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Posted: 2024-01-30T14:17:15Z | Updated: 2024-01-31T05:32:53Z The Powerful Street Art Campaign Spotlighting Israels War On Gaza | HuffPost

The Powerful Street Art Campaign Spotlighting Israels War On Gaza

The conflicts images are being turned into paintings and sketches with Obama HOPE poster creator Shepard Fairey involved in the Unmute Gaza project.
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Street artists worldwide are showing solidarity with photojournalists who are risking their lives covering Israels war on Gaza.

Shepard Fairey of Barack Obama HOPE poster fame is among the dozens of artists whove joined the Unmute Gaza project that is amplifying the work of local photojournalists on the ground amid Israels continued ban on international media from entering the territory.

Fairey and others have recreated some of the harrowing images emerging from Gaza as paintings and sketches, with a mute symbol in the middle.

The artworks are downloadable for free from the projects website . People are urged to print them out and paste them on walls in their own cities and towns to raise awareness of the conflict.

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Images that were taken by Belal Khaled were reimagined by street artist Ernest Zacharevic and are now on display in Penang, Malaysia.
Unmute Gaza / Antoine Loncle

By creating artworks based on the images of these professional photojournalists, we wish to build a bridge between our community of artists and those facing death every second in Gaza, the Unmute Gaza collective, whose members are donating their time and resources freely, wrote on Instagram

Its a simple way to support while showing the truth of what is happening, it added.

Fairey was compelled to join the initiative because Im a pacifist, he wrote on his website.

I was inspired to work from Belal Khaled s photo of a young boy who is crying out in pain from his injuries as blood runs down his face, he said. An image like this (and thousands of others) can strip away the superficial overlay of country, ethnicity, and religion and illuminate the basic human suffering that is happening in Gaza.

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Street artist Shepard Fairey's reworking of a photograph by Belal Khaled.
Unmute Gaza

The campaign went public in November 2023 when Unmute Gaza members unfurled banners featuring Spanish street artist Escifs recreations of photos that were taken by Khaled and Mahmoud Bassam from the third floor of the Guggenheim Museum in New York City.

The stunt temporarily forced the museum to close its entrance, HyperAllergic reported at the time. Since then, artists reworked images have appeared in 80 cities across 29 countries from Bogota, Colombia to Bristol, England.

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Unmute Gaza members unfurled banners in the Guggenheim Museum in New York to draw attention to their campaign.
Unmute Gaza

Last week, environmental activist organization Greenpeace joined Unmute Gaza to unfurl a gigantic banner featuring Faireys interpretation of Khaleds image on Madrids Reina Sofia Museum, the home of Pablo Picassos Guernica painting which shows the horrors of the Nazi German bombing campaign on the Spanish town of the same name.

Picassos haunting painting is a symbol of the suffering of civilians in war, Greenpeace executive director Eva Saldaa said in a statement sent to HuffPost.

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Unmute Gaza teamed up with Greenpeace to unfurl a gigantic banner on the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid, Spain.
Greenpeace / Mario Gomez

There is no better place to denounce what is happening in Gaza, to reconnect with our humanity in order to put life before everything else, to demand respect for current international law and to call for a ceasefire through the work of two great artists, Saldaa added.

Israel launched its war on Gaza in response to Hamas surprise Oct. 7 attack in which 1,200 people many civilians were killed.

Israels retaliation has, to date, killed more than 25,000 Palestinians.

Some 85% of the territorys 2.3 million residents have been forced from their homes .

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Pablo Picasso's "Guernica" depicts the horrors of the Nazi German bombing of the northern Spanish town of the same name.
THOMAS COEX via Getty Images

On its website, the Unmute Gaza group condemned Hamas Oct. 7 attacks yet also slammed the disproportionate response of the Israeli government for creating mass humanitarian suffering, adding the violence stemmed from  deeply rooted causes that can be traced back to the XIX century.

The group wrote, Explaining the root causes of violence is under no circumstance a justification for it. We believe violence begets violence. Only peaceful, non-violent, and equitable measures will break the ongoing spiral of violence.

It added, We see ourselves as humanitarians. We stand in solidarity with all oppressed people, including the Palestinian people, and advocate for peoples inherent dignity.

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