, but they're powerful, they wear suits and ties," said one of the students, Gerson Ortiz.

If death is part of everyday life in Honduras, then Urban Maeztro says his work should be about "breaking the daily macabre by changing its meaning."

Doing his work is not easy in a country that experienced a coup three years ago and is now plagued by daily murders, many of them blamed on the police.

The violence has directly touched the artist, who remembers one night when he heard a car slowing down behind him as he was working.

"I looked back just in time to see someone lower the window and stick out a gun," he said. "He shot at me three times without a word. He didn't get me. I was really lucky."


Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

July 31, 2012

Discovery at Border Cave reinforces the theory that modern man came from southern Africa

United States recovers apparent remains of World War II airmen in eastern Quebec

New York City movie, pin-up collection slated for auction at Guernsey’s Auction House

Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents exhibition of Lucian Freud portraits

Peter Blum Gallery announces that visionary filmmaker Chris Marker dies at age 91 in Paris

Heritage Lottery Fund awards £4.85 million for the National Museum of Scotland

Dallas Museum of Art presents The Legend of Quetzalcoatl in Southern Mexico

Leading UK corporate lawyer Bruce Minto appointed new Chair of National Museums Scotland

Cassone Panel to be unveiled by Moretti Fine Art at the Biennale des Antiquaires in Paris

Celebrate the life and art of Marilyn Monroe at Martin Lawrence Galleries in Las Vegas

Claxons: A group show curated by art critic Walter Robinson on view at Haunch of Venison

Extremely rare Brooklands racing motorcycle from the 1920s offered for sale at Bonhams

Newark Museum hosts exclusive Metropolitan Area Romare Bearden retrospective

"Across the Great Divide" at the Museum at Bethel Woods explores commune life of the counterculture

Participating artists announced for Design Museum's Digital Crystal exhibition

"Small Utopia: Ars Multiplicata" curated by Germano Celant on view at Fondazione Prada

Exhibition showcases the First Nations participation in the War of 1812 and their lives in its aftermath

Mladen Miljanovic's "Good Night - State of Body" opens at A plus A Slovenian Exhibition Centre

Steady sales and upbeat mood at second annual artMRKT Hamptons

Denver Art Museum exhibits the innovative airports of Fentress Architects

July 30, 2012

Exhibition of Flemish and Dutch Caravaggism on view at Musée des Augustins in Toulouse

Christie's announces third edition of the contemporary art in editions fair: Multiplied

The Estate of Bruno Giacometti to be sold at Christie's in Zurich to benefit children's hospitals

Sydney "grunge" painter Adam Cullen, winner of the prestigious Archibald Prize, died at age 47

American classics, such as a 1930 Duesenberg, top RM's $6.8 million Michigan sale

Fotomuseum Winterthur explores the current state of the document and documentary image in exhibition

Major exhibition of photographs of Muhammad Ali on view at Forman's Smokehouse Gallery in London

Carnival: Caribbean grandeur comes alive at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto

Unique film installation by Neil Jordan to be shown at IMMA at National Concert Hall

United Federation of Doll Clubs: Black cloth dolls growing in collector popularity

National Weather Center at the University of Oklahoma debuts art biennale, prizes for weather in art

Colonial African-American stoneware artists, stolen, hidden, now rediscovered

Monumental sized paintings by Sean Scully on view at Valencian Institute for Modern Art

Inaugural Art Southampton proves to be game changer on Hamptons art scene

"Accidentally on Purpose" exhibition opens at QUAD Derby

1970s New York graffiti artists still have urge to tag

COLOROPHIL: Nomad cool-down at Reinisch Contemporary

Old Master exhibition at the Flint Institute of Arts drawing statewide visitation

Design September: The annual meeting for designers to host more than 100 cultural events in Brussels

"With and By Nature": New photographs by Hartmut Neumann on view at Alfred Ehrhardt Stiftung

July 29, 2012

Pablo Picasso's "Paths of the South" examined at the Centre d’art La Malmaison in Cannes

Autumn sales at Koller Zurich to offer a spectacular rediscovery of an early painting by Goya

Exhibition at the Menil Collection explores the realm of silence in modern and contemporary art

MoMA presents first examination of childhood as a source for modern design thinking in the 20th century

Exquisite folios and paintings reveal the intricacies of Mughal and Persian art

"Rock, Paper, Scissors" exhibition at Leila Heller Gallery includes the work of nine artists

Groninger Museum presents the first large-scale solo exhibition of the work of Yin Xiuzhen

Doug Aitken's "The Source" to feature Tilda Swinton, Jack White, Mike Kelley and Jacques Herzog

Four international buildings shortlisted for the Royal Institute of British Architects Lubetkin Prize

Philadelphia Museum of Art presents paintings by Sean Scully including major acquisitions

American Museum of Natural History explores the fascination and complex world of spiders

Asheville Art Museum presents Mel Chin: High, Low and In Between, a special installation and recent works

Aspen Art Museum presents first U.S. solo exhibition of 2012 artist in residence Amelie von Wulffen

"Pursuit of Perfection: The Politics of Sport" opens at South London Gallery

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to be Honorary Chair of Gallery Weekend Chicago

"Small Skills, Special Effects: Unusual Chinese Works of Art" at the Royal Ontario Museum

Pupils' winning Game launched at design museum

Bellevue Art Museum's fundraiser breaks all-time record: Over $1 million raised

July 28, 2012

Exhibition at Pera Museum in Istanbul show sheds light on Goya's dark etchings

Museum Catharijneconvent acquires exceptional Protestant portraits by Cornelis Jonson van Ceulen

Aspen Art Museum presents first U.S. museum exhibition dedicated to ceramic work by Lucio Fontana

1947 Oscar, rare Beatles single and Marilyn signed headshot lead Heritage Auctions event

Galerie Lelong New York announces the representation of Chinese artist Lin Tianmiao

Tim White-Sobieski's multimedia installation 'cold forest' on view at Rudolf Budja Galerie in Salzburg

Museum of Modern Art's Fifth Annual Film Benefit to honor Quentin Tarantino

The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston announces major public murals by Brazilian artists Os Gemeos

Curlee Holton appointed Interim Executive Director of UMD's David C. Driskell Center

Summer of Sport at the Science Museum - inspired by the London 2012 Olympic & Paralympic Games

abc art berlin contemporary art fair will present some 120 galleries from 17 countries

Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit announces project for Detroit pavillion at 2012 Shanghai Biennale

West Coast's largest and most comprehensive art event to expand galleries, programming, and mixers

Rochelle Feinstein now represented by On Stellar Rays

Sotheby's Madeleine Hall presents a new series of hand-illustrated books

Jeff Rosenheim named Curator in Charge, and Malcolm Daniel named Senior Curator, at Met

San Francisco Bay Area furnishings for auction at Bonhams in August

Todd McFarlane 1990 Spider-Man #328 cover art brings world record $657,250+ at Heritage Auctions

July 27, 2012

Innovative and progressive Austrian artist Franz West dies at the age of 65 in Vienna

Pace London installs iconic Calder sculpture at St. Pancras, in celebration of the Olympics

Kunsthaus Zürich presents for the first time works from the bequest of Bruno Giacometti

Smithsonian picks paleontologist to lead Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History

Museum galleries become a treasure house of Chagall's works, including first local showing of 1957 Bible series

Diane Carroll selected as Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art Media Relations Manager

Saatchi Gallery brings Contemporary Korean art to a new international audience

Fine Allan Ramsay portrait of Scots lawyer John Campbell at Bonhams annual Scottish sale

Guggenheim exhibition examines Frank Lloyd Wright's first buildings in New York City

Valencian Institute for Modern Art opens exhibition featuring work by Frank Stella

Vietnamese government lends Australia its war monument to dead during the Vietnam War

Art and artifacts of the Americas on the auction block at Bonhams in San Francisco

Appraiser Caroline Ashleigh joins Heritage Auctions as consignment director

Technical innovations shed new light on archaeology

Chrysler Museum adds John Henry sculpture to its collection

Heritage Auctions debuts free Heritage Mobile Catalog for iPad

Art Students League of New York and the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation install 'BioMask'

Accidentally on Purpose exhibition in QUAD Derby

1912 Red Sox World Series trophy to be auctioned

July 26, 2012

Architects faced challenges transforming a derelict site into a showcase for London Olympics

Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez unveils new 100-peso Evita Peron note

Sotheby's to offer an important Wucai 'Fish' Jar and Cover in Fine Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art Sale

Christie's announces early highlights for the Modern and Contemporary Arab, Iranian and Turkish sale

Exhibition featuring a cross section of contemporary art from London opens at Shizaru

Exhibition combining rare and original work by Andy Warhol and Mauro Perucchetti opens at Halcyon Gallery

Christie's to offer works from the collections of James Perkins and Andrew Lamberty

International Contemporary Jewelry Fair to premiere aboard SeaFair -Art Basel Miami Beach week 2012

Pipeline Company threatens to demolish workshop of artist Aidan Salakhova

Boconnoc announced as winner of Historic Houses Association/Sotheby's Restoration Award

Beirut Art Fair 2012 confirms cultural and artistic potential of the ME.NA.SA region

An Age of Confidence: Photographs by Bedford Lemere & Co. on view at Sudley House

Museum in California preserves legacy of Grapes of Wrath author John Steinbeck

Reynolda House Museum of American Art awarded more than $180,000 in grants to put collections online

Academy Art Museum summer exhibitions sizzle in July

Northern Art Prize long list announced with new spring exhibition dates

New Design Museum wins £4.65m from Heritage Lottery Fund

New Museum opens major survey exhibition exploring the relationship between art and machines

A mausoleum built for Bolivar but worthy of Chavez

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site