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Nicaraguan Graffiti, As A Mode Of Deconstruction
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Lavo was part of a word scratched into the pink paint of a gazebo at the church end
of Parque Evaristo Carazo in Rivas, Nicaragua.
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The top of a rail that ran around the platform of a gazebo
in Parque Evaristo Carazo of Rivas, Nicaragua was defaced with many words.
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A saying that read approximately, "No Scan Sapos Kae Mal," was scratched into the pink
painted surface of a gazebo found in Parque Evaristo Carazo, Rivas, Nicaragua.
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A bracing board on the gazebo in Parque Evaristo Carazo, Rivas, Nicaragua was defaced
with the words (approximately) "Te Amo Da Duty."
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A board on the gazebo of Parque Evaristo Carazo, Rivas, Nicaragua bore the sentence
(approximately) "En este mund ame solo a uno perso y toda mi lida lo voy a queve Dan."
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Alongside the road on the way back to Granada, the bus paused by this section of wall painted
in the modern style of tagging. A squid appeared to crawl over the top of building that formed from
letters that read in part, "Bore...."
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A odd little label on the side of an exterior column read, "D609." To its left the wall had been
carved with a history of names. Below those still visible, were others scratched out. One name
was, "Alejando."
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This is the inside of a waist-high wall on the roof of the Bacílica Catedral de La Asunción.
Over time, graffiti had been scratched and carved into its surface.
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Small mock bell-enclosures flanked the plaza in front of the church.
Those enclosures have gathered an impressive collection of graffiti of late.
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Penned in a corner of the Educational Station atop the volcano was this brief tribute to
"Millõn Moya Aldo Antonio".
Truly well meant with a shaded heart, halo and angelic wings.
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