Disrupting urban space with large-scale portraits of everyday heroes.
Alexandre Farto aka Vhils creates enormous mural-esque portraits that draw from his own political context, and question the relationship between the individual and the globalised world. At the heart of Vhils’ practice is destruction, creation and the city. His trademark technique uses hand and power tools to hack, scrape and carve urban surfaces that emerge into representational portraits of predominantly anonymous people that he describes as “everyday heroes.”
After exhibiting next to Bansky at The Cans Festival in 2008, which was subsequently published on the front page of The Times newspaper...
Bio
Vhils, real name Alexandre Farto, was born in 1987 on the outskirts of Lisbon, Portugal. He now splits his time between Lisbon and London, UK.
Career
He first rose to prominence in 2008 when he exhibited alongside Banksy at The Cans Festival, a one-off street art festival staged in London.
Collaborations
The artist's list of collaborators stretches from prestigious institutions like Paris' Centre Pompidou and London's Barbican Centre to communities in Cape Verde and the favelas of Rio de Janeiro.