Venezuela’s ‘painter of protests’ sees art on the barricades
CARACAS, Venezuela — Day after day, abuse is hurled at the art of Oscar Olivares.
Rubber bullets and tear gas canisters clatter off protesters’ shields adorned with his works — cartoon-like digital paintings that have made him an instant icon for the demonstrators who have taken to Venezuela’s streets in recent weeks to oppose the socialist government.
Olivares received a standing ovation at a recent event by former colleagues of volunteer paramedic Paul Moreno, who died in May after being crushed by a truck while attending to injured protesters. In Olivares’ hands, Moreno is immortalized as 24-year-old clinching his fist high the air while walking through a cloud of tear gas with Venezuela’s colorful flag trailing behind.
Another popular creation, called the “Heroes of Liberty,” depicts the more than 50 victims of this year’s protests — along with victims of previous unrest in 2014 — standing alongside independence hero Simon Bolivar and other national icons smiling widely and staring into a sky full of white doves.