g o o g l e b 5 5 4 f 8 3 e 5 4 2 1 5 7 f e . h t m l Sak Karepe Inyong: 2008

Senin, 01 Desember 2008

Ximending Graffiti Art Exhibit


Something is going on in Taipei on 12/12 in Ximending. It involves the best graffiti artists in Taiwan, so if you've got free time, get up there and get yer culture on!

Minggu, 06 Juli 2008

New/Old Graffiti by the Wuer HSR Station

I saw a couple walls painted up right by the Taichung HSR station from the bus the other day and figured on getting back to see if there was anything else nearby. Just across the stream to the south beneath the overpass there is perhaps a .5km long wall that is 98% covered with great stuff from Four Crew and Virus No 6. Most of the stuff along the wall is dated 2007, but there's a ramp tagged 2008 on the south end. It's good to finally find where everyone has been active for the past year.

Minggu, 08 Juni 2008

Graf-wii-ti



Martin Lihs, working on his Master's Thesis at Bauhaus University in Weimar, has developed a modified Wii controller with which one could practice tagging inside on rainy days. As his thesis is not yet complete, full specs have not been made public, but Lihs suggests about the next version that he's
planning to build a new spraycan with more functions and also an advanced software with collaborative spraying option, different caps, different colours…. and maybee different Sprayers make an appointment and create grafitties together: online!

Controllers might be ready for Christmas, but I guess Santa Claus won't bring you one if you've been defacing public property.

Selasa, 06 Mei 2008

Cans Festival, May 2008, London

Bloggage by Tanya » Blog Archive » Cans Festival:
Here's a link to a collection of great shots from London this week.

Tanya sez she "decided to check out the Cans Festival which was publicised just a few days ago.
The location had been kept a secret while Banksy, Bandit, Jef Aerosol and others transformed a
bland tunnel near Waterloo Station, into a street art extravaganza.

""

Updated:

Here's a video from Current on the topic of Banksy. I haven't been able to view more than the first ten seconds yet because of my super slow connection where I'm at. I hope you can enjoy it where you're at. When I'm at a different place, I'll see where it's at. And what it's about.


Rabu, 30 April 2008

T-T-Tagged

Do I stutter? A little, when I'm excited. But check this out. This bit of self-promotion brought to me by Paint That Shit Gold. Go there. Have fun. Nice is what you are when you're at your grandmother's house.

Jumat, 18 April 2008

Four Crew Spring 08

Fast and Same got busy all over a wall in the canal next to Chung Ming S Rd next to the Early Bird.









Kamis, 17 April 2008

Spring Update

My students all went out for the day, so I took an early lunch today to go collect some graffiti underneath the highway on the way up to Tunghai off of Taichungkang Rd.

Some of the stuff below dates back to 2006, but some of it is dated 2008. If I'm not mistaken, this stuff is the work of Taichung's "other" graffiti crew. I thought they used to call themselves Stinky Tofu Crew, but I didn't see that tag anywhere today. At any rate, they've gotten real good.







Sabtu, 12 April 2008

Vote for Omen!




I just received word from the man himself:
Hey omen-affectionados,
Please be sure to vote oMEn as "best graffiti Crew" in the Mirror's best of Montreal. I know I'm not a crew but they don't know that...shhhhh...
So, do what you have to do. Click on this here link and fill in the form. Now, this is the tricky part...
They ask that you vote in at least 25 categories, so we can't all just go to vote for the Best Graffiti Crew then high five each other and go home.

I have very little knowledge of Montreal, so I wouldn't know how to vote. If I still have any readers from the Montreal scene, please feel free to leave suggestions in the comments. Not that I'm inviting anyone to tell anyone how to vote and thus bring North America's last great democracy crumbling to the ground...but still. ... wait...Montreal has a king, don't they?

Minggu, 24 Februari 2008

New For You

Out with the kids on Sunday afternoon when I spotted this truck in a parking lot between DongXing Rd and DaTun Rd near the Costco. There's some more graf around town that I've seen, but this has been the first time that I've had my camera with me in months.


Posted by Picasa

Selasa, 29 Januari 2008

Interview with Fab 5 Freddy by Miz Metro


Got an email today from Myles in New Yawk who turned me on to an interview with Fab 5 Freddy and the story of a historical artifact from the early graffiti era recently discovered in SoHo (not the one in Taichung... err ...oddly enough?). If you're in, or on your way to, NYC, check out the Wild Style Exhibit.


The interview is below.



Recently a work of art, in the form of a graffiti wall, was discovered. It displays work by, Fab 5 Freddy, Futura 2000, Jean Michael Basquiat and others. The wall was only rumored to exist, but it was found behind layers of sheetrock and plumbing prior to its building being renovated to luxury lofts. The wall has been renamed "The 151 Wooster Wild Style Wall." The mural and 16 other works (Jean-Michel Basquiat, Fab 5 Freddy, Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, and Ero) will be on display until February 15th at 151 Wooster Street New York, NY.


Below is the interview that Fab 5 Freddy gave to the up-and-coming singer/songwriter from New York, Miz Metro. In addition to her beautiful music and powerful voice, Miz Metro is very in touch with the underground street-art scene that has been in New York City for decades. To check out Miz Metro's music and see more pictures of The 151 Wooster Wild Style Wall, please go to http://www.myspace.com/mizmetro .
Excerpts from Miz Metro's interview with Fab 5 Freddy151 Wooster Street SoHo NY, November 2007

MM: How did you come to write on this wall? When did you first visit 151 Wooster?
F5F: This woman Edit DeAK who's house this was, a really noted art critic told me "come and paint on the walls" - she just let it happen - when right outside people were like, "Ugh, that's horrible. Get those guys out of here." She was able to see things that now many people see and understand. Now they use this style of painting to represent hip, young, cool - the music does the same thing, you know about that. It was something I definitely saw was a lot bigger then it was, but I had no idea 25 years later I'd be standing here in-front of this wall dropping this history like we uncovered some secret tomb.
MM: Looking at all of this, how does it make you feel?
F5F: It feels great, when I saw all this and got wind of it, it just made me think about what point I was at, and all the other things that I was about to do. So now 20-plus years later it's like the preverbal mark on the wall… The thing I like about seeing it is a lot of people would look at this and try to say "I like when you do the big colorful things, but I don't like it when it's all the scribbles" - but I like that too. On the more artistic side, I was the urban nerdy kid who hung out in the museums, I was on the street corners doing my thing but I knew about Jackson Pollack, I knew about Franz Kline, so I was seeing how abstract painters are inspired by the calligraphic history of it all… The interconnected craziness turns it into a whole thing like what you have here [pointing to The 151 Wooster Mural], which really represents the wild energy of it all from that period.
MM: Is it significant that "Wild Style" is actually written on the wall?
F5F: Yeah, well there was a crew named Wild Style, wild style was actually a style of graffiti - of the really interconnected pieces… Charlie [Ahearn] and I named our movie "Wild Style" - the first film on Hip Hop culture to really speak so broadly to specifically that style of work.
MM: Looking back on all this I'm curious to know how you feel about hip hop and the culture it is today. On MTV, you hosted the first international show that really brought hip hop around the world. Now it's a phenomenon in all these other countries. How do you feel about that?
F5F: I feel great about it, I'm very much so still a part of it. Today I produced a show for VH1 called "Hip Hop Honors"… As a producer of the show I was honored, along with Charlie Ahearn, for producing and being a part of the film "Wild Style". I'm really happy to see the culture go beyond my wildest dreams, or imaginations of where it could go. It's a great thing to see people in different countries, from different places and different spaces being a part of this interesting culture. It's really great.
MM: It seems like everything that you were a part of putting out there into the mainstream was very positive. How do you feel about the different directions that Hip Hop has taken?
F5F: In general the good parts of Hip Hop are still probably the most important, and I'm not just being biased. I think it's probably the most important cultural force that's emerged, without question, in the last 100 years because it continues to thrive and grow in every aspect… In America there's so much of a commercial, watered down, "lets just get the money" vibe, but when you go to every other country around the world - all over Europe, all over Asia, all over Africa - people take up this culture to give themselves a voice. They don't have outlets to media that we have, the outlet to galleries, so people have picked up these forms to express themselves in ways that are really beyond comprehension. There's nothing really that you can compare to what goes on with people picking up spray paint, and grabbing the microphone, scratching some records to kind of make a sound, and giving people a vibe that they mean something. That's the important thing about [Hip Hop] to me.
MM: You mentioned that one of the main things asked by the press was "How long is this going to last?" Were you aware that this movement was something that was going to go beyond what was happening in the Bronx, Harlem, and Brooklyn?
F5F: To a certain extent I did… I knew the amount of kids throughout the city that were avidly into this but [in 1980] it was still a big secret to the rest of the country and the rest of the world… I knew that once people got a sense of it, got to see it, got to understand it - they would at least be able to appreciate it. [In the 1980's] if you were Black or Puerto Rican and you were wearing street cloths, whenever you would see [graffiti] images in the press it was negative, it was crime - like "these are the bad guys"…. I wanted to help make a film to see images of people that look like me that were doing something. That's why, as a painter, my "Swan Song" on the subway system was an homage to Andy Warhol; I did a whole subway car painted with Campbell soup cans to let people know - "wow some of those kids that are doing those trains must know about art." Warhol was somebody that I really admired as an artist… He redefined what an artist could be in this pop culture and I was very fascinated - myself, Jean-Michel, and Keith Haring were all thinking about that aggressively, talking about it, then doing our own thing based on that history.