BLocal | Street Art Travel Guides
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Trips
  • Destinations
    • Be_Local in Amsterdam
    • Be_Local in Bristol
    • Be_Local in London
    • Be_Local in Rome
    • Italy
    • the Balkans
      • Albania Travel Itinerary
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria Travel street art
      • Croatia Travel and Street Art
      • Greece Travel and Street Art
      • Macedonia Travel Itinerary
      • Serbia Travel and Street Art
      • Slovenia Travel and Street Art
    • World
      • Belgium Travel and Street Art
      • Czech Republic Travel and Street Art
      • France Travel and Street Art
      • Germany Travel and Street Art
      • Israel
      • Palestine Travel and Street Art
      • Malta Travel and Street Art
      • Netherlands Travel and Street Art
      • New York Travel and Street Art
      • Norway Travel and Street Art
      • Portugal Street Art and Travel
      • Spain Travel and Street Art
      • Tunisia Travel and Street Art
      • UK Street Art and Travel
  • Maps
  • Newsletter
  • Tours
Home Street Art Cities Travel GuidesPortugal Street Art and TravelCovilhãA City in Dialogue: Inside WOOL Festival 2025
CovilhãFestivalsStreet Art

A City in Dialogue: Inside WOOL Festival 2025

707

I’ve returned to WOOL – Covilhã Arte Urbana, Portugal’s first urban art festival, but this time for the full unfolding. 😊

I’ve written before about Covilhã, and about why WOOL Festival has earned its place among Europe’s most respected street art festivals.

Last year, I arrived after the artists had already packed up their ladders and emptied their paint cans. The murals were still fresh, but the process, the heartbeat of the event, had already passed.

This time, however, I was there on day one a.k.a. the Recognition, as the organizers call it. This precious first day of the festival is more than orientation. It’s not about choosing walls or mapping logistics. It’s about tuning in. Listening to the land. Getting to know the rhythm of the city before making any mark on it.

  • Read also: WOOL Festival: Contextual Art and Identity in Covilhã

That morning, we -artists, organizers, and a few of us tagging along- climbed into the Serra da Estrela mountains, all the way to Portugal’s highest peak.

Artists exploring Serra da Estrela, Portugal's highest point.
Artists exploring Serra da Estrela, Portugal’s highest point.

We also wandered the historic center of the small town, visited the city museum, where Covilhã’s story stretches from Roman times to the textile era, and stepped inside two very different factories: one still humming softly with wool production, the other repurposed as a contemporary art space.

New Hand Lab contemporary art Covilha
When in Covilhã, make sure to visit the cultural space New Hand Lab!

This slow immersion into the local context is WOOL’s defining strength. It’s what makes the festival feel less like an exhibition and more like an act of listening. Artists don’t arrive with a concept to impose; they arrive with questions. And from that shared curiosity, the murals begin; not as decoration, but as dialogue.

WOOL Festival ’25: Portraits of a Working Past

The visit to the textile factories is always one of the most affecting parts of the Recognition. You can feel the city’s industrial history in the scent of the fibers, in the rhythm of machinery, in the wool itself (among the softest things I’ve ever touched btw).

It’s no surprise that many artists return to this heritage as a source of inspiration. Over the years, murals by Regg Salgado, Cinta Vidal, Daniel Eime, Marta Lapena, Helen Bur, Addfuel, and Taxis among many others have honored the labor behind Covilhã’s textile identity. Their works translate textures into patterns, stories into portraits, memory into public image.

Mural by Cinta Vidal in Covilha
Mural by Cinta Vidal at the entrance of the city.

This year, the Spanish duo Ampparito joined that conversation with a project that blurred the line between restoration, performance, and collective memory. Their site was a grand iron gate at the entrance of a textile factory abandoned since the 1990s. They began by carefully cleaning it, restoring its original luster, bringing back the gravity and elegance it once held when the factory thrived.

Ampparito at work. WOOL Festival Covilha Portugal

Then, armed with a color chart featuring dozens of shades of green, they began asking former workers of the factory one question: Which green was the gate? One by one, they pointed to different tones—each person carrying a different version of the same memory. Some chose a soft olive. Others insisted on a brighter, almost industrial enamel. No two answers matched exactly.

Ampparito WOOL Festival Portugal
Photo by the artist.

So the gate was not painted in a single uniform shade. It became a mosaic of their recollections—layered, contradictory, real. In the end, it didn’t matter which green had been historically accurate. What mattered was how the gate lived in memory. What emerged was a portrait, not of a factory, but of the people who had passed through it, and the tones their stories had taken on over time.

Ampparito WOOL Festival Portugal
Photo by the artist.

WOOL Festival ’25: Belonging in Layers

As the week progressed, murals bloomed across Covilhã. Two of this year’s artists turned to the city’s own painterly past for inspiration. Spanish artist Lidia Cao and Greek artist Stelios Pupet both created works influenced by Eduardo Malta, the Covilhã-born portraitist of the early 20th century known for his meticulous realism.

Stelios Pupet at work in Covilhã.

When Lidia saw one of Malta’s paintings up close during our visit of the city museum, a detail caught her eye: rather than signing with his name alone, he had added the symbol of Scorpio—his astrological sign. She decided to mirror the gesture in her own mural. The girl in her painting wears a pendant shaped like a Scorpio, and inside the painted canvas within the mural, Lidia has signed her own sign: Gemini. A subtle, personal thread connecting two artists across time.

Lidia Cao right after signing her wall at WOOL ’25.

Other murals emerged from different layers of the city’s heritage. Portuguese artist Lígia Fernandes painted a trio of site-specific works inspired by traditional children’s games native to the region—games that are quietly vanishing in the age of screens and smartphones. Her goal, she told me, is to spark curiosity in today’s kids. Maybe they’ll ask their parents or grandparents how to play. Maybe the walls will become a bridge.

Detail of a mural by Ligia Fernandes in Covilhã
Detail of a mural by Ligia Fernandes in Covilhã.

One afternoon, while I stood by her wall sipping a beer she had kindly offered me, a young girl named Matilda—who lives in the house where the mural was being painted—asked if she could help. Lígia didn’t hesitate. She handed her a brush. “I want her to leave her mark,” she said, watching as Matilda added her strokes. “Because it’s her house.”

Moments like that weren’t rare. Children passed by on their way home from school and offered unfiltered critiques. Teenagers hovered nearby, filming progress for social media. Workers paused during smoke breaks to watch a new image emerge from the walls. This wasn’t art as spectacle; it was art as a presence.

Early stages of Lidia Cao's mural for WOOL Festival
Early stages of Lidia Cao‘s mural for WOOL Festival

The same blend of people showed up again and again; at the community lunch, the evening concerts, the outdoor film screenings and workshops. WOOL doesn’t “decorate” Covilhã; it animates it. It brings people back into public space, not as spectators, but as participants. It invites them to share time, to occupy streets with purpose, to turn looking into a form of belonging.

WOOL Festival ’25: A Word That Holds Its Ground

One of the most deeply felt moments of shared connections came during the screening of Crossroad, a documentary about the Spanish collective Boa Mistura and their community-based projects around the world.

Screening of Boa Mistura's documentary Crossroads during WOOL festival
Q&A with Boa Mistura after the screening of their documentary “Crossroads”

When the credits rolled, the applause was a thunderous, sustained wave of appreciation. It wasn’t just for their aesthetic choices, but for the way their work centers dignity, dialogue, and human connection.

It was also a thank-you for the mural they had just completed in Covilhã, the largest in the festival’s history. They painted the word “Amor” (Portuguese for “Love”) in bold letters across a towering wall, framed by two taller buildings that almost seem to press in on it.

Boa Mistura signing their mural for WOOL Festival 2025
Boa Mistura signing their mural for WOOL Festival 2025

The mural pulses with energy: vibrant colors, shifting patterns, textures that shimmer in the light. The word stands firm, central and undeniable.

The “Boas” didn’t approach this mural as a response to the place alone, but as a response to the moment. In a time when hate speech is rising, when violent rhetoric echoes across borders, when even the youngest generations aren’t immune to its pull, this wall became an opportunity to call for something else.

Boa Mistura AMOR Wool Festival

Amor stands its ground between those towering façades—as if physically holding its place in a world trying to shrink it. Not decorative, but declarative.

WOOL Festival ’25: A Collective Act of Regeneration.

Being there from the beginning allowed me to see the way Lara Seixo Rodrigues and her team operate—not just as curators, but as mediators. Their work begins long before the first brushstroke and continues long after the last. They maintain year-round contact with the community, ensuring that the festival is not something done to Covilhã, but with it.

Lidia Cao at work for WOOL Festival 2025
Lidia Cao at work for WOOL Festival 2025

Workshops, guided tours, film nights, concerts, community meals, school visits, impromptu conversations on street corners—WOOL is woven from all of this. It’s not just a cultural event; it’s a civic process. A framework for co-creating a city’s future with the people who live in it.

WOOL Festival ’25: A Model Worth Crossing Oceans For

Midway through the week, I met two American women standing in front of Lidia Cao’s mural. They had come from Providence, Rhode Island, drawn not by the Portuguese summer or the mountain views, but by WOOL itself.

“We needed to see it,” one of them said. Both are involved in a public art project back home, and Covilhã kept surfacing in their research, as a model, a reference point, a case study in how to do things differently. “We’ve heard it mentioned again and again as one of the best practices in community-based street art,” the other added. “We wanted to understand why.”

Concert WOOL festival
Every day, a new mural-in-progress became the backdrop for a different live concert.

So they came; to walk, to watch, to listen. Their presence made something click for me. WOOL isn’t just transforming Covilhã; it’s offering a framework. One that centers patience, dialogue, and deep respect for context. It proves that street art doesn’t need to be “Instagrammable” to be impacting. And that regeneration doesn’t have to come at the cost of gentrification.

As we chatted, I realized that what WOOL Festival offers isn’t only transformation, it’s a way of working that others want to learn from. A blueprint not for “beautifying” cities, but for weaving them back together.

In a world where urban art can so easily become branding, Covilhã quietly insists on something else.

Beyond the Walls: A Street Art Newsletter

Would you like to receive my stories, travel guides, and interviews straight to you inbox? Every 1st of the month, I will send you my latest articles along with more surprises!
It’s a more intimate and more direct way to connect with you than through social networks :) 

Join up!

Where to find WOOL murals in Covilihã? Grab my map!

Covilhã street art map murals Wool Festival

My travel and street art maps will come in useful.

They are the same Google Maps I created for myself and then tested on the field -no random places taken from the web, all spots approved by yours truly.

Get my maps
AmpparitoBoa MisturaLidia CaoLigia FernandesStelios PupetWOOL FestivalWOOL Festival 2025
Giulia BLocal street art travel
Giulia Blocal

I'm a writer who is specialised in street art and graffiti. Since 2011 I have run this independent street art blog, which has been the media partner of important street art festivals around Europe. I was the Communication & Content Manager of Amsterdam's STRAAT Museum and now I'm a freelance writer and content creator based in Rome. I work for creative enterprises and museums, and my writing was published in street art catalogues and art publications.

previous post
Behind the Scenes of F.A.C. Street Art Festival

You may also like

Behind the Scenes of F.A.C. Street Art Festival

21 June 2025

Behind the Scenes of CVTà Street Fest 2025

12 June 2025

WOOL Festival 2025: Returning to Covilhã for a...

23 May 2025

Forget the Château: Discover the Unexpected Street Art...

19 April 2025

Street Art in London: Walthamstow Murals and Why...

19 March 2025

About Me

About Me

Ciao, my name is Giulia. I'm a writer who is specialised in street art and graffiti. Since 2011 I have run this independent street art blog, which has been the media partner of important street art festivals around Europe. I was the Communication & Content Manager of Amsterdam's STRAAT Museum and now I'm a freelance writer and content creator based in Rome. I work for creative enterprises and museums, and my writing was published in street art catalogues and art publications.

Beyond the Walls: A Street Art Newsletter

Would you like to receive my stories, travel guides, and interviews straight to you inbox? Every 1st of the month, I will send you my latest articles along with more surprises!
It’s a more intimate and more direct way to connect with you than through social networks :) 

Join up!

Explore Rome with me!

Personalised walking tours to discover Rome with a local: me.
Street Art and more alternative tours on which I'll bring you to my favorite spots in my hometown.

Your BLocal Friend

My travel and street art maps will come in useful.

They are the same Google maps I created for myself and then tested on the field -no random places taken from the web, all spots approved by yours truly.

Get my maps!

Custom Travel Itinerary Service

Do you want a personalised itinerary based on your interests and passions? Tell me what you like.

Personalised Travel Tips

Media partnerships & collaborations

wool Urban Art
blind walls gallery
stencibility
urbanfest
up
vision art festival
urbanfest
blind walls gallery
up
wool Urban Art
stencibility
vision art festival
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube
  • Bloglovin
  • About
  • Contact
  • Newsletter

Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy — Manage cookie settings © Copyright BLocal — All Right Reserved. Managed by TomStardust Web Design

BLocal | Street Art Travel Guides
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Trips
  • Destinations
    • Be_Local in Amsterdam
    • Be_Local in Bristol
    • Be_Local in London
    • Be_Local in Rome
    • Italy
    • the Balkans
      • Albania Travel Itinerary
      • Bosnia and Herzegovina
      • Bulgaria Travel street art
      • Croatia Travel and Street Art
      • Greece Travel and Street Art
      • Macedonia Travel Itinerary
      • Serbia Travel and Street Art
      • Slovenia Travel and Street Art
    • World
      • Belgium Travel and Street Art
      • Czech Republic Travel and Street Art
      • France Travel and Street Art
      • Germany Travel and Street Art
      • Israel
      • Palestine Travel and Street Art
      • Malta Travel and Street Art
      • Netherlands Travel and Street Art
      • New York Travel and Street Art
      • Norway Travel and Street Art
      • Portugal Street Art and Travel
      • Spain Travel and Street Art
      • Tunisia Travel and Street Art
      • UK Street Art and Travel
  • Maps
  • Newsletter
  • Tours