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Step into the Raval and the first thing you’ll notice isn’t the architecture; it’s the friction. It’s the sound of urethane wheels slapping against granite, the smell of cheap hashish, and the heavy, humid air of a neighborhood that refuses to be gentrified into submission. Tucked behind the gleaming white, clinical fortress of the MACBA—Barcelona’s Museum of Contemporary Art—is a long, blood-red streak of defiance known simply as the Keith Haring mural. Officially titled 'Todos Juntos Podemos Parar el Sida' (Together We Can Stop AIDS), this isn't just an 'art display.' It’s a ghost of 1989, a time when the Raval was the 'Barrio Chino' and the city was teetering between Olympic ambition and a heroin epidemic.
The mural you see today at Carrer de Valldonzella is a faithful recreation, but the soul remains intact. Haring painted the original in 1989 on a crumbling wall in Plaça de Salvador Seguí, a place then synonymous with needles and neglect. He did it in five hours, for free, with a boombox blasting house music. When the area was razed for urban renewal, the city had the foresight to trace the work before the wall came down. In 2014, it was resurrected here, on this concrete slab in the Plaça de Joan Coromines, using the exact same shade of red. It’s a thirty-meter-long narrative of snakes, syringes, and dancing figures, all intertwined in a desperate, rhythmic struggle against a plague that was devouring Haring’s world.
Standing here, you’re at the epicenter of Barcelona’s street culture. To your left, the MACBA’s Richard Meier-designed facade looks like a giant, expensive refrigerator. To your right, the Raval’s narrow, dark arteries pulse with life. The mural sits in the middle, a bridge between the institutionalized art world and the raw reality of the street. You don’t need a ticket. You don't need a docent to tell you what it means. The imagery is universal: the snake of disease being strangled by the collective effort of the figures. It’s loud, it’s urgent, and it’s remarkably beautiful in its simplicity.
The atmosphere is rarely quiet. This is the unofficial headquarters of the city’s skate scene. You’ll see kids from all over the world—Japan, Brazil, California—launching themselves off ledges, their shadows flickering across Haring’s red lines. There’s a beautiful irony in it: a mural about a terminal illness serving as the backdrop for the most kinetic, alive energy in the city. It’s not a place for hushed whispers. It’s a place to sit on a concrete ledge, crack a beer from a 'latero,' and watch the world go by.
Is it worth the walk? If you want the sanitized, postcard version of Barcelona, stay in the Eixample. But if you want to see the city’s heart—the one that beats with a bit of a murmur and a lot of grit—this is it. It’s a reminder that art doesn’t always belong in a climate-controlled room. Sometimes it belongs on a wall, under the sun, getting hit by the occasional stray skateboard. It’s honest, it’s tragic, and it’s one of the few things in this city that hasn't been ruined by a gift shop.
Type
Tourist attraction
Duration
15-30 minutes
Best Time
Late afternoon for the best street culture atmosphere and skater energy.
Free Admission
No tickets required
The central figure strangling the snake (symbolizing the fight against AIDS)
The vibrant red color, which was Haring's specific choice for the original
The contrast between the mural and the modern white MACBA architecture
Watch out for stray skateboards; the square is a major skate spot.
Combine this with a visit to the MACBA or CCCB next door.
Grab a coffee at one of the nearby Raval cafes and sit on the ledges to people-watch.
Only major Keith Haring work in Spain
Epicenter of Barcelona's world-famous skate culture
Powerful 1980s activist art in a modern public space
Carrer de Valldonzella, 56
Ciutat Vella, Barcelona
A thousand years of silence tucked behind a Romanesque monastery, where the grit of El Raval dissolves into ancient stone, cool shadows, and the heavy weight of history.
Forget the plastic bulls and tacky magnets. This is where Barcelona’s soul is bottled into art, a small sanctuary of local design hidden in the shadows of the Gothic Quarter.
A raw, paint-splattered antidote to the sterile museum circuit. This is where pop-art meets the grit of the street, served straight from the artist’s hands in the heart of old Barcelona.
Absolutely, especially if you appreciate street art and social history. It's a powerful, large-scale work by a global icon, located in the heart of the city's most energetic neighborhood.
No, it is a public mural located on an exterior wall. You can view it for free at any time of day or night.
Late afternoon is best for atmosphere, as the square fills with local skaters and the light hits the red paint perfectly. For a quiet photo, go early in the morning.
It is on the exterior wall of the MACBA building facing Plaça de Joan Coromines, accessible via Carrer de Valldonzella in the Raval neighborhood.
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