Battered faces of female celebrities appear in Italian street art to denounce violence

Video. Battered faces of female celebrities appear in Italian street art

The battered faces of Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton and Angela Merkel stare out of posters in Milan.

The battered faces of Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton and Angela Merkel stare out of posters in Milan.

Italian artist Alexsandro Palombo created them to raise awareness of violence against women.

The street art campaign is called "Just Because I am a Woman" and also feature US Democratic Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Sonia Gandhi, the head of India's main opposition party.

Palombo intends "to illustrate the drama that affects millions of women throughout the world... with the aim of denouncing, raising awareness and obtaining a real response from institutions and politics", his press office in a statement.

"Violence against women is a global problem that affects everyone regardless of race, class or religion," the posters say.

The women, with bruised faces or bearing strangulation marks, testify: "I am a victim of domestic violence, I am paid less, I have undergone genital mutilation, I don't have the right to dress as I want, I can't choose who I'm going to marry. I've been raped".

The contemporary pop artist and activist, 45, is renowned for colourful, reflective and irreverent works and uses satirical art to raise awareness of social and cultural issues.

Among his most important works are "Disabled Disney Princesses" and "The Simpsons Go To Auschwitz".

He launched the #BriefMessage campaign to mark International Women's Day, calling on women to denounce violence by writing a message on their underwear and sharing the photograph on social media.

This latest campaign echoes one Palombo ran in 2015, which featured doctored photos of US celebrities such as actors Kirsten Stewart and Angelina Jolie and pop star Madonna.