Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Sofia and its painted garments

"Sofia Urban Art" - the first book that explores street and ‎graffiti art in Sofia over the last three decades

Photo: sofiagraffititour.com

In the last days of the past year 2023, one of the best graffiti artists in Bulgaria, ‎Nasimo, and his Fine Graff Art team announced on their FB page their decision ‎to donate all newly received income from reproductions and their free work to ‎‎"various educational and others institutions that directly serve our children - ‎our future". 

Stanislav Trifonov, as the real name of the artist Nasimo is, ‎promises to "donate" his talent in the form of murals, paintings and talks, so ‎that children can grow up in a more favourable environment, surrounded by art ‎with a message and incentives for development of their creative potential. And ‎if for the older generation of Bulgarians, graffiti still means only those ugly ‎inscriptions and slogans on the walls from the beginning of the democratic ‎transition in the country, then we must honestly admit that in the last thirty ‎years the street garments of Sofia have become more colorful, beautiful ‎and impressive - worthy of the global street art scene. ‎


The young team of Sofia Graffiti Tour, created by Tsvetan ‎Bizev and like-‎minded people, proves it. In 2016, they started organizing walking tours that ‎show graffiti and street art around the streets of the Bulgarian capital. The tours ‎continue to be held to this day, all year round, completely free of charge also in ‎English, so that every foreigner can "see" the true face of our city. Over the ‎years, the young people's idea grew to the creation of a cultural organization ‎that supports and organizes various festivals, exhibitions, events, master classes ‎and film screenings in support of the native graffiti scene. 

And for a week now ‎their biggest dream has come true - the first published bilingual (Bulgarian and ‎English) anthology of street art in Sofia for the last three decades. ‎


‎“The book is called "Sofia Urban Art" and traces the development of graffiti in ‎Sofia from the beginning of the 1990s until now. This is an attempt to ‎systematize all events in this field - the most important artists, the most ‎important locations, how these drawings grow into the subculture of the place ‎in the first years of the new century and reach the boom after that, with the ‎appearance of the festivals and large-scale murals we see today. We ourselves ‎have been fans of this art for nearly twenty years and it has always been a ‎dream for us that street art and graffiti in Sofia have their own book. I believe ‎this will take the scene to a higher level and open it up to the world. The idea is ‎to present the book outside of Bulgaria as well," Tsvetan Bizev tells Radio ‎Bulgaria. ‎


It is for this reason that an international partner for the distribution of "Sofia ‎Urban Art" is the largest graffiti and street art museum in Europe "Straat" based ‎in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The publication is based on years of research, ‎collection of archival footage, numerous conversations with artists and ‎organizers, as well as 600 carefully selected images spread over 256 pages. ‎

Tsvetan says that it is very important to show works and artists that are ‎historically important for this kind of culture in BulgariaКо such as Eric 273 ‎from the beginning of the 21st century, the team of "140 Ideas" ‎responsible for some of the most the beautiful school walls in the city, the ‎bizarre creatures of Bozko and, of course, Nasimo and the group of Destructive ‎Creation, who more than ten years ago tried to "change the clothing" of the ‎Monument to the Soviet Army in line with the times of the Marvel Cinematic ‎Universe. ‎


"Bulgaria is quite solid in terms of style and artists”, Bizev tells us. “We have ‎quite a few representatives who are world-famous and in this regard Bulgaria is ‎developing in parallel with graffiti and street art around the world. From the ‎point of view of providing infrastructure for painting, we should note that in ‎‎2023, for the first time in Sofia, a wall was set aside, on which it is ‎administratively permitted. There have been similar locations in Plovdiv and ‎other cities for a long time, and I hope that more and more such places will ‎appear. I personally think that every neighborhood should have its own street art ‎gallery."‎


Street art does not necessarily have a social and political context, believes ‎Tsvetan Bizev. But he truly believes that this type of art is increasingly entering ‎the image of a city, changing it to the extent that it bcomes part of its tourist ‎appeal.‎

‎"One such example was Lisbon where the municipality itself supports street ‎visual art and organizes various events. They do not set administrative ‎restrictions on how to paint the facades, but give complete artistic freedom.”‎

Our capital city, in its appearance today, is very similar to Berlin, believes the ‎founder of Sofia Graffiti Tour: ‎


‎ "It’s the urban dynamics. There, too, the dynamics is extremely ‎great from the point of view of new graffiti constantly appearing on the walls, ‎as is the case in Sofia, too.”‎

Each of Bulgaria's big cities has its own well-developed graffiti scene, Tsvetan ‎Bizev tells us, and it is worth learning how to perceive it because it is part of ‎modern urban culture. And his wish for the year 2024 is to have more graffiti ‎festivals in Bulgaria which are the basis of the unification and growth of the ‎entire community of street artists and their urban works. ‎

‎*The book "Sofia Urban Art" is published with the support of the Sofia ‎Municipality and the National Culture Fund.‎

Read also:

Photos: sofiagraffititour.com, FB / Sofia Graffiti Tour



Translated and published by Rositsa Petkova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

17 Bulgarians elected to the European Film Academy

The European Film Academy (EFA) has welcomed 709 new film professionals as members . Among them are actors Maria Bakalova and Boyko Krastanov and 15 other Bulgarian film professionals. As EFA members, they will be eligible to vote for the European Film..

published on 5/10/24 12:03 PM
Mel Gibson and Hristo Jivkov

The late Hristo Jivkov to star in The Passion of the Christ sequel digitally

Exactly 20 years after the release of the epic biblical film The Passion of the Christ , its director Mel Gibson will make a sequel. This was announced by the production company of the Hollywood filmmaker. The production is already in an advanced..

published on 5/5/24 7:45 AM

Photographer Valery Poshtarov on the power of holding hands

"In a world that is already growing apart, holding hands becomes a silent prayer - a way to come together again". So begins the description of the project "Father and Son" by Bulgarian photographer Valery Poshtarov on the website of the World..

published on 4/30/24 8:57 AM