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Urban Folklore and Anthropology

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Street art in a residential building on the outskirts of Pereslavl-Zalessky

EDN: LLYUVT

Abstract

This article presents an ethnographic study of street art in a residential building in the provincial town of Pereslavl-Zalessky, based on the author’s participant observation. The study proposes an expanded understanding of street art, encompassing not only graffiti in entrance halls but also living art objects, such as stray animals fed by residents, folk flower beds, and homemade sculptures in courtyards. The empirical material consists of graffiti found in an apartment building — a former Soviet family dormitory — where the lack of funding for repainting created conditions for observing a long-term, resident-generated visual “chronicle.” The article analyzes the content, style, and functions of entrance hall graffiti, which reflect residents’ aspirations, love letters, and philosophical statements. The study is situated within the author’s concept of sustainable territorial development through the harmonization of natural and cultural heritage, in which street art is interpreted as a manifestation of the genius loci. It is shown that grassroots folk art produces a space of harmony between nature and culture, operating at a level beyond standardized official urban design and forming an ecosystem of creative neighborliness and biospheric art therapy. The article also reveals a connection between local practices of decorating living spaces, a cosmic worldview (as expressed in the graffiti “You are my cosmos”), and the traditional Russian cultural code of hospitality and kindness.

About the Author

Natalia M. Garber
Creative union of artists of Russia; AI ARTs global movement; Institute of economics and peace
Russian Federation


References

1. Garber, N. M. (2013). Secrets of the Frog Princess. Biosphere therapy for man and humanity. Rostov-on-Don: Phoenix. (In Russian).

2. Garber, N. M. (2023). The cultural brand “Russia” for innovators of the digital Age.

3. Moscow: Pero. (In Russian).

4. Garber, N. M. (2025). The biosphere-centric model of cultural and natural heritage as a tool for sustainable development of countries and the Planet: From traditions to innovations of the digital age. Issues of Cultural Studies, (1), 7–25. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.33920/nik-01-2501-01

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Review

For citations:


Garber N.M. Street art in a residential building on the outskirts of Pereslavl-Zalessky. Urban Folklore and Anthropology. 2026;8(1):271-285. (In Russ.) EDN: LLYUVT

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2658-3895 (Print)
ISSN 2782-1757 (Online)