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Athens, Greece, January 2013
Photo: de Nève
de Nève
Bucharest, Romania, March 2010
Photo: Tina Olteanu
Olteanu
Bruneck, Italy, February 2013
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
"Anti-Fascist City Athens", Athens, Greece, January 2013
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Athens, Greece, January 2013
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
"The economy is not in a crisis, it is the crisis", Bottmingen, Switzerland, January 2013
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
"Stop police violence", Bruneck, Italy, February 2013
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Dance, Basel, Switzerland, September 2008
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Sao Paulo, Brazil, February 2011
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Basel, Switzerland, September 2009
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Vienna, Austria, 2012
Photo: unknown photographer
unbekannt
Marburg, Germany, March 2012
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Berlin, Germany, February 2011
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
Sao Paulo, Brazil, February 2011
Photo: Dorothée de Nève
de Nève
You can find it all over the world – on walls and buildings, in train stations and on railway cars. Its message may be – but doesn't have to be – political.
This content was published on
March 6, 2013 - 11:00
Graffiti often materialises at night, in fog. It can be black & white or colourful or garish. Some people regard it as art; for others it’s an outrage.
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