'Graffiti is resistance': Palestinian artist paints murals on Israel's apartheid wall
For Palestinian artist Taqi Spateen, a stroll along the Israeli-built barrier that runs through parts of Bethlehem amounts to an open-air exhibition of his murals denouncing Israel's occupation.
Spateen's work fills much of the concrete outside secretive artist Banksy's Walled-Off Hotel, a now iconic section of the barrier which Israel constructed to cut off the West Bank from the Jewish state.
His murals include an enormous portrait of George Floyd, the African American killed by former US policeman Derek Chauvin.
"I feel like he's a Palestinian man. He has the same issues we have," Spateen told AFP, after completing his latest work showing a sniper rifle underneath east Jerusalem's Dome of the Rock mosque compound.
Spateen said visually relating Palestinian life under Israeli occupation was an important tool to keep alive global awareness of the decades-old conflict.
The murals "convey the image of Palestine to the world", Spateen said, after spending four hours to complete his latest work under a blazing sun, at the base of a watch tower.
While Israel claims the barrier, built mostly inside the West Bank, is necessary to prevent alleged attacks, Palestinians label it an apartheid wall designed to separate them from Jerusalem.
Spateen has also portrayed football star Lionel Messi kicking a ball through chains, an image inspired by Argentina's 2018 decision to call off a friendly with Israel, citing the Jewish state's treatment of Palestinians.
Spateen is about to begin a residency in France, where he has plans for a project on "the fogginess" of Palestinian society.
He said the project was inspired in part by images of tear gas fired by Israeli forces to suppress Palestinian protests and unrest as well as dust-filled photos from Gaza following Israeli air strikes.
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Israel levelled several multi-story buildings in the Palestinian enclave during an 11-day May conflict, that killed at least 250 Palestinians including dozens of children.
Spateen stressed the importance of continuing his work on the concrete barrier, despite the "ugliness" of the structure.
"Graffiti is a means of resistance in Palestine," he said.