Bosoletti
Is our artist line-up for Tangi Instervention Program 2025
Born and raised in Armstrong, Santa Fe, Argentina, Francisco Bosoletti approaches the world with a limpid and contemplative gaze. His art captures life, nature, and humanity in ways that reveal subtle, often hidden meanings. A detail—like a flower or a rope—can carry profound significance, while faces and bodies, caught in fleeting moments, invite viewers to reflect on the transience of existence.
Bosoletti’s murals respect the memory of the sites and communities he engages with. He blends ephemeral visions with the environment, creating artworks that appear and disappear in dialogue with their surroundings. His compositions awaken viewers to a more nuanced perception, encouraging them to observe beyond the obvious and connect with the emotional resonance of the work.
Through walls and canvases, his paintings cross sensory boundaries, intertwining with the memories and emotions of those who encounter them. By harmonizing classical universal aesthetics with site-specific storytelling, Bosoletti transforms public spaces into contemplative environments where beauty, impermanence, and human experience converge, leaving audiences with a deeper awareness of life and place.
Francisco Bosoletti participated in the Tangi Intervention Program #2, part of the ongoing Tangi Street Art Festival initiative to integrate art throughout Bali year-round. The program transforms walls and public spaces into living canvases, allowing the city to evolve through continuous artistic expression rather than a single annual festival.
In early 2025, Bosoletti created a mural at the abandoned Bali Festival Park in Denpasar, a site where nature and concrete coexist in striking contrast. Over one day of painting, he transformed the raw, decayed environment into a space that harmonizes with the surrounding landscape while telling a compelling visual story.
The project reflects Tangi’s mission of fostering cultural dialogue, engaging communities, and highlighting the connection between artists and their surroundings. Bosoletti’s work at the park exemplifies the power of public art to revitalize unexpected locations, encouraging viewers to see beauty, impermanence, and creativity intertwined with the environment.

Francisco Bosoletti’s intervention at Bali Festival Park took place in a hauntingly beautiful, abandoned space where nature had begun reclaiming concrete structures. The surreal coexistence of vines, decaying walls, and open spaces created a perfect canvas for Bosoletti’s evocative style.
Spending a total of seven days in Bali, he immersed himself in the local culture, connecting with people, traditions, and landscapes, allowing these experiences to inform his mural. The one-day painting process translated his observations into a composition that interacts seamlessly with the environment, emphasizing impermanence, memory, and perception.
Bosoletti’s mural reflects his philosophy of blending ephemeral beauty with the enduring presence of a site. By carefully considering how each line and detail interacts with the surroundings, he transformed the abandoned park into a contemplative space that invites viewers to look beyond the surface and engage with the layers of history and emotion embedded in the environment.
His work sparked conversations about the role of street art in preserving and interpreting evolving spaces. Through this intervention, Bosoletti not only left a visual mark but also contributed to a dialogue about cultural memory, impermanence, and the transformative power of public art in Bali.