Naples

Unusual traffic signs in Naples

Thanks to the artist with the pseudonym Clet (Clet) in different parts of Naples and many other cities in Italy (Rome, Florence) you can meet the usual traffic signs in an unusual design

On Via dei Tribunali, a sign prohibiting passage shows a drowning man asking for help. A little further on the same sign, the policeman waves a club. If on the street Via Raimondo de Sangro of the Sansevero district, on a white brick, a sign now probably lies a person, probably dead, then on Via Toledo the same brick was transformed into a white hand, which compresses the person with force.

But on the sign leading to the sea Via Partenope, allowing you to go forward, turned into a fish skeleton. Samples of contemporary art signed Anacleto Abraham (creative nickname - Clet)which on Tuesday and Monday night changed the look of many of Naples road signs. The artist is sure that the streets of the city are the best space for an exhibition. The Breton came to the creative, chaotic and anarchist Naples after visiting Florence, Bologna, Rome, Turin, Milan, Lucca, Palermo, Perugia, London, Valencia, Sassari, Duarnen, Quimper, Oderne, Paris, Prato and Livorno.

The French artist and sculptor Clet has been living and working in Italy since 1990, and his workshop is located in Florence. His father was the writer Jean-Pierre Abraham, who worked as a ranger for the Ar-Men lighthouse on the island of Sen in the UK.

Street art Klet was carried away four years ago: "I became ready to appear before the public and give way to the desire to oppose myself to the power symbolically represented on road signs".

To those who criticize his work, referring to traffic safety, the artist replies: "Road signs serve to organize the road network. Safety is provided only by the care and responsibility of drivers. It is paradoxical, but road signs allow you to move faster and theoretically more risky."

In any case, the signs remain readable, as Clet’s creative language is simple and minimal. Sometimes images come from the meaning of the sign and “beat” it, in other cases they have an exclusively aesthetic function. The artist paid tribute to Naples with the help of a sign on which he clearly marked the letter "N". At the same time, on his FACEBOOK page under the caption “Naples, the authorities are at a loss”, Clet posted a photo of a sign prohibiting entry to the historic center, on which he painted a bored and annoyed traffic controller collecting a puzzle.

Watch the video: Merecz in Italy: Florence - unusual traffic signs (April 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Naples, Next Article

Mestre district of Venice - main attractions
Venice

Mestre district of Venice - main attractions

Mestre (ital. Mestre) is a charming small area of ​​Venice, which is connected to the city by water with a large railway bridge, known as the "Freedom Bridge" (Ponte della Liberta). The central part of the autonomous region, once considered a city, is closed to transport, so guests of Mestre can leisurely and unhinderedly explore the main attractions of this place, as well as enjoy a cup of coffee on the terrace of one of the pastry shops, which are so numerous around.
Read More
Church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice
Venice

Church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice

Santa Maria della Salute (Basilica di Santa Maria della Salute) is one of the most significant and beautiful churches in Venice (Venezia). It is located in the south of Venice in the historic quarter of Dorsoduro, on the Grand Canal (Canal Grande) against the Doge's Palace (Palazzo Ducale). The history of the construction of the Cathedral appeared in the XVII century, at which time the territory of Italy was covered by an epidemic of plague, during which a third of the population of Venice died.
Read More
How to get from Treviso Airport to Venice
Venice

How to get from Treviso Airport to Venice

Treviso Antonio Canova Airport (L'aeroporto "Antonio Canova" di Treviso-Sant'Angelo, TSF) is located 40 kilometers from the center of Venice. The cheapest way to get to the Troncheto or Mestre stations is by bus for 11 euros, from where you can transfer to the vaporetto and get to the city center.
Read More
Piazza and San Marco Cathedral in Venice
Venice

Piazza and San Marco Cathedral in Venice

St. Mark's Square (San Marco, Piazza San Marco) is Venice's main square. This is the only place in the city that the Venetians themselves call the “place” - the square. The inhabitants of the city call the remaining squares campo or campiello - a field or a small field. In the 9th century, it was a small platform near St. Mark's Cathedral.
Read More