April 17, 2026 A Bilingual Newspaper

New York,US
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Brazilian artist Eduardo Kobra colors the UN building – The Brasilians

In recent days, the famous Brazilian muralist Eduardo Kobra, 47, worked day and night to complete a new mural measuring 45 ft x 78 ft (3606 sq ft) on one of the outer walls of the United Nations Headquarters in New York by September 15. The wall is located at E 42nd St & 1st Ave. According to Kobra, this is the first time the UN has authorized an artistic intervention on the outer walls of its complex in its 70 years of existence.

The unprecedented initiative to bring street art to the UN wall was approved by the UN Committee, which recognized that Kobra’s art “aligns with the ideals of the United Nations.”

The mural arrives at a very important moment. The seventy-seventh session of the General Assembly takes place from September 13 to 27 under the theme “A Turning Point: Transformative Solutions for Interconnected Challenges.” Representatives from 193 countries, mostly world leaders, will discuss issues such as post-Covid reconstruction, the war in Ukraine, sustainability, and human rights.

“After receiving the invitation, I researched the theme of the General Assembly and realized that it converges with issues that are increasingly part of my work, especially sustainability. So, I created an artwork where a father hands the Earth to his daughter, trying to contribute to the reflection on what planet we want to leave for future generations,” explains the artist.

Born in 1975 in São Paulo, Brazil, Kobra has become one of the most recognized muralists today, with works on 5 continents.

Since the Olympic Games in Rio in 2016, he holds the record for the largest graffiti mural in the world – first with ‘Ethnicities’, painted to celebrate the event, covering 2,500 square meters; a record surpassed by himself in 2017, with a work honoring chocolate that occupies a wall of 5,742 square meters along the Castello Branco Highway in the São Paulo Metropolitan Region. One of his most famous works is ‘The Kiss’, created in 2012 on the High Line in New York – erased four years later. It is a colorful reinterpretation of the image made by American photojournalist Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995) on August 13, 1945, when people took to the streets to celebrate the end of World War II.

But his first mural outside Brazil was in Lyon, France, in 2011. At the time, he was invited to illustrate a wall in a neighborhood undergoing a revitalization process. He used his “Walls of Memory” approach to help in the historical appreciation of the area. Since then, he has painted in countries such as Spain, Italy, Norway, England, Malawi, India, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, as well as several cities in the United States. If you are in New York, don’t miss the opportunity to see the work of this great artist. The mural at the UN headquarters will be on display for about 3 months, until December 2022.


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