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C2NY Graffiti Artwork Creation Event

The Movement of Graffiti Art presents a day at five points with Benj Gershman from LookAtLife.com, graffiti artist Meres One, and one of the largest and growing collections of public graffiti art. This clip was a summary of some of the highpoints of the day as well as showing off the artistic integrity of high-level graffiti art. C2NY, Lookatlife.com and MOGA themoga.com are all working hard to educate the masses of the merits and benefits of this relatively new and emerging social artform.

Writing On The Wall – A Look Into The World Of Graffiti Art

Highly decorative graffiti from Brazil

Highly decorative graffiti from Brazil

Graffiti has always been given a negative connotation as it is seen as a defacement of a piece of property with the used of paint and other items. It has also been inextricably linked with the hip hop culture and has become one of the main elements of the movement. Despite the negativity that some people feel towards graffiti, it has slowly become one of the foremost art forms in modern society.

Graffiti Art History

Despite seeming to be an all too modern art form, graffiti has always been around even in ancient times. Remains and relics from the ancient Roman city Pompeii reveal a world where people expressed their thoughts emotions by writing on walls and on other public and private items. Everything from poems to various drawings were found preserved in the ancient walls. This kind of society in ancient Rome is beautifully depicted in the introductory scenes of the HBO series Rome. The animators of the two season TV series depicted Roman streets and walls covered with graffiti that ranged from the obscene and sexually explicit to depictions that were political in nature.

Rome wasn’t the only place where ancient graffiti was found. The Egyptians were also known to write on the walls aside from their highly celebrated hieroglyphics. In Saudi Arabia, it is widely recognized that a form of ancient Arabic language called Safaitic was only found scratched into boulders and rocks in the Syrian and Jordanian deserts.

During war eras and choppy political periods in the United States, people have also seen various forms of graffiti from World War Two’s “Kilroy Was Here” to Dick Nixon “Before He Dicks You” during the 1970s. Another famous graffiti are the immortal words “Clapton is God” found in the London Underground. Read more

Modern Graffiti

Modern graffiti on train.

Modern graffiti on European train.

Graffiti is often seen as having become intertwined with hip hop culture as one of the four main elements of the culture (along with rapping, DJing, and break dancing). However, there are many other instances of notable graffiti this century. Graffiti has long appeared on railroad boxcars. The one with the longest history, dating back to the 1920s and continuing into the present day, is Bozo Texino. During World War II and for decades after, the phrase “Kilroy was here” with accompanying illustration was widespread throughout the world, due to its use by American troops and its filtering into American popular culture. In the sixties, its popularity was eclipsed by American graffiti proclaiming that “Yossarian lives!”, a reference to the protagonist of Joseph Heller’s novel, Catch-22. The student protests and general strike of May 1968 saw Paris bedecked in revolutionary, anarchist, and situationist slogans such as L’ennui est contre-révolutionnaire (”Boredom is counterrevolutionary”). A famous graffito of the 20th century was the inscription in the London subway reading “Clapton is God”. The phrase was spray-painted by an admirer on a wall in an Islington Underground station in the autumn of 1967. The graffiti was captured in a now-famous photograph, in which a dog is urinating on the wall. A popular graffito of the 1970s was the legend “Dick Nixon Before He Dicks You,” reflecting the hostility of the youth culture to that U.S. president. Graffiti also became associated with the anti-establishment punk rock movement beginning in the 1970s. Bands such as Black Flag and Crass (and their followers) widely stenciled their names and logos, while many punk night clubs, squats and hangouts are famous for their graffiti.

In America around the late 1960s, graffiti was used as a form of expression by political activists, and also by gangs such as the Savage Skulls, La Familia, and Savage Nomads to mark territory. Towards the end of the 1960s, the signatures-tags-of Philadelphia graffiti writers Top Cat, Cool Earl and Cornbread started to appear. Around 1970-71, the center of graffiti innovation moved to New York City where writers following in the wake of TAKI 183 and Tracy 168 would add their street number to their nickname, “bomb” a train with their work, and let the subway take it-and their fame, if it was impressive, or simply pervasive, enough-”all city”. Bubble lettering held sway initially among writers from the Bronx, though the elaborate writing Tracy 168 dubbed “wildstyle” would come to define the art. The early trendsetters were joined in the 70s by artists like Dondi, Futura 2000, Daze, Blade, Lee, Zephyr, Rammellzee, Crash, Kel, NOC 167 and Lady Pink.

'Kilroy was here' inscription on the World War II Memorial.

'Kilroy was here' inscription on the World War II Memorial.

The relationship between graffiti and hip hop culture arises both from early graffiti artists practicing other aspects of hip hop, and its being practiced in areas where other elements of hip hop were evolving as art forms. By the mid-eighties, the form would move from the street to the art world. Jean-Michel Basquiat would abandon his SAMO tag for art galleries, and even street art’s connections to hip hop would loosen. Occasional hip hop paeans to graffiti could still be heard throughout the nineties, however, in tracks like the Artifacts’ “Wrong Side of Da Tracks” (Between a Rock and a Hard Place, Big Beat, 1994) and Company Flow’s “Lune TNS” (Funcrusher Plus, Rawkus, 1997). Read more

Banksy Posters – Snapshots of Vanishing Art

Banksy Wall Art

Banksy wall art 'Maid'

Fans of Banksy graffiti are in a strange position. If you don’t live in London or any of the various international cities where he paints his works, you’re not likely to see them. Even if you do happen to live in the city, you have to be quick or by the time you reach a new piece of Banksy art it is more often than not covered in Plexiglas or has been chipped away and flogged on eBay.

While it’s understandable, if not mercenary, for people to be removing Banksy art, I take more exception with those who chase their fifteen seconds of fame by defacing his stencils. A recent example of this was a piece of Banksy graffiti that the he painted in New Orleans to commemorate the devastation of Hurricane Katrina (and perhaps a timely reminder of the lack of response from the government just before the national election!). One of the stencils was of a boy swinging on a lifesaver and this has now been blotted out with red paint. You could perhaps understand a kid doing this, but given the placement and height of the graffiti, it would seem to be someone more ‘mature’. I suppose by defacing a piece of art, they know it will be reported and ergo they have their little piece of infamy. The same thing happened in London earlier this year when two of the more prominent pieces were destroyed within days; part roller-painted out, with the words “All the best” painted over them. There is speculation by Banksy posters on forums that this was actually done by the artist himself, in answer to the wholesale removal of his public works that were placed on eBay at extortionate prices. Read more

The Art World’s Most Revered Vandal

By Michael Molyneux

Angel in a doorway

Doorway angel by Banksy

There are few artists working today whose fame can be attributed as much to their ability to stir up controversy as to how talented they are. Banksy is different. Not only is his work controversial because it is essentially graffiti, but because his stenciled works of “‘art’ often fetch thousands at auction. So is Banksy, one of the world’s best known artists, a spray-can wielding charlatan or an urban, post-modern prophet?

There are few artists working today whose fame can be attributed as much to their ability to stir up controversy as to how talented they are. Banksy is different. Not only is his work controversial because it is essentially graffiti, but because his stenciled works of “art’ often fetch thousands at auction.

So is Banksy, one of the world’s best known artists, a spray-can wielding charlatan or an urban, post-modern prophet?

Although he has become one of the most eminent and collectable artists working today, he remains all but anonymous; almost no details about his life, including his name, are publically known.

In recent years the self-described “art-terrorist’ has used his art for overtly political purposes; in 2005 he painted nine images on the Israeli West Bank wall including a child digging a hole through the structure, in 2001 he travelled to Mexico to paint murals for the Zapatista Army of National Liberation and, in Bristol Zoo, he once painted the words ‘I want out. This place is too cold. Keeper smells. Boring, boring, boring’ in the elephant enclosure.

He remains best known in the UK for his stencil graffiti and for creating “subverted’ paintings; adaptations of famous masterpieces that are either redrawn or added to with satirical slogans. Read more