After nearly three years of devastating civil conflict, South Sudanese artists have come together to try and get the country thinking and talking about peace, by launching a public art project in the capital Juba.
Ana Taban
Painted murals have appeared on walls and shipping containers across the city.
Ana Taban
The Ana Taban collective (from the Arabic “I am tired”) takes its name from a parallel pro-peace movement in Syria.
Ana Taban
The artworks highlight the suffering of children in the civil war. “In the end they are the ones who will have to pick up the pieces and stitch the fabric of South Sudan back together,” the group says.
Ana Taban
The walls of schools, bakeries and cultural centres in Juba have been repurposed as concrete canvases for the artists.
Ana Taban
Ana Taban
Nearly one million children have been displaced in the conflict, which has devastated a nation that harboured such great optimism at independence five years ago, when it became the world’s newest country.
Ana Taban
Student Abul Oyay Deng fled the conflict in 2013, ending up in Nairobi, but has returned home to join in the project.
Ana Taban
The artists in the collective worked with residents of local neighbourhoods on some murals.
Ana Taban
The man depicted treating a child in the centre of the artwork is inspired by Dr Ding Col Dau, who returned to South Sudan in 2014 to practise medicine, but was murdered in his own home the following year.
Ana Taban
Cutting our Roots, Destroying Ourselves depicts the self-destructive nature of the conflict.
Ana Taban
An online campaign #SaveTheLastTrain by South Sudanese poet Akol Miyen, inspired this artwork. “This is the last train because our chances as a nation our running out,” the group says.
Having spread its message over many of the walls in Juba, the team now plans to extend the project outside the capital.
Photos courtesy of Ana Taban
