Archive for the ‘New Zealand Graffiti’ Category

Garage graffiti mural honours Anzacs

Thursday, April 15th, 2010


Traditional Anzac poppies have been given a contemporary retouch by Christchurch graffiti artist Wongi Wilson at a roadside mural in rural Cust.

The tribute artwork painted on the side of a garage owned by Cust retailer Margaret Austin took six hours to complete and used about 40 different cans of spray-paint, Wilson said.

Wilson, whose partner, Emma, is Austin’s daughter, said remembering the Anzacs was important to him and to Austin’s family because her two sons were in the military. One is a medic serving in Afghanistan.

Wilson has previously exhibited work with fellow graffiti artist Nick Tam. It has featured at the Ellerslie International Flower Show and on television.

He had been interested in the art form since primary school, he said.

“One of my friend’s older brothers was into hip-hop, break-dancing and graffiti art, so I read the books, watched the movies, got into it and made my own style.”

Wilson has been painting for more than 10 years and is studying for a bachelor in visual arts at the Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology.

He disliked the impression some people had of graffiti art as tagging.

“It doesn’t reflect what I do, but I still get grouped into it.”

Projects such as the Anzac mural helped to dispel those connections and showed the good aspects of graffiti art.

“I’m thinking about doing a reproduction on canvas for the RSA, then donating it to them to show we understand what they’re going through and to show my respect to them.”

Wilson also helps a council-funded group called Project Legit which deals with youths who have been caught tagging.

A 50-year-old South Auckland man has been ordered to stand trial for murdering a teenager caught tagging his property

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Bruce Emery, who is charged with killing 15-year-old Pihema Cameron in January, appeared in Manukau District Court on Monday for a depositions hearing.

Earlier, a friend of Pihema told the court about a night of alcohol and drug taking and graffiti.

The teenager, who has name suppression, told the court how he and Pihema spent the afternoon drinking and smoking cannabis before setting out on a Manurewa street with spray cans.

He says his friend tagged a number of fences, phone boxes and windows before a man, whose face he did not see, yelled out and started chasing them.

The accused followed them into a quiet cul-de-sac and stabbed Pihema in the chest. He died at the scene.

The friend said they both tried to spray the accused in the face with their spray cans in a bid to defend themselves.

[Via:www.radionz.co.nz]

Don’t like graffiti? He doesn’t care

Monday, May 26th, 2008

The ‘tagging bill’ may come down harder on graffiti vandalism, but the motivation of one prolific tagger suggests it probably won’t stop bored young men making marks on your fence or business. Marty Sharpe reports.

Meet Joseph Kitchener. The 24-year-old former P addict from Flaxmere has found a more addictive drug: graffiti vandalism. He is a prolific tagger and a “bomber” and boasts of “stuffing up” much of the North Island.

Kitchener epitomises all that people detest when they see their city or town defaced by vandals.

A seasonal fruit picker currently out of work, he’s a young, bored man with no interests and no ambitions that don’t include spraying paint on someone else’s property.

His idea of a good night out is to board a moving freight train in Napier, hang off the side of it with a bag-load of spray cans and “bomb” a shipping container before jumping off as the train nears Hastings. His friends – part of his “crew” – drive alongside filming him as he does it.

Kitchener won’t reveal the name of his crew for fear of being charged for numerous tags around the North Island, but says it includes four others in Hawke’s Bay, three in Hamilton and two in Wellington.

[Read More]

Tag and go to jail – Judge’s warning as he locks up teen vandal

Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

A judge has jailed a graffiti vandal for 28 days and warned others in Hawke’s Bay they can expect the same from now on.

[Via:www.stuff.co.nz]

Orchard worker Ford Randell, 18, appeared before Judge Tony Adeane in Hastings District Court for sentencing on four charges of intentional damage yesterday.

Randell had been in custody on the charges for five days, and his lawyer Roger Phillip asked for a sentence of community work.

He said Randell was remorseful and had described his own tagging of three buildings and a concrete pillar in Hastings as “stupid and pathetic”.

The offending took place between January 1 and when Randell was arrested on March 16.

The judge said taggers were giving Hastings the appearance of a North American slum and rejected suggestions that graffiti was art or culture. “If it’s art, why aren’t the artists out doing it in broad daylight?” he said. “It is covert, criminal behaviour.”

He said the sentence was “a signal to you and your friends that the penalty for graffiti in Hawke’s Bay will be imprisonment until such time as there is some sign this self-indulgent egocentric behaviour is abating”.

Before sentencing Randell the judge asked if anyone in court had anything to say. Randell’s father, Peter stood up, apologising for speaking out: “I don’t think he deserves to be in jail. He did the offences, I appreciate that.”

The judge replied: “I’m afraid we’ve come to the end of the line.”

He said: “He is a tagger and he has chosen to assert himself or make his statement by going around wilfully damaging other people’s property.”

Randell was also ordered to pay $1092.45 in reparation.

Last November Judge Adeane sent Napier tagger Randall Grey, 19, to prison for two nights after he pleaded guilty to causing $2042 damage to Taradale properties.

Grey has since been convicted of theft and is in custody awaiting sentence on both matters.

In January Judge Adeane sentenced Onj Matete-Wilkie, of Gisborne, to 42 days’ jail for tagging Kaiti School.

OfficeMax in St Aubyns St was one of three businesses tagged by Randell. Store manager Michelle Green said the sentence was a great result. “It sends an example to all other taggers.”

She said the premises had been tagged several times this year.”We left a small tag to deter others and they appeared to leave us alone for a while,” she said. “Then we got tagged again. It’s like they’re trying to own the building.”

Peter Randell said later that he did not condone his son’s behaviour, and even believed a few days in prison might be a good thing. “But 28 days for spraying a bit of paint around is too much,” he said.

“I know what the judge was trying to do and I respect that. But what he’s done is not good for anyone. Five days in prison is fair enough. Let him see what it’s like. But 28 days? People who hit their wives get less than that, drink-drivers get less than that.”

He said graffiti was a way young people could try to be noticed. “Many come from broken families, and most of those families used to work at the Tomoana and Whakatu [freezing] works that were doing well until the works closed.”

He said his son, who worked at Watties, was a kind boy who was good at sports and art. He thought he had moved on from tagging.

“The first I knew is when I got a text from him last week telling me he was going to prison. He’d been too ashamed to tell us he’d even been caught,” Mr Randell said.

He said he had encouraged him to paint on canvas and hoped he could get on an art course.

He said he was not a tagger, but a “bomber” – bombers paint large shapes in bright colours; taggers just leave a mark in one colour.

Wanganui Mayor Michael Laws’ offer of $500 for information after vandals tagged the city’s library has led to a phone calls naming the alleged taggers. The Alexander Heritage and Research Library was hit at the weekend.

More graffiti laws – Graffiti bill soon to come into law

Monday, April 14th, 2008

[Via:www.nzherald.co.nz]

A bill that outlaws tagging and bans spray can sales to youth in Manukau is expected to pass its final stages in Parliament this week, making the city the first area able to put new anti-tagging measures into practice.

The Manukau District Council (Control of Graffiti) Bill has broad political support and if it passes, taggers in the city will be the first hit by $2000 fines and bans on spray can sales to under 18-year-olds.

Despite initially opposing its provisions, the Government decided to back the legislation after using it as the basis for its own Tagging and Graffiti Vandalism Bill.

The bill, which is now before a select committee, was introduced in February in response to a backlash following the killing of 15-year-old Pihema Cameron after he was caught tagging.

A spokesman for the Minister of Justice, Annette King, said the government agreed to support the Manukau bill because it only covered a small part of the country and would lapse when the Government’s own legislation passed.

There was a lead-in time before the Manukau bill would have any effect, and the Government’s bill was expected to pass before then.

The bill was rejected by a select committee because of age discrimination and allowing police the power to require suspects to give their details and dob in accomplices. However, it was later watered down so its provisions aligned with those in the Government bill.

Manukau Mayor Len Brown has said passing the Manukau bill would mean his city could begin to address its graffiti problems without having to wait while the Government’s Tagging and Graffiti Vandalism Bill went through Parliament.

The Manukau bill, sponsored by Labour MP George Hawkins, was introduced in 2005 to help the council fight the problem of tagging which was costing the council about $1 million a year in clean-up costs.

Both bills ban sales of spray cans to under 18-year-olds, restrict display of spray cans and make graffiti a specific offence with penalties of up to $2000 fines and community sentences.