Miguelito: "I've always had a love of outline and colour"
The Australian artist who paints Valencia's walls as a 1940's abstract expressionist would do!
Milena: - Graffiti or Urban Intervention?
Miguelito: - Both. Depends on opinion of definition.
Spray or stickers?
BrushNight or day?
I normally paint in the daylight
Colors or B&W?
Colour
Walls or blinds?
Walls
For the community or for the Name?
Both
Milena: - Who is Miguelito?
Miguelito: Australian artist from Melbourne, living in
Valencia.
M.- When does the work of Miguelito appear for the first time on the streets?
Miguelito: My first work on the street appeared in October 2016, Valencia.
M. - Do you belong to any crew?
Miguelito: No
M. - Is there any academic background behind your work?
Miguelito: Yes. I studied painting and drawing for five
years in Melbourne.
M. - How does your style evolved during the years of activity?
Miguelito: Over the past 20 years I´ve studied and
experimented with many styles of painting and drawing. But I've always had a
love for shape and abstraction.....(Even as a young child)
M. - Where and how do you like to paint?
Miguelito: At the moment I'm loving painting in the streets
with brushes and wall paint. The opportunity to paint larger scale paintings is
more easily available than in a studio.
M. - Which kind of paint do you prefer to use?
Miguelito: In the street....wall paint.
But I love to paint with oil paint the most.
Miguelito: I share a studio with Valencia urban artists: Barbi, Sr Marmota and Metal Ink- Barbi and I have collaborated on maybe 4 or 5 walls together here in Valencia. I have also painted with Atila from London, while he was living in Valencia, and Spanish street artists Xolaka and Dafne Tree.
M. - Did you influence each other?
Miguelito: There are 7 of us in our studio space, so it's impossible not to be influenced by each other's work.
M. - How do you like to paint? Alone or accompanied?
Miguelito: Normally alone.
M. - How do you choose the surface (texture) to perform on?
Miguelito: First I look for the best position. I also try
not to paint over anything that is less than one year old. Also, because I use
brush, the smoother the surface, the better.
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Miguelito, Barbi and Xolaka on the same wall |
Miguelito: Street art is
always political in a way. It's an
artist saying that his/her work is good enough, or has a right to be on the
street. However the streets are for the people, and peoples opinions vary.
M. - Do you think the illegality is an essential feature of the Graffiti Art, as
well as the Urban Art intervention?
Miguelito: I think that the
culture is changing. But the ilegality will always be part of it's identity.
Peopple have been illegally, and legally painting in public spaces for
thousands of years.
M. - Do you think is a sort of paradox, being a street artist, to take the works from the city walls to an exhibition hall?
Miguelito: No. Artists can
choose to exhibit wherever they choose.
At the age of forty
years old, I took my art from the gallery and studio to the street.

Miguelito: Street art is just
a form of art. If by using the term 'commercialisation' means that the artist
is becoming exposed to a broader audience, becoming more popular and maybe
making some money too, then I think it's a great thing.
I would not have
been able to study many of the artists that influenced me in life if their art
hadn't reached commercial fame.
M. - If you had to define your own style, what could you say to be the identifying marks of your work?
Miguelito: It really comes
directly from the 1940's abstract expressionists.
I've always had a
love of outline and colour.
Behind the Wall: interview to Miguelito
Miguelito: "I've always had a love of outline and colour" The Australian artist who paints Valencia's walls as a 194...