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Camilo Fidel Lopez: The Colombian artist using graffiti to fight social injustice

‘When my father saw it, it was the first time he said he respected what I was trying to do with this medium of expression, to make a valuable social statement’, Lopez tells Perry Garfinkel

Thursday 07 November 2019 13:29 GMT
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The street artist group manager’s aim is to make people see graffiti as a high art
The street artist group manager’s aim is to make people see graffiti as a high art (Santiago Castro)

Camilo Fidel Lopez eats, drinks, thinks, sleeps and breathes graffiti. Where the average eye sees empty and drab building walls, Lopez, founder of the graffiti artists crew Vertigo Graffiti, sees blank canvases, opportunities to colourfully further the cause of social justice, whether in his home city – the Colombian capital, Bogota – or the rest of the world.

Looking younger than his 38 years, sporting a scruffy beard, wearing jeans and an untucked casual shirt, he is constantly on the move recently crisscrossing Bogota, which has become one of the world’s top graffiti destinations.

A few days later he is wandering the cobblestoned back alleys of Cartagena, a historic coastal Colombian city that is also famous for its graffiti art. And several months later he is still on the go – this time in Turkey with his crew.

Not a graffiti artist himself, Lopez plays multiple roles: art director, business manager, promoter, negotiator, lawyer, entrepreneur, festival producer, even tour guide. He is, in addition, a professor of entertainment law and cultural industries at the Jorge Tadeo Lozano University in Bogota.

He refused to give himself a job title. “My job is to start conversations,” he says succinctly, in one of the few times he is succinct. He now plays a key role at the forefront of a street art revolution that reflects his nation’s new face of pride and self-expression.

He sprinkles his nonstop passionate discourses on the importance of graffiti with references to great thinkers and authors – John Cheever, Umberto Eco and Aristotle, in one recent disquisition.

Lopez turned his attention to street art when he failed to get into law school (Nicolas Fernandez) (Nicolas Fernández)

But his most frequent references are to the Nobel Prize-winning Colombian author Gabriel Garcia Marquez, whom Lopez refers to by his nickname, Gabo. “This line from Gabo’s 2004 novella Memories of My Melancholy Whores defines my philosophy: ‘It is not true that people stop pursuing dreams because they grow old, they grow old because they stop pursuing dreams.”

Lopez is the son of two academics and staunch socialists, whose beliefs are reflected in his name: Fidel, for the former Cuban leader, Fidel Castro; and Camilo, after Camilo Cienfuegos, a close comrade in Castro’s guerrilla army who died in a plane crash shortly after the Cuban revolutionaries ousted dictator Fulgencio Batista.

That was when a light bulb went on. I thought maybe one could do both: spark a social revolution and make a business out of it

But Lopez’s path to a passion that arguably has revolutionary impact – and that satisfied his parents – was often circuitous.

Urged by his parents to gain the best education and then turn it into a fight for social justice, he decided to become a lawyer. Having graduated from one of Bogota’s top law schools, Lopez turned his sights to Harvard Law School and was shattered when he was rejected.

That Harvard rejection, however, inadvertently led to his current occupation. “I was 28, my life was turned upside down,” Lopez says. “So I went from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Manhattan to bury my sorrows and blow off steam.”

The crew’s graffiti has stretched continents – as seen here in Canada (Santiago Castro)

“In SoHo, I stumbled across such a vibrant graffiti art scene that spoke of social injustice. It was even being sold at galleries,” he says. “That was when a light bulb went on. I thought, ‘Maybe one could do both: spark a social revolution and make a business out of it.’” Lopez went home and in 2009 founded Vertigo Graffiti.

“Those first years were difficult,” he says. “We started doing demos for free in private homes to build a portfolio. There was a lot of trial and error as I learned what could be possible. Even though painting on public walls was illegal at that time, there was early interest from some companies. We created a huge campaign with Coca-Cola and Sprite in 2011.”

In the aftermath of a police killing of a 16-year-old graffiti artist that was widely condemned, he helped persuade the city government in 2012 to decriminalize graffiti painting in certain areas.

Some of the crew’s work spans entire building sides (Santiago Castro)

He often fields questions about an artistic endeavour that largely defies definition. Are the artists independent anarchists or opportunistic capitalists selling out to commercial interests? Is it vandalism or an exercise in freedom of expression?

Before I moved here three years ago, I had the same misconception as many people — Colombia was a country of moustachioed coffee farmers and drug lords

The answers are less important, says Lopez, than the way graffiti is changing people’s perception of his country. It is a shift that others have noticed, too.

“Before I moved here three years ago, I had the same misconception as many people – Colombia was a country of moustachioed coffee farmers and drug lords,” says Mark Bingle, general manager of the Four Seasons Casa Medina in Bogota, for which Lopez now leads graffiti tours. “Camilo opened my eyes to the new Colombia. Going around, one sees that Bogota’s walls are like a living, breathing museum of modern history.”

On a recent day, Lopez dashed from meeting to meeting in Bogota: working with Digitalistic Ad Agency’s Pablo Cebellos, whose company represents the major spray paint makers Montana and Pintuco; sprinting to a session trying to convince a conservative textile manufacturer that edgy graffiti murals in its retail outlets would appeal to millennials; then back to Vertigo Graffiti’s studio to check on works in progress.

The studio, a second-floor walk-up with no signage from the street in a nondescript neighbourhood, is a jumble of the works in progress, preliminary sketches for walls that the crew will paint, commissioned pieces for private residences and fine art projects they are working on for themselves.

The art always aims to make a political, social or cultural statement (Santiago Castro)

Canvases, cans of paint, spray paint and smelly rags are strewn all over. Lopez’s office, if you can call it that, is a makeshift tabletop in one corner. He makes calls and sends texts standing up from wherever he can.

“A lot of people have wanted to represent us, but we trusted only Camilo,” says Sebastián Garcia (nickname Ecks), who along with Santiago Castro (Cazdos), Ricardo Vasquez (Yurika) and Estefany Fajardo (Zas), the only female member, make up Vertigo Graffiti.

The crew’s tag – those characteristic artist signatures found in the corner of a painting – is MDC, which stands for Mientras Duermen Crew (in Spanish, the While They Sleep Crew).

They have entrusted Lopez to sell them, but not to sell them out. “These folks are a peculiar mix of tough guy and sensitive guy,” Lopez says. “We’re on the same page about what we’ll do and what we won’t do for money.”

On his way to yet another meetup, he stops at “The Kiss of the Invisibles”, a 10-story-tall mural that Vertigo Graffiti created in 2013, based on a famous photograph of two homeless people kissing.

“It generated a lot of attention,” Lopez says. “But for me it meant a lot more because when my father saw it, it was the first time he said he respected what I was trying to do with this medium of expression, to make a valuable social statement.”

Lopez’s father said it was this piece that truly made him believe in the work his son was doing (Ricardo Vasquez)

The next stop is Bogota’s Graffiti District, which Vertigo Graffiti and more than 50 prominent artists from around the world painted in 2017. It stretches on both sides of two blocks, covering the exterior walls of several companies – all with permission and subsidy from the city.

“This was one of the dirtiest and most polluted areas of Bogota,” he says, strolling down the corridor in the industrial neighbourhood, Puente Aranda. “Now it’s cleaned up and attracts tourists and aficionados from everywhere.”

In the last year or so, Lopez has taken Vértigo Graffiti on the road to Ottawa, Ontario; Miami; and Amman, Jordan; among other places. In September they travelled to Turkey, where they painted a wall of the Halis Kurtca children’s cultural centre in Kadikoy, a suburb of Istanbul, in commemoration of the 60th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Colombia and Turkey.

Politics play a huge part in the group’s many works across the city (Santiago Castro)

The image depicts a Colombian girl dressed in the traditional garb of a coffee farmer, holding a basket of fresh-picked beans, a bird floating on her black skirt.

Lopez says he could not have imagined a decade ago that graffiti, which began as a protest against all things establishment, would now be used to symbolise links between two governments.

But he has still loftier ambitions for graffiti. “I want it to become recognised as a high art,” he says, “like opera, ballet and theatre.”

© New York Times

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