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Where Health Meets History: Brazil Day 9 – January 12, 2026

Reframing Perspectives: Graffiti as Communication, Not Crime

minute read

by Johnna Bakalar | February 4, 2026
Mural artist Eder Muniz stands in front of his work "The first was the first master" depicting three ancestral figures around a fire with drums.
Graffiti as a marker of comfort and safety

Walking through the streets of Salvador, Brazil, one quickly notices walls adorned with spray paint. While some pieces are intricate street art, others consist of letters and symbols known as “tags.” In the United States, graffiti, especially tagging, is criminalized and commonly viewed as vandalism. However, after a lesson with local artist Eder Muniz, I left with a new understanding of graffiti and its potential role as both a tool and an indicator of a neighborhood’s social well-being.

Students line walls of a long narrow room in a bright clean earth toned tome with a metal ceiling with wooden accents.
CU students listen to a history of graffiti lesson.

Eder equated the presence of graffiti in a neighborhood to a sense of perceived safety.

To illustrate this idea, he conducted an informal experiment at a neighborhood bus stop: he painted one wall but left the other untouched. Over time, he observed that people began lining up only on the painted side, likely due to a higher sense of comfort and safety there. Eder also explained that he views neighborhoods with more tagging as safer, because tagging provides an outlet for self-expression.

A graffiti mural of the face and hands of  man with brown skin and brown eyes wearing a green hat points the lens of a large black camera at the viewer of the artwork.
Each mural had its own story to tell as layered as the work itself.

In urban neighborhoods without tagging, he fears that people are forced to suppress their emotions and will take feelings of hate and frustration out in other, more violent ways. This perspective stands in stark contrast to dominant narratives in the United States, where graffiti is often associated with danger and disorder.

Murals as mirrors of neighborhood identity

Our lesson in Eder’s home was followed by a graffiti walking tour, during which we saw walls transformed into powerful works of art reflecting the culture and identity of the local community. Many murals highlighted Afro-Brazilian history, religious traditions, and everyday life in Salvador.

A group of CU students with Eder in front of an elaborate mural depicting ancestry and cultural heritage of the community
We were grateful and excited for the opportunity to go with Eder on the tour. We pose here with his work "The fire was the first master."
Elaborate mural of three figures sitting around a fire in clothing ancestors may have worn with drums and with tags on either side that seem to join with the flames.
Taking in the color, detail, lighting, and depth of expression on "The fire was the first master" was a highlight of the tour.  This piece felt like it had many stories to tell.

Graffiti creates opportunities to represent neighborhood history and cultural practices through visual storytelling, offering visitors meaningful insight into community life.

Image of graffiti har of a stylized face in profile with brown, red and purple tones an yellow flowers against a blue wall with a gray tag behind it
The images we saw on the graffiti tour drew us in to the artist's mind.
The communicative power of tags

Beyond street art, tags function as a form of communication expressing political views, social resistance, territorial identity, and frustrations among disenfranchised populations. Viewed through this lens, graffiti becomes not a sign of disorder, but a visible record of community presence, voice, and resilience.

A graffiti mural with a light blue tag agains a bright blue wall and a person draped over top, arms legs and drink hanging down with an object on their chest. Yellow flowers are to the left of the primary image.
Work by another graffiti artist on our walking tour.
A new approach to urban safety and community investment?

If graffiti can serve as both cultural expression and social communication, then reframing how we understand it in the United States could fundamentally change how we approach urban safety and community investment. Rather than treating graffiti solely as a problem to be erased, it could be used as a tool for identifying communities in need of additional social support, providing a voice to marginalized communities, and improving the built environment and perceived safety in urban areas. This lesson also underscores the importance of providing accessible creative outlets for youth in underserved neighborhoods, which may help reduce the likelihood of emotionally driven violence by offering alternative forms of expression. Overall, graffiti challenges us to reconsider whose voices are allowed in public spaces and how honoring those voices can contribute to safer, healthier communities.

Artist Eder walks away from a brightly colored tag on a blue wall
Follow Eder Muniz on IG @calangoss

 

Johnna Bakalar, MPH

PhD in Epidemiology Student

Colorado School of Public Health