Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Nasimo's “Zhar” - the largest street mural in Eastern Europe

Photo: library

The largest street mural in Eastern Europe and the Balkans can now be seen in Sliven. The work is entitled "Zhar" (Embers) and is the work of world-famous Bulgarian graffiti artist - Stanislav Trifonov (Nasimo). One of the first street artists in Bulgaria, he started painting in public places in the mid-90s of the twentieth century when graffiti culture emerged in this country.

More than two decades later, his works can be seen on the facades of buildings around the world - Canada, Britain, Western Europe, the Balkans, Turkey, Russia, India and China. Stanislav Trifonov graduated with a degree in Fine Arts from the University of Veliko Tarnovo, which explains his distinctive feature of mixing contemporary graffiti techniques with classical art and painting. This is how his "Fine Graff Art" was born. Nasimo is the first graffiti artist in Bulgaria with an exhibition at the National Art Gallery "Square 500" in Sofia, presented in early 2020. His latest project in Sliven consists of 12 separate detailed and conceptually related murals, which focus on wine and human life. They can be seen on industrial containers for wine storage and cover an area of ​​over 1000 square meters.

Compiled by: Vessela Krasteva

English: Alexander Markov



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Visiting the Bulgarian kindergarten in Bratislava

Help me do it myself, get me in touch with nature, take care of my immunity – these are the principles that the teachers at the Bulgarian kindergarten "Hristo Botev" in the Slovak capital Bratislava follow. The kindergarten has been operating since 2009..

published on 2/22/25 7:05 AM

Yaneta Dimitrova from the Bulgarian school in Paris: The Bulgarian language is first preserved in the family

"The place in France where we draw together the future of our children in Bulgarian" - this is how Yaneta Dimitrova described her workplace - the Bulgarian Sunday School "Ivan Vazov" in Paris a year ago in a post on a social network. It is one of the 396..

published on 2/21/25 5:05 PM

Silsila Mahboub from Afghanistan: I am proud my language is taught at your university

21 February is International Mother Language Day, first proclaimed as such by UNESCO and later adopted by the UN General Assembly. The right to study and to speak one’s mother tongue, or native language, is a basic human right and a civil right..

updated on 2/21/25 1:24 PM