graf and streetart news compiled from the finest sites in the land by a robot.

The Boom Bus – Awesome Graffiti Bus!

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
So on the A41 in North West London, towards the M25 Junction near Watford I saw the Boom Bus covered in graffiti, looking like it had been abandoned in a bus stop on the side of the busy 2 lane road. So I stopped, and here are some photos!
It’s a pretty good looking graffiti bus, [...]


Wooster In The White House – Sharing Your Thoughts

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

We’ve received so many wonderful and inspiring emails in the last 24 hours. We wanted to share with you some of the things people have said…

From Jennifer:

“Wow! Your recent post about your experience at the White House briefing made my morning. Back in the Spring of 2007, during my final semester of undergrad, I emailed you about how important the Spring Street Project was in terms of my development as a student studying art and its cultural impacts. I focused my final thesis on street art and its cultural growth.

Two years later, I am back in school for a graduate degree in Urban Policy and Management at The Milano New School because I want to find my voice in the political arena through policy and advocacy for public art/street art/community art (all synonymous in my book). I am currently working for a local nonprofit art organization to gain the administrative and fundraising skills necessary to take the theory I am learning in class to the next level. I’m devoting a lot of time and energy into my professional development in hopes that I will be part of a collective to make a true impact on the growth of public art and space in the United States. It sounds corny and cliche, but It is my passion and my motivation on days that are particularly trying.

So, to read: “Again – our definitions need to change. And we think Obama can do that. At the very least he can start to move the needle forward.”

Truly inspiring! Thank you for attending and thank you for sharing.”

From Teresa:

“I am writing today to personally thank you for going to the White House. As some one who is working on a public art ringtone project and who understands that the airspace is public property for purposes of sonic transmission, I’m delighted to hear that you had a seat at that table. I feel it’s so important that this conversation is
happening at the national level because I live in a town where funders, and locals who serve on arts granting panels, the local news media generally don’t “get” contemporary art practices that utilize and question aspects of public space. I’m hopeful that if the President and his administration are listening, that there’s a chance that public perception will change. Thanks for allowing your voices to be heard as part of this national conversation on the arts.

I’ve been following your blog for a few years now. I can’t tell you how much good I get out of starting up my browser with your archive and insights day after day (I’ve used links and content to share with friends as well as in educational settings).

Many thanks for your contributions to contemporary community”

From Priest:

“I am conflicted with this column. As you and Sara say one of the best aspects of street art is that it is “temporary”. It has an unexpected lifespan, it lives and it dies. I don’t like to have my pieces buffed, but at the same time there is something exciting about doing as you guys say, “Unauthorized art”. It is against the grain, upstream, and original. The eternal battle of “going mainstream” comes into play. One of the most interesting factors of your website is that you and Sara are broadcasting art that would otherwise only show up in a Metro police station flier. I know you both run legitimate careers outside of the website and I am appreciative of what your website represents but I know the adrenaline rush that I and so many others feel when they walk up to a blank wall exists without the permission of others and cannot be matched with such. Congratulations on your site and your international and presidential recognition”

From Mitch:

“i’ve been following wooster for what feels like many years. It has become a steady and constant feature of my internet use – i love having it as my homepage so that each day i can start off with some learning and research. I’ve been particularly excited by the New York Street Advertising Takeover recently, thanks for bringing this to my attention. The last time i felt driven to contact you was a few years ago in relation to a discussion about a Nike ad jam, where the placement of the swoosh suggested violence against women. This time, as you might well have surmised, i write in response to your fascinating post from wednesday 13th. I appreciate the manner in which you disclosed this – its this sort of personal communication that makes Wooster feel like a community driven at one level by the love of two individuals for street art. Of course to me it appears that Wooster would be nothing without the constant stream of contributions and interest from the broader global church that we are a part of (excuse the religious metaphor). Which is why, as nitpicking as it seems, i wanted to pull you up on one sentence and one sentence only in what was otherwise an excellent (yet maybe too brief) exposition of how community and alternative media can be elevated to the highest level of official regard. This was the phrase which pricked my ears – “So all of this is to say that we felt that by going to meet with officials in the new Obama Administration we were representing not us, but all of you.” While Wooster has now begun functioning as something that seems to approximate a lobby group for the value of urban art forms and the rights of artists and communities involved in them, i think that you have made a gross error here, which was perhaps just a rhetorical oversight.

Because, as i think you both already know – no one can “represent” the streets. The streets and the artists on them don’t need someone to stand up and speak for them – they have a rich and loud voice of their own. What you represent is your own, well informed, perspective on how and why the streets are important, and in what contexts they have become so.

My own perspective relies on the rationale that the street and its utilisation through whatever means, is an inherently political entity – ultimately democratic, yet subject to the same sort of rules, conditions and exploitations of power that the rest of our society suffers beneath. That is why a “representation” of the streets is inherently flawed, and why i think you may have said that to pacify an attack that you perhaps expected to come.

Be proud that you were invited to the White House on the merit of your personal opinion and work – but don’t try to disguise it as being ambassadors or envoys chosen against your will. By making that mistake you are doing yourselves a disservice, as well as recreating the conditions of power imbalance within our world that simply create more problems further down the track.”

(Or response to Mitch was this – “Thanks for sharing your thoughts. In no way did we mean to imply that we were representing the entire street art community as we agree, there are many different viewpoints and it’s impossible to represent all of them. We are indeed only one voice in a very large and diverse discussion and in no way speak for all. By saying we represented “you” we were specifically speaking about all the people who we do know agree with our views. We talk and hear from people every day about the issues we are passionate about. These are the people we felt we represented yesterday. We did not feel we were going there as individuals. So if you were offended by that we do apologize to you. You are correct, it’s impossible to represent everyone’s views.”)

From Mari:

“Im so ecstatic after reading your post about the trip to the big house, and not jail for once!! So great to have people like you two working to benefit the community at large… I have been struggling so much with our lack of public space, and lack of access to it, and I feel revived and inspired by your acomplishment! THANKS FOR ALL YOU DO”


Another Faile Prayer Wheel "Arrives" in Brooklyn

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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AWESOME to see that Faile is installing more prayer wheels in the streets of Brooklyn.

(Photo and video by Stephen Kelley)


MyMo Tonight at Pure Evil Gallery In London

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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If you’re in London tonight, head over to Pure Evil’s gallery as he’s doing a show with MyMo from Berlin. Her work is wonderful. If you haven’t see it, click here.

photos of the hang:
http://gallery.me.com/pureevil#100405


JR in Rio – The Video

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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Last week we had the chance to have dinner here in New York with both JR and Prune. To hear each of them talk about their work, left us “on a high” for days.

For a long time our opinion has been that both of them will absolutely be recognized as “important” artists for their generation for decades to come. (Every time we’re reminded that JR is only 25 we can’t believe it)

The photos above are form JR most recent installation in Rio. The setting should be obvious. If you’re in Rio you may not know that there’s an audio Guide for the photos in the streets of Rio in which you can listen to the stories of the women from Providencia (Portuguese) Dial 0055 21 (0)800 283 0064 (its a free number)

Globo has also done a video on the project. It’s in Portuguese, so we can’t understand what it says. But we’re sure it’s amazing :)


More Judith Supine Goodness

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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In the middle of doing his piece for the 11 Spring show (a massive wall collaboration with Davide Zucco), Judith Supine walked in one day with a huge smile on his face. He declared to anyone who would listen – “I’ve just quit my job!”

The happiness on his was infectious as it was one of those moments in an artist’s life where you say – “Fuck it. Why not? If it’s not now, it’s never.”

The cool thing to watch is that Judith’s work just keeps getting better and better. We we absolutely love the two pieces above and wanted to share them. If you’ve never seen the piece he did with Davide Zucco (aka Rekal) for our 11 Spring show, here it is:

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Jusith Supine In Central Park

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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Photo by Kevin Walsh

How fucking awesome is this piece installed by Judith Supine yesterday in Central Park. He told us – “I sank in the mud up to my waist.”


Wooster Wants To Know: What Causes and Issues Are You Most Passionate About?

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

To get a sense of the issues that the Wooster Collective “community” is most passionate about, we’re asking today on the Wooster Facebook page: “What one cause or social issue are you most passionate about?”

Post your thoughts here: http://bit.ly/nce9r


BOOM BOX

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Carnaby blastersee the video at xnztube


Legendary Tats Cru graffiti video

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
OK so World Graffiti Urban Art have been off for a few weeks due to internet problems and a trip to San Francisco, but normal service will be resumed very soon along with a nice new design. I want the site to load faster, and that means doing some stripping down and simplifying, hopefully it’ll [...]


Bristol City Council Graffiti Policy

Posted: May 14th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Yesterday’s news about the Cheo and 3Dom piece in Stokes Croft being painted over by the council seems to have provoked a fair reaction, so perhaps it’s worth looking briefly at the council’s current graffiti policy. You can read it here, but the interesting bits for this case seem to be…

As part of our aim to make our Local Authority area safe, clean and green, we are committed to reducing and removing graffiti.

Apart from in galleries such as the RWA of course, where letting graffiti artists paint onto the walls has just seen it have its most successful and best attended show for years.

Interestingly whilst the policy says;

The Council is responsible for removing graffiti from Council owned properties, parks and the highways.

It then adds;

This policy focuses on reducing unlawful graffiti on property and land that is not on Council owned property.

So, the council’s focus isn’t on its own buildings and property, it’s on other people’s.

Best of all, the council can;

- Issue “Graffiti Removal Notices” under section 48 of the Anti-social Behaviour Act 2003 requiring the person responsible for the “relevant surface” to remove the defacement within a period of 28 days where the defacement is detrimental to the amenity of the area or is offensive
- Where the recipient of a Graffiti Removal Notice fails to comply with the requirements of the Notice, an authorised officer of the local authority may enter land to the extent necessary to enable it to remedy the defacement and may recover expenditure reasonably incurred in exercising this power

So, if you get someone to paint your building, and the painting is felt to be ‘detrimental to the amenity of the area’, then the council can issue you with a legal notice to remove it, and if you don’t, they can paint over it themselves and charge you for doing so.

Just to confirm this, the policy goes on to say;

Where the owner/person responsible for the property upon which the defacement has occurred does not consent to removal of the graffiti, we will exercise our statutory powers under section 48 of the Anti-social Behaviour Act 2003

Don’t worry though, the council does sort of recognise that graffiti can be ‘art’, although they do use inverted commas around the word ‘art’;

5. Graffiti as ‘Art’

a.   Where murals or artworks are deemed to make a positive contribution to the local environment and where the property owner has raised no objection, we may make the decision not to exercise our discretionary enforcement powers and/or powers of removal

So, if the person who owns the wall that has been painted has agreed to it, and what has been painted is ‘deemed to make a positive contribution to the local environment’, then they may let the piece stay.

You lucky people can even apply for permission to the council to have the wall you own painted by someone you ask to paint it;

6. Engagement with Communities
a. Support applications from residents and residents’ groups who would like to manage graffiti by displaying a mural in a specific location through a process of consultation and gaining permission from property owners for artwork. This particularly applies in areas where there is a history of graffiti and tagging

As long as it’s a ‘mural’ of course, and you’ve applied to have it done in order to ‘manage graffiti’. So no to any old wildstyle presumably. Unless Banksy did it back in the day. Then it’s probably fine. Even though the policy doesn’t explicitly say that.

It would be interesting to know how you go about applying for permission to the council to have someone paint your wall.

So, given the council can, and seemingly intends to, paint over work done on walls even with the owner’s permission, who gets to decide whether a work should be left alone or not?

specific consultation may be carried out internally with the planning department and with the Executive Member, and externally with local residents and the owner of the property

Four different groups then. So in a case where the building owner has already consented, then the council either has to base its decision on consultation with local residents (anyone ever heard of any being done with reference to a specific piece before it’s painted out?), or on the decision of council officers or the Executive Member.

Given that the council seems very unlikely to be consulting with local residents over individual pieces of graffiti being painted out, the situation seems to boil down to this.

Unelected council officers, or one single councillor, can use the law to paint over graffiti they think isn’t right for a certain area, and then charge the owner of the wall for doing so, even if the owner asked the artist to paint there in the first place, and regardless of whether local residents have complained or not.

Unelected officers and one councillor are between them the ultimate and sole legal judges of what you’re allowed to have someone paint on a wall you own, with no clear criteria on which they have to base their decision.

Doesn’t seem quite right somehow, does it?