Under cover of darkness, a beacon’s hopeful signal
In preparation for their upcoming collaboration at Ad Hoc in Bushwick next week, Armsrock and Chris Stain sailed deep into the night near Brooklyn’s massive Navy Yard, hoisting up ladders to put up a large mural stirring the contemplative inner currents of child’s play entitled “I Know There Is Love”.
Using projections of their original work as well as improvised “chalk drawings”, the storytelling includes two tadpole-aged lads and a small harbor of imaginary vessels. In it one instantly escapes to a freer time of discovery when multiple dreams were easily set afloat.
As if a reaction to the rough and salty seas of daily life in New York for many, the street artist co-captains hang a huge banner across the mast of this ship to announce that it is possible to right the bow and head toward hope.
More pics and detail of this installation to follow in the next few days.
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
You know the shy kid at the party who won’t hit the dance floor even if Jesus himself begged him - and then he hears his jam and suddenly starts doing flips, tricks, and power moves? Woes. Jer...
Welcome to BSA Images of the Week! Happy Halloween Enjoy this Halloween parade of art on the streets of NYC. Stay safe! Here's our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring: A...
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities. Now screening : 1. Welcome To America Owen Dippie by Erin Dippie 2. Covert To Overt: Photography of Obey...
"This is not an autobiography in the practical sense. I didn't cover the day-to-day minutia of my childhood or formative teenage years all the way to the present. Rather, I have chosen to take the rea...
For a considerable time now at BSA we’ve been discussing with authors, artists, academics, writers, historians, political scientists, sociologists, criminologists the topics of Street Art, graffiti, U...