Archive for the ‘Graffiti Events’ Category

Blackbook Battle @ DaBakery

Friday, July 17th, 2009

‘Born in the Streets’: glorified graffiti loses its gravitas

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

By Florence Waters
Street appeal: a graffiti artist leaves his calling card in São Paulo

This week one of Paris’s chicest contemporary art spaces threw open its doors to the Vermeers of vandalism: graffiti (ouch, the next word is reluctantly typed) artists.

At Fondation Cartier, amid the high-end boutiques of the French capital’s Left Bank, pictures of vandalised walls, cars and billboards have been neatly gathered into neat displays under titles such as “Action Writing’’, which looks at the scribblers’ penchant for “tagging” (street’s equivalent of an autograph) as a way of claiming their territory.

The show may be visually flamboyant, but the premise is flawed. Removed from their natural homes – in Amsterdam, São Paulo, Santiago, New York, Berlin and Paris – and placed in the white cube of an art gallery, what were spontaneous exclamations and violent slices of expressionism are reduced to curiosity wallpaper.

Born in the Streets – as the show is, somewhat condescendingly, called – is an ultra democratic exhibition in that it incorporates the least talented sort of graffiti artists, essentially doodlers, alongside some whose works have sold in international auction houses (to the likes of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, two of street art’s best-known collectors). At worst, graffiti is loud, obvious and unsophisticated. Selfishly perhaps, it uses public spaces for a studio, eats up public funds, and revels immaturely in the police chase. Should gallery owners know better than to promote all this? Well, probably.

Part of me, though, can see why Fondation Cartier has fallen for street art’s irresistible appeal. The first time a piece of street art made an impact on me was in one of East Berlin’s busiest streets. A real bed had been dumped on the pavement in an act of rage. Painted onto the sheets was a stick person; where his heart should have been, the mattress had been ripped open and painted red so that crimson feathers erupted from the hole. Sprayed onto the bed were the words: ”you tore my heart out’’. Full of purged teenage hurt, the bitter message stood in everyone’s way that day – and was removed the next morning.

At best, street art has the effect of poetry. It’s a colourful celebration of the freedom of speech and can unexpectedly transform a banal space or a mundane journey into something rather more thoughtful. One photograph in the new French exhibition shows a life-size painting by Evan Roth of a homeless man sleeping on the side of a pavement in Paris. While we might stop to stare at this depiction, rarely would we give the same consideration to a real homeless person. Graffiti makes its impact by playing with our expectations when we are going about our business. Occasionally, it has the ability to inspire a whole community, as did Shepard Fairey’s now iconic image of Barack Obama’s block-coloured face, which, in the run-up to the last US presidential elections, was stencilled all over downtown New York above the letters H, O, P and E.

However, as politically fuelled as street art may be, one could argue that the only thing it has ever really revolutionised is advertising. Long ago, graphic designers and advertisers hijacked the ”street’’ aesthetic. The populist appeal of the distinct design-friendly graffiti scrawl, and the simplicity of the block-colour stencil was cleverly used to sell stuff to people, like trainers, jeans – and now Cartier luxury goods. Branding and exhibiting graffiti deprives it of its saving grace: mystery. Street art should revere anonymity, the very thing that most other art genres despise.

Street art still has its place: on pee-stained ugly buildings in cities where dissidents reshuffle the power balance on the pavement. And on railway routes through suburban hell, where grit and grime – rather than destroying the pictures – actually add to their dirty aesthetic. If we wanted to look for enlightening and unexplored social history in Paris’s illustrious graffiti scene, we would skip the Louvre on our weekend city breaks and amble through the rough streets of the 18th arrondissement. We would take cameras, and our kids, and a slang dictionary to help translate the French expletives so that we could appreciate the artworks’ full meaning.

Given the current market interest in street art, you can count on Born in the Streets pulling in the crowds. But the rebel in me hopes that on my next visit to Paris, I’ll find an enormous Day-Glo saucisson sprayed down the side of Fondation Cartier’s pristine glass walls.

Via:www.telegraph.co.uk/

Miami Graffiti Street Art Opening 07.11.09 at Mid-City Arts – Los Angeles

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

Graffiti goes on tour, and this time it’s legal

Thursday, July 9th, 2009

Amnesty International backs Central and East European social awareness tour junket.

“I feel like it’s not all prepared just yet,” Dmitrij Proškin, who goes by “Chemis” on the graffiti scene, said before departing from Palackého náměstí on a humid July 1. After a year of planning and saving, he was finally loading his blue BMW pickup with a few backpacks and more than 400 spray-paint cans.

Embarking on a two-month tour of duty, the 22-year-old graffiti artist hopes to ignite discussion about the cross-border themes of racism, gender inequality, child abuse and the environment in several cities including Kraków, Bucharest, Sofia, Belgrade, Budapest, Bratislava and Vienna. Under the auspices of Amnesty International, Proškin and two other artists will travel from one wall to the next – all pre-selected and legal – speaking on substantive issues through graffiti. Proškin has named the trip “Write for Freedom,” and the first scheduled stop was the town of Auschwitz in Poland.

Before setting off, Petr Vízdal began documenting the trip with a video camera in one hand and a cigarette in the other. Eventually, he’ll transform it into a movie – the self-labeled “19-and-a-half-year-old” cameraman’s first major project due for eventual screening at Kino Aero. Throughout the 50 or so days on the road, Vízdal will trace the steps of the trio – Dominika Hornerová rounds out the group – in short film snippets uploaded to the project’s Web site.

[Read More]

Toasting Graffiti Artists – NYTimes

Monday, March 30th, 2009

It’s not quite the same as having one of your paintings in the Louvre, but a French exhibition, above, is enhancing the international recognition of graffiti artists. Among those honored in the show, called “Tag,” at the Grand Palais in Paris, are four New York pioneers who have been active since the 1970s: Toxic, Quik, Seen and Rammellzee, the last of whom showed up for an opening event in a Darth Vader-style mask. The exhibition, which runs through April 26, was commissioned and organized by Alain-Dominique Gallizia, a French architect who became interested in graffiti as an art form when he encountered examples of it at his work sites. Some 150 graffiti artists prepared works for display in the show; most are from the United States or France, but countries including Australia, Brazil, Chile and Japan are also represented.

Via:NYTimes

Contested art by graffiti star Banksy fail to sell

Monday, September 29th, 2008

LONDON (Reuters Life!) – Five works by cult graffiti artist Banksy failed to sell at a weekend auction after doubts were raised about their authenticity.

On its website, auctioneer Lyon & Turnbull said that the five top lots by Banksy with a combined estimate of 200-275,000 pounds ($360-495,000) and called “street works” because they were removed from their original urban settings, went unsold.

It was unclear whether their failure to find buyers was a result of the row over authenticity or reflected broader uncertainty in the contemporary art market caused by the financial crisis. Lyon & Turnbull were unavailable for comment.

Before Saturday’s London sale, the auctioneer said the five main Banksy’s on offer were genuine, even though the only authorized verification body had declined to confirm that they were by the hugely successful British artist.

Pest Control said it would not approve any street pieces removed from their original settings, partly to crack down on fakes and partly to protect the original concept.

Banksy made a name for himself painting stenciled satirical and political images in public spaces, always keeping his identity hidden.

His work became so valuable that several street pieces were salvaged, including a painting attributed to Banksy on a wall in London that fetched 208,100 pounds ($383,000) in an online sale. The cost of removing the wall and replacing it was not included.

The auction record for a Banksy is 288,000 pounds for “Space Girl and Bird.”

On its website, Pest Control said that since its creation in January, 89 street pieces and 137 screen prints attributed to Banksy have turned out to be false, potentially involving millions of pounds of losses for the buyers.

Via [uk.reuters.com]

Bomb-It Theatrical Release Party W/T-Kid, Mear, Vyal Painting Live, BarbQ, & $5 Cans Sale @33third L.A…FREE!

Monday, May 19th, 2008

BOMB IT! The Global Graffiti Documentary Featuring Street Artists T-KID 170, MEAR ONE, VYAL ONE, Pose II, Shepard Fairey, Tats Cru, Chaz Bojorquez, Robbie Conal, Cope2, Daim, Lady Pink, Revok, Lady Tribe, Zephyr, Ron English, Cornbread & Top Graffiti Writers From 5 Continents…(Click here to watch Bomb It Trailer)

Monday, May 19th, 2008

An artist known as “Stab” is guest curator for a show of graffiti and graffiti-inspired art at DB5K Gallery in Fells Point. (Sun photo by Elizabeth Malby / May 6, 2008)

Barry Heintz pulls the trigger of a powerwasher to blast away the last vestiges of an eight-foot-long and two-foot-high sprawl of graffiti in a Mount Vernon alley. He has already blasted it with a chemical mix called Taginator Graffiti Remover and scrubbed at it with an ordinary push broom. When he’s finished washing, nothing remains but a few small patches of white underneath a crumbling windowsill.

Heintz, maintenance supervisor with the Downtown Partnership of Baltimore, may be graffiti’s worst enemy. But many others in the city consider it art.

Just a mile and a half from the alley where Heintz attacked the unsightly black and white name, the DB5K Gallery has an exhibition showcasing famous graffiti “writers” and the movement’s progression over the decades. Prices in the Foundations of Style Writing show range as high as $1,000, and on opening night, a dozen pieces sold.

Graffiti is a strange hybrid. Across the country, people vilify it as vandalism indicative of neighborhoods in decline; others laud it as urban art worthy of museums. This year alone, Baltimore will spend nearly a million dollars to keep streets and alleys pristine. Meanwhile, DB5K in Fells Point is selling writers’ signatures, or tags, drawn on everything from torn pieces of paper to stolen street signs, and the National Portrait Gallery in Washington has incorporated large panels of graffiti into an exhibition about hip-hop’s influence on portraiture.

[Read More]

[Via:www.baltimoresun.com]

Banksy throws London stencil party

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

[Via:AP]

LONDON (AP) — Graffiti impresario Banksy and airbrush-wielding guerrilla artists blanketed the walls of an abandoned London tunnel with offbeat murals as part of a three-day stencil-art street party this weekend.

Banksy marshaled more than three dozen international artists for what he’s calling the “Cans Festival” — and is encouraging visitors to contribute their own graffiti starting Saturday.

“I’m hoping we can transform a dark forgotten filth pit into an oasis of beautiful art — in a dark forgotten filth pit,” Banksy was quoted as saying in the Times of London, which carried a preview of the exhibition Friday.

Festival spokeswoman Jo Brooks said work will be featured from 40 international artists and collectives, which sport names such as Bandit, Schhh, Pure Evil and Orticancvoodles.

Among Banksy’s pieces are security cameras growing from a tree, a hooded figure cutting itself with a knife and a worker spraying over ancient cave drawings. Other work includes an image of the pope pushing down his fluttering robes in an imitation of Marilyn Monroe by Norwegian artist Dolk.

Armed with aerosol cans and paint rollers, artists were still touching up the walls of the damp archway tunnel Friday.

Unlike many of Banksy’s previous stunts, the exhibition was approved by Eurostar, which manages the site under its old train platform at Waterloo Station.

It’s a sign of how far the artist — who has refused to give his real name — has come since he began his graffiti career in the 1980s and 1990s. Most of his work had a wickedly ironic and strongly anti-authoritarian bent. (His graffiti of two uniformed policemen locked in a passionate kiss is a longtime favorite.)

But although his identity has never been fully confirmed, critical success has made him something of an establishment figure. Banksy’s work commands hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction, and Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are among his fans.

The event, which is free, will be held in the tunnel Saturday through Monday.

Q&A with graffiti artist GHOST, whose work is in a Seattle gallery

Friday, April 25th, 2008

By Jeff Albertson [Via:Seattle Times]

New York City graffiti artist GHOST, or “Cousin Frank” to his friends, is a long way from stumbling through the dark recesses of New York’s subway tunnels looking for an idle train to “bomb.” The veteran graffiti writer, who got his start in the influential and well-documented New York City scene in the 1970s, is now pushing the art form from trains to gallery walls.

GHOST’s show at Seattle’s BLVD Gallery is a collection of highly stylized acrylics on canvas. The bright neon and pastel colors on clean white backdrops recall the “Wild Style” of graffiti art with its blocky letters and flashy colors; the comiclike characters he draws with big dopey eyes and sloppy wet tongues refer back to underground comic artists of the ’60s and ’70s.

GHOST spoke earlier this week by phone about his work and the transition from being a graffiti writer to an artist.

Q: What role have comics played in influencing your work?

A: As a kid I was more into Marvel [Comics], because of where I lived there wasn’t a lot of underground-comic kind of stuff; I wasn’t really in touch with that, but as I got older my friends turned me on to it. I was more into Rick Griffin [the artist who designed many early Grateful Dead posters], I thought his line work was amazing. To this day I think his stuff is incredible. For a long time I was strictly into black ink drawings. I never really liked color.

Q: Tell me about the transition from trains to galleries.

A: For years I was against it. ‘Cause I was just in that mind-set that graf belongs on trains and to this day I still believe that to a strong degree, even though I don’t do it anymore. As the trains got clean and I got older, I still had all this energy to paint and I just had to put it somewhere. I just drew for years after I stopped writing. At the time I never went to school to paint, it was just something I had to learn over time.

Q: Does it surprise you to find out who is buying your work? Not street-level hipsters, but serious middle-age collectors with money?

A: I was rather excited about the BLVD show because it was the first show I almost sold out. A lot of kids that look up to me or like what I do can’t afford it — but do I want to get to a place where I’m only selling to the rich who are gonna throw it in the basement somewhere and not even get seen or just wait for my death? Or is it gonna be like a kid who saves up his money and puts it in his house, cause I appreciate that more?

Q: When was the last time you “bombed a train”?

A: Quite a while [ago]. I only do legal stuff. I’m at that age, I don’t need problems in my life. I’m tryin’ to relax, and I don’t want to have to look over my shoulder every day.