AP PHOTOS: Greek graffiti artists spray thoughts
By Associated Press
Mar 26, 2014 7:53 AM CDT
In this photo taken on Saturday Feb. 22, 2014, artwork by Indonesian-born street artist WD, inspired by a news photograph from recent riots in Istanbul, Turkey is seen in central Athens. Anti-government demonstrations in Greece have inspired local street artists as the country struggles to emerge from...   (Associated Press)

ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Ancient Greeks chiseled their messages, often rude or boastful, into marble. They would probably be amazed how the illicit art form has evolved in the country's capital centuries later.

Graffiti covers entire buildings, trains, and is disrespectfully scrawled on the statues of respected ancestors. The vandals are often graduates of Greece's fine arts schools, who have sometimes spun their street art into commissions.

Loudly expressing opinions is a national pastime that has only grown more raucous during the social upheaval caused by Greece's deep financial crisis. Vacant storefronts, acres of shutters reinforced against rioters are the canvases that have helped attract artists from Greece and abroad to spray their thoughts in Athens.

Mindless tagging this is not: Violent confrontations with police, stateless children of immigrants, and the rise of a political party whose leaders were inspired by Nazi Germany are among the issues turned into art.

See 9 more photos