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

Jago & Will Barras – An Introduction By Walrus TV

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

The Making Of A Wall Piece Made in Stockholm by Ceke and Forget in collaboration with Kollektivet livet

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Forget Ceke Kollektivet livet from CekeForget on Vimeo.


Happy Halloween from Dan Witz

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

halloween-prank-DAn-Witz-LA.jpg

If you’re in LA, be sure to check out Dark Doings, Dan’s solo show which opens next Thursday, November 5th at the Carmichael Gallery.


Top 5 Prints Of The Month – October 2009

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

White rabbits and all that, here’s my Top 5 round-up of all the prints released this month.

1. D*Face – More Punk Than You Punk

DFace More Punk Orange limited edition print release

2. Faile – Star Spangled Shadows

faile limited edition star spangled shadows print

3. Shepard Fairey – Jessica

shepard fairey jessica obey giant graffiti street art print

4. Ded Associates – Snow

graffiti street art limited edition ded associates snow print

 

5. Slinkachu – The High Life

slinkachu limited edtion print the high life

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Some of these prints are available here: www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Top 5 Prints Of The Month – October 2009

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

White rabbits and all that, here’s my Top 5 round-up of all the prints released this month.

1. D*Face – More Punk Than You Punk

DFace More Punk Orange limited edition print release

2. Faile – Star Spangled Shadows

faile limited edition star spangled shadows print

3. Shepard Fairey – Jessica

shepard fairey jessica obey giant graffiti street art print

4. Ded Associates – Snow

graffiti street art limited edition ded associates snow print

 

5. Slinkachu – The High Life

slinkachu limited edtion print the high life

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Some of these prints are available here: www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Top 5 Prints Of The Month – October 2009

Posted: October 31st, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

White rabbits and all that, here’s my Top 5 round-up of all the prints released this month.

1. D*Face – More Punk Than You Punk

DFace More Punk Orange limited edition print release

2. Faile – Star Spangled Shadows

faile limited edition star spangled shadows print

3. Shepard Fairey – Jessica

shepard fairey jessica obey giant graffiti street art print

4. Ded Associates – Snow

graffiti street art limited edition ded associates snow print

 

5. Slinkachu – The High Life

slinkachu limited edtion print the high life

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Some of these prints are available here: www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


I (Heart) This Artist #2

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Nothing floating my boat again today, so here’s installment two of the award-winning* I ♥ This Artist.

Elizabeth Peyton is an American who paints bright, androdgynous, pink-lipped celebrity folk.

Her use of colour is incredible and whilst many of her paintings are small, they fill the room.

Take a look: http://bit.ly/3SO1LQ.

I♥TA #2 Elizabeth Peyton

earls court elizabeth peyton

Earls Court by Elizabeth Peyton

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Check out my gallery: www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk

*tbc


David Choe – An Introduction by KQED (From 2004)

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Fresh Stuff From Laura Keeble: ‘Without Consent’

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

medusa1.jpg

medusa2.jpg

Title: ‘Without Consent’
Date: 28th October 2009 6.30am
Place: Versace, Sloane Street, London.

From Laura:

“Medusas’ punishment for being raped by Poseidon was to have her hair turned in to a head of writhing snakes. So petrifying she turned men to stone with a single look. Pregnant by Poseidon, she lived as an outcast of society until Persues came and removed her head.

The installation of Medusa outside the Versace store was to discuss the ownership of Medusa by the fashion house. A relationship between the single Versace mannequin within the store shopfront and Medusa also reflected the acceptance of what is beautiful and the outcasting of what is deemed ugly, by those that consider themselves an authority.

Medusa with her shopping bags turned to stone by the very horror that is herself reflected in the use and ownership of an ancient icon to sell goods.”


Jon Burgerman Goes BIG in Beijing For Economies of Scale

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

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(be sure to click to enlarge)

You can learn more about Jon‘s new solo show in China by clicking here.


Seen On The Streets of Brussels

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

IMG_8065%5B2%5D.jpg

Artist: HIKUPS


‘VIDEOGIOCO’ Animation – Donato Sansone and Sound Design by Enrico Ascoli

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

‘VIDEOGIOCO’ Animation – Donato Sansone and Sound Design by Enrico Ascoli

Check out this awesome paper flick animation ‘VIDEOGIOCO’ by Donato Sansone (Animation) and Enrico Ascoli (Sound Design), created with stop-motion photography and drawn on paper. It’s reminiscent of the BLU stop-motion videos but with a totally different style and execution.

Let me now what you think of it!

Here is a brand new stop-motion art video by BLU and David Ellis, also well worth a watch. Truelly amazing stuff.

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Win a Banksy ‘Nola’ for £1

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

I hate Christmas.

I hate the expense, the Argos ads (on TV already!!!) and snogging the face off the ugly one from accounts getting too p*ssed at the staff party.

But I do like a good Christmas Lotto.

Especially one where I get the chance to win a Banksy.

Blah, blah, blah

All I want for Christmas is yoooooooooooouuuuuuuu….

You gotta be in it to win it and to win it you gotta go here http://bit.ly/2765hm.

Good luck!

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Check out my online gallery www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Win a Banksy ‘Nola’ for £1

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

I hate Christmas.

I hate the expense, the Argos ads (on TV already!!!) and snogging the face off the ugly one from accounts getting too p*ssed at the staff party.

But I do like a good Christmas Lotto.

Especially one where I get the chance to win a Banksy.

Blah, blah, blah

All I want for Christmas is yoooooooooooouuuuuuuu….

You gotta be in it to win it and to win it you gotta go here http://bit.ly/2765hm.

Good luck!

Until next time.

The Wall Pimper

Check out my online gallery www.pimpyourwalls.co.uk


Dylan Shipley ‘A Rat’s Tale’

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
Our good buddy Dylan Shipley has been hard at work on for a while on a new ‘Graphic novel ‘A Rat’s tale’. ‘Sun and Moon Studios’ were asked to commission all the artwork by Gloucester based charity ‘Fresh Air Foundations’ who address’s social issues though the arts.’A Rat’s tale’ is a massive 100 pages! It’s based in modern Britan and aims to warn young people about the hazzards of ‘drug use’ and


Puma are at it again…!

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
<!–[if gte mso 9]> Normal 0 0 1 70 402 woc 3 1 493 11.1282 <![endif]–><!–[if gte mso 9]> 0 0 0 <![endif]–> <!– /* Font Definitions */ @font-face {font-family:"Times New Roman"; panose-1:0 2 2 6 3 5 4 5 2 3; mso-font-charset:0; mso-generic-font-family:auto; mso-font-pitch:variable; mso-font-signature:50331648 0 0 0 1 0;} @


A Mode 2 Timelapse from Mutuate Britain

Posted: October 30th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Burning Candy Show At The Emporium Next Thursday

Posted: October 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

front_PROOF

Now this looks a bit special, a Burning Candy group show at The Emporium down on Stokes Croft. Opening a week today, and only open for a short time, there’s going to be work in there from the whole Burning Candy crew.

Here’s the chat…

SOME RAW BUSINESS : Feat – Cept, Cyclops, Dscreet, Gold Peg, LL Brainwash, Mighty Monkey, Rowdy, Sweet Toof and Tek 33

Opening Night – Nov 5th, 6- 10 pm then daily 12 – 7pm till Nov 9th

This Bonfire night Burning Candy, the UK’s foremost Savant Garde autistic spectrum graffiti crew, come together to set aflame and pay respect to the memory of Guido Fawkes…..the guy with the right idea.
Expect fireworks, sweet stuff and some jazzy painting.

If you like looking at slightly creepy artwork, or you’ve ever admired that enormous skull, tooth, crocodile combo atop Wetmoreland house, come along. Bring some sparklers!!!

BC, or Burning Candy, or Before Chrome comprises old school writers, lovers, fighters, anthropologists, ice cream rocking queens, Royal Acedemicians, film makers and anarcho croc rockers.

Born in bombed out East London, BC has spread across the world, from Sweden to Bombay and from Paris to Bangkok, bringing a new, colourful and free visual aesthetic to the world of graffiti.

Collected by Saatchi, hung in the Tate modern, still smashing the streets. 2009 BC

The Emporium, 37 Stokes Croft, Bristol, BS1 3PY

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Video: Pirates & CIA present: We Like Colour

Posted: October 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »
Just found this over on the Pirates blog. A brand new time lapse fresh from the edit. Simply put, this is amazing. 4 minutes of sublime work. Check more of the Pirates work over on their site

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Diorama of Pain – Thomas Doyle

Posted: October 29th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Graf | No Comments »

Thomas Doyle's miniature sculptural art nods heavily towards a nostalgic history of kitsch, seaside souvenirs and snow globes, and even further back to a Victorian delight for whimsy and the trinketry of a generation of mildly engaged tourists determined to show on some small scale they are relatively 'well travelled' – if only in the most parochial of senses.

That's where the similarity between Doyle's art and the mass made low-cost paraphernalia of the past ends. It's a deceptive ruse, an open invitation to the uninquiring mind and conservative opinionate, to think again about the world we live in. Perfection is a myth, in an expanding scale of relativity, both macroscopic and microscopic, one will eventually find fault with any idealised vision of life, society, mankind. The same process unfolds on every viewing of Thomas Doyle's dioramas of pain.

Antipodes (2009) by Thomas Doyle Antipodes (2009) by Thomas Doyle
Antipodes (2009) by Thomas Doyle Antipodes (2009) by Thomas Doyle

In a strange way Doyle's work reminds me of the often debunked yet still intriguing 'Stone Tape Theory'. The premise being, should a violent or extreme act, be it physically or emotionally should have occurred in the past, a re-enactment of the event will forever be replayed within that precise location. The ghosts of violence past, captured forever, sealed in the very bricks of a building or structure much like a recording, ever to be replayed for posterity should an audience encroach.

Technically Doyle's dioramas are perfectly scaled down and modelled renditions of everyday suburban life. However unlike mass-made souvenir 'snow globes', the viewer is rewarded with something other than the usual idealised vision of life one might expect from, but rather a voyeuristic and prurient view of lives shattered by violence, deceit, malevolence, and guilt. His minute characters can be seen burying their murdered victims, suffering emotional turmoil, sharing pain and fear, experiencing isolation, cannibalism, dimensional shift, in fact almost everything a real human being can feel or imagine is explored in Doyle's inimitable style.

Escalation (2008) by Thomas Doyle
Escalation (2008) by Thomas Doyle Escalation (2008) by Thomas Doyle

As of now he has completed three series entitled 'Distillations',  'Reclamations', and 'Bearings'. Following a childhood obsessions with modelling miniatures, and an early artistic career creating and printing mono and lithographic prints, Doyle began to feel that his ideas and subject matter were best suited to the microscopic world of the diorama. Personally, Doyle prefers to stay on the sidelines of art discussion, his work is not easily categorised, and his subject matter belies his particular medium. Yet, as with all model makers, Doyle spends a vast majority of his time painstakingly working on detailed figurines, houses, trees, lawns and so on. His influences are varied, be it urban myths, news media, the surburban world in which he inhabits. The distillation of these influential factors is a subconscious process, something much like a screenplay writer envisioning a pitch for a movie, the events and characters forming the overall look of the piece in question.

In an interview with UndergroundMagazines.com Doyle explains the story behind his work Escalation, part of the Distillations series – "My father worked at an auto factory with a large cast of characters, one of whom was a drug-addled hothead who gathered all of his estranged wife’s possessions from their home, piled them in the backyard, chopped them with an ax, and set them aflame. The bizarre brutality of this act always seemed so cinematic to me, and years later it sparked what you see…'

In another of his works The Reprisal, a male and female couple are seen preparing to bury the corpses of another couple, however all is not as it seems at first glance. Notice the shoes on the female body match those of the female perpetrator, as do the jeans match the male's, to me this transforms the piece from a potential scene in CSI, to something far more metaphorical, indeed even mystical. The idea of renewal, revenge on past selves, and drawing a line under a past that will forever be forgotten.

The Reprisal (2006) by Thomas Doyle The Reprisal (2006) by Thomas Doyle
The Reprisal (2006) by Thomas Doyle The Reprisal (2006) by Thomas Doyle

Asides concurrent themes of the home, both as sanctuary and hub of traumatic memories, Doyle also toys with the themes of time and context. Utilising the power of his chosen medium to its fullest, his 'frozen moments' as displayed in such works as Something in the Absence from the Bearings series and Clearing (UXO), offer more than a glimpse into his intentions as an artist, and the emotional relationship Doyle has formed with his process of creation. Akin to a slither of time or reality, made concrete and permanent and affixed for all eternity under the protective shell of a glass bell jar. A slice of life trapped within the a single still from a movie, ensconsced in its own shroud of tantalising mystery, forever forsaking the before and after, the continuity of events that so often breeds and instills an insentivity or even irreverance towards pain and suffering in everyday life. But beyond that are themes of the omnipresent myth, the order of things, the giganticism of exterior context that relatively speaking reduces the greatest and most aspirational teachings and knowledge of man to mere dust.

Well Enough Alone (2005) by Thomas Doyle Well Enough Alone (2005) by Thomas Doyle

In Thomas Doyle's world, we are gods, giants looming over in prurient curiosity, objectively reviewing the miniscule machinations of a microscopic race, their limitations both physically and intellectually, suffocated by their lack of scale, held down by the great weight of objective distance, and molecularised subjectivity.

View more of Thomas Doyle's work at www.ThomasDoyle.net.

Tags: art, artist, Diorama, sculpture, small-scale sculptor, T.J. Doyle, Thomas Doyle

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