“‘Digra” is an attitude based on a blend of struggle and pride, and that attitude is at the core of the Portuguese multidisciplinary artist collective Unidigrazz. Formed by Sepher Awk, Diogo “Gazella” Carvalho, Rappepa Bedju Tempu, Onun Trigueiros, and Tristany in 2017, its regular media spans painting, drawing, music, film, graffiti writing, and design. With one foot on public programming, the collective often works with public entities to tackle wider societal issues. No matter the angle, two connected fundamental questions seem to arise throughout: How many forms can space hold? Can digra be a place?
Meia riba kalxa (2020) is a good door into the world of  Unidrigrazz. An album signed by Tristany and a series of music videos  directed by Gazella and Trigueiros, the project gives an overview of the  collective’s work: at times a patient thread of memory and longing, at  others an upbeat documentary of travels and current events, soaked in a  mesh of musical drifts swinging between slow-paced oneiric melodies and  buoyant images that make their way to the foreground. This description  applies to the music and the films, and that’s the point.
Mem Martins, where the group is based, always stands out. A parish in  the so-called Linha de Sintra, a wider metropolitan area stretching  along the railway line connecting Sintra and Lisbon, Mem Martins grew  exponentially in the 1970s, pushed by an influx of migration both from  the Portuguese countryside and from formerly colonized African  countries, such as Angola and Mozambique, following the 1974 Portuguese  revolution. Over the years, Linha de Sintra has been officially  mistreated as a periphery, a stigma reflected in lack of public  investment, especially in the cultural sector.
But what is a center the center of, anyway? And what does  “peripheral” suggest if not that recentering is urgent? Either way, an  infrastructural and institutional void means structures must be built.  At least that’s how Unidigrazz responds to these questions – while  continuing to raise them. The collective seeks to create a platform that  young people and artists come across, and it has reached out over the  years to public entities in the area, ultimately collaborating with the  parish of Algueirão-Mem Martins and Sintra municipality.