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Vol. I · No. 164
Saturday, 13 June 2026
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Culture

The Street as Canvas: Why Public Art Keeps Choosing the Pavement Over the Gallery

An Iranian philosophy researcher frames street art as an ethical imperative rather than a legal grey zone — and the argument reveals something wider about the politics of public space.
An Iranian philosophy researcher frames street art as an ethical imperative rather than a legal grey zone — and the argument reveals something wider about the politics of public space.
An Iranian philosophy researcher frames street art as an ethical imperative rather than a legal grey zone — and the argument reveals something wider about the politics of public space. / The Guardian / Photography

When Mohammed Ali Rajabi Devani describes street art as "a concrete example of the mission of artists," he is making a claim that cuts against a century of institutional art history. The Iranian philosophy researcher, speaking to Fars News, frames public-space creation not as a deviation from professional practice but as its clearest expression. The distinction matters — not because every street artist dreams of gallery validation, but because the framing reveals assumptions about what art is for and who it belongs to.

The question of public art's legitimacy has never been purely aesthetic. From the murals of the Mexican muralist movement to the stencilled propaganda of post-Soviet Eastern Europe, art placed in unmediated public space has always carried an implicit challenge to institutional authority — the authority of galleries, governments, and markets that determine which images deserve exposure and which remain invisible.

The street as argument

The philosophy of art has long grappled with what separates a painting on a wall from a mark on a wall. The institutional answer is straightforward: context, curation, and the mediating hand of the gallery determine artistic value. Rajabi Devani's position sidesteps that entire framework. For him, the street is not an absence of institutional validation — it is the presence of something the gallery cannot replicate: direct, unmediated encounter with an audience that did not choose to be there.

This is not a marginal position in contemporary art discourse. Writers and critics who study the relationship between space and meaning have noted that public art necessarily operates under different constraints than gallery work. A mural on a city wall cannot be moved behind velvet rope; it can be painted over by a municipal authority, ignored by a passerby, or reclaimed by a community as a site of collective memory. That instability, the argument goes, is not a defect — it is the work's defining condition.

The politics of consent

What gets obscured in the romantic framing of street art as pure resistance is the question of who holds the wall. Every city has a skyline of unwritten laws about which surfaces can be marked and by whom. In Tehran, as in New York or São Paulo, the legal status of unsanctioned public art is entangled with property rights, municipal aesthetics policy, and sometimes outright criminalisation. The philosopher's claim about mission sits in tension with that practical reality: the street may be a canvas, but it is also someone else's property.

That tension has produced a split in how street art is understood across different contexts. In Western liberal democracies, the rise of officially commissioned murals and city-sponsored street art festivals represents a kind of institutionalisation — the street brought inside the gallery's logic, with commissioning bodies selecting which voices get a wall and which do not. Critics of this process argue it neuters the form's subversive potential; defenders counter that it brings art to communities that galleries have historically ignored.

In Iran, where formal channels for artistic expression are constrained by both law and cultural policy, street art occupies a different political position — not as a career pathway for credentialed artists but as a different register of public speech entirely. The framing from Rajabi Devani — mission rather than transgression — reflects that context. He is not celebrating lawbreaking; he is arguing that the relationship between an artist and a public space carries ethical weight that institutional settings do not provide.

What the street offers that galleries cannot

The distinction matters beyond the philosophy lecture hall because it shapes how different societies decide what public space is for. Cities that treat streets purely as transit infrastructure or commercial real estate tend to view unsanctioned art as a maintenance problem. Cities that recognise streets as sites of cultural production — as spaces where identity, history, and aspiration can be made visible — tend to have different relationships with the artists who use them.

The practical consequences of that recognition vary widely. Barcelona's neighbourhood murals and Bogotá's street art corridors represent deliberate municipal strategies to use public art as a tool for community identity and urban revitalisation. The results are uneven — gentrification often follows cultural activation — but the policy logic treats the street as a legitimate artistic medium rather than an exception to it.

The alternative model treats public art as a regulatory problem to be managed. Here, the artist's mission collides with bylaw enforcement, and the philosophical argument about mission has to navigate the gap between what art could be and what the law permits it to do.

The stakes of the argument

Rajabi Devani's framing matters because it asks a question that the institutional art world has never cleanly answered: what does it mean to create something that belongs, at least for a moment, to everyone rather than to a collector? The gallery system has an answer — provenance, conservation, and market value — but that answer sidesteps the more uncomfortable question of what art is for when it cannot be bought.

The street does not solve that problem. But it asks it differently than a white cube does. When a mural appears on a city wall, it makes a claim about who the city belongs to and what its public surfaces are allowed to say. That claim will be contested — by property owners, by municipal authorities, by critics who see public art as aesthetic clutter. But the contest itself is part of the work. The mission, as Rajabi Devani describes it, is not to win the argument. It is to make sure the argument exists at all.

This piece uses the Fars News interview as its primary sourcing anchor. Broader contextual framing on public art policy draws on established historical record; where specific claims about municipal programmes or cultural policy outcomes are made, they reflect widely documented cases rather than single-source assertions.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/farsna/9999
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire