Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future

Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future
facades of old buildings renovated with murals by Bosnian street artist Benjamin Cengic and his creative team in Sarajevo. (AFP)
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Updated 28 July 2025

Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future

Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future
  • Graffiti was a part of Sarajevo life even during the war, from signs warning of sniper fire to a bulletproof barrier emblazoned with the words “Pink Floyd”

SARAJEVO: Bullet holes still pockmark many Sarajevo buildings; others threaten collapse under disrepair, but street artists in the Bosnian capital are using their work to reshape a city steeped in history.
A half-pipe of technicolor snakes its way through the verdant Mount Trebevic, once an Olympic bobsled route — now layered in ever-changing art.
“It’s a really good place for artists to come here to paint, because you can paint here freely,” Kerim Musanovic told AFP, spraycan in hand as he repaired his work on the former site of the 1984 Sarajevo Games.
Retouching his mural of a dragon, his painting’s gallery is this street art hotspot between the pines.
Like most of his work, he paints the fantastic, as far removed from the divisive political slogans that stain walls elsewhere in the Balkan nation.
“I want to be like a positive view. When you see my murals or my artworks, I don’t want people to think too much about it.
“It’s for everyone.”
During the Bosnian war, 1992-1995, Sarajevo endured the longest siege in modern conflict, as Bosnian Serb forces encircled and bombarded the city for 44 months.
Attacks on the city left over 11,500 people dead, injured 50,000 and forced tens of thousands to flee.
But in the wake of a difficult peace, that divided the country into two autonomous entities, Bosnia’s economy continues to struggle leaving the physical scars of war still evident around the city almost three decades on.
“After the war, segregation, politics, and nationalism were very strong, but graffiti and hip-hop broke down all those walls and built new bridges between generations,” local muralist Adnan Hamidovic, also known as rapper Frenkie, said.
Frenkie vividly remembers being caught by police early in his career, while tagging trains bound for Croatia in the northwest Bosnian town of Tuzla.
The 43-year-old said the situation was still tense then, with police suspecting he was doing “something political.”
For the young artist, only one thing mattered: “Making the city your own.”
Graffiti was a part of Sarajevo life even during the war, from signs warning of sniper fire to a bulletproof barrier emblazoned with the words “Pink Floyd” — a nod to the band’s 1979 album The Wall.
Sarajevo Roses — fatal mortar impact craters filled with red resin — remain on pavements and roads around the city as a memorial to those killed in the strikes.
When he was young, Frenkie said the thrill of illegally painting gripped him, but it soon became “a form of therapy” combined with a desire to do something significant in a country still recovering from war.
“Sarajevo, after the war, you can imagine, it was a very, very dark place,” he said at Manifesto gallery where he exhibited earlier this year.
“Graffiti brought life into the city and also color.”
Sarajevo’s annual Fasada festival, first launched in 2021, has helped promote the city’s muralists while also repairing buildings, according to artist and founder Benjamin Cengic.
“We look for overlooked neighborhoods, rundown facades,” Cengic said.
His team fixes the buildings that will also act as the festival’s canvas, sometimes installing insulation and preserving badly damaged homes in the area.
The aim is to “really work on creating bonds between local people, between artists.”
Mostar, a city in southern Bosnia, will also host the 14th edition of its annual street art festival in August.
With unemployment nearing 30 percent in Bosnia, street art also offers an important springboard to young artists, University of Sarajevo sociology professor Sarina Bakic said.
“The social context for young people is very difficult,” Bakic said.
Ljiljana Radosevic, a researcher at Finland’s Jyvaskyla University, said graffiti allowed youth to shake off any “nationalist narrative or imposed identity.”
“It’s a way of resisting,” Radosevic said.


G7 diplomats publicly show support for Ukraine but avoid contentious issues like trade

G7 diplomats publicly show support for Ukraine but avoid contentious issues like trade
Updated 10 sec ago

G7 diplomats publicly show support for Ukraine but avoid contentious issues like trade

G7 diplomats publicly show support for Ukraine but avoid contentious issues like trade
  • Ministers say they are economic costs to Russia and exploring measures against those who finance Russia’s war efforts on Ukraine
  • Canada announced more sanctions against Russia, and Britain has pledged money for Ukraine’s energy infrastructure

NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ontario: Top diplomats from the Group of Seven industrialized democracies publicly showed their consensus on Ukraine and Sudan on Wednesday, but stayed away from contentious issues like the US military strikes on boats in the Caribbean and trade.
The foreign ministers of the G7 met with Ukraine’s foreign minister on Wednesday as Kyiv tries to fend off Russian aerial attacks that have brought rolling blackouts across the country. Andriy Sybiha said Ukraine needs the support of its partners to survive what will be a “very difficult, very tough winter.”
“We have to move forward to pressure Russia, to raise the price for the aggression, for Russia, for (Russian President Vladimir) Putin, to end this war,” Sybiha said.
The G7 ministers said in a joint statement at the conclusion of the two-day gathering that they are increasing the economic costs to Russia and exploring measures against those who finance Russia’s war efforts.
Canada announced more sanctions against Russia, including targeting those involved in the development and deployment of drones, and Britain, a day earlier, pledged money for Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio made no immediate announcements about new US initiatives but said on social media that the meeting delved into ways “to strengthen Ukraine’s defense and find an end to this bloody conflict.”
“We are doing whatever is necessary to support Ukraine,” Canadian Foreign Minister Anita Anand said.
The meeting in Niagara-on-the-Lake, near the US border, followed US President Donald Trump’s decision to end trade talks with Canada after the Ontario provincial government ran an anti-tariff advertisement in the US, which upset him. That followed a spring of acrimony, since abated, over the president’s insistence that Canada should become the 51st US state.
Anand declined to talk about the trade dispute.
“I am here to talk about the work that the G7 ministers are doing,” she said. “And that is exactly what I think I should be discussing.”
Anand met with Rubio, but said she did not bring up trade talks, noting that a different minister leads the trade issue.
US military strikes also ‘didn’t come up’
The Trump administration says the US military has killed at least 75 people in 19 known strikes against what it says are drug-smuggling vessels in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean since early September. The administration has been under pressure from Congress to provide more information about who is being targeted and the legal justification for the strikes.
Rubio told reporters that questions about the military campaign and intelligence sharing in support of the operations were not raised with him at all by any of his G7 or other counterparts on Wednesday.
“It didn’t come up once,” Rubio said. He also denied a report that Britain has stopped sharing intelligence.
“Again, nothing has changed or happened that is impeded in any way our ability to do what we’re doing. Nor are we asking anyone to help us with what we’re doing — in any realm. And that includes military,” Rubio said.
The G7 comprises Canada, the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan. Anand also invited the foreign ministers of Australia, Brazil, India, , Mexico, South Korea, South Africa and Ukraine to the meeting, which began Tuesday.