Street art and protest under pandemic conditions in Colombia: A visual semiotic approach

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Abstract

This article engages in a visual critical semiotic analysis of Medellín street art and its interpretation as political action in the Colombian social mobilisation of 2021. I explore three epistemological turns towards a descriptive and contrastive methodology to contextualize street art and its transformative poten-tial. Firstly, the spatial turn leads us to understand how space and street art function as a framework of life and conflict that challenges viewers socially and politically. Secondly, following Peirceʼs ideas, I reinter-preted some images. I explain how they function as theoretical objects related to indices, signs and sym-bols. According to Mitchell's image turn, the image functions as a significant semantic unit. Thirdly, I read the political turn based on Rancièreʼs works in which he equates the political and the aesthetic as an act of visibility, always existing together at a conceptual and substantive level, and with which emancipation is objective. The article does not try to argue whether street art has a transformative power as this has been widely discussed in the literature. The article looks at street art that appeared in the context of the social mobilisation of 2021-2022, and partially in the context of the recent pandemic as a social transformation, the fact of which was proven by the recent elections.

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APA

Gómez, H. B. (2022). Street art and protest under pandemic conditions in Colombia: A visual semiotic approach. Crossroads, 2022(37), 81–102. https://doi.org/10.15290/CR.2022.37.2.05

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