Uroš Janjić

Graffiti, collective memory, and anti‑hate interventions in public space.
Uroš Janjić is a programmer-turned-civic-practitioner whose decade-long practice sits at the intersection of gonzo journalism, visual intervention, and antifascist activism. Working primarily in public space, he documents and disrupts hate graffiti through sticker actions, micro-text installations, community whitewashing campaigns, and strategic alliances with local authorities—transforming bystanders into co-agents of civic reclamation. His project Liberté, égalité, fraternité and documentary The Story of the Walls form twin pillars of a sustained, research-driven inquiry into hate speech, democratic accountability, and the contested politics of the Serbian street. A survivor of a neo-Nazi attack and a Deutsche Welle Peace Broadcasters prize-winner, Janjić brings both personal stakes and rigorous methodology to work that operates as much as activism as it does art.





