Cities in all the hemispheres take turns being the pre-eminent location for Street Art and street culture as the influences that lead to a lively scene cropping up in a city and becoming popular are in continual flux. Whether its economics, demographics, politics, or the various timelines of cultural evolution intersecting, the conditions must be just right for a Street Art scene to blossom and endure in all it’s idiosyncratic splendor. At the moment it is Springtime in Paris and photographer Sandra Hoj says during her visit to the city, “I was overwhelmed by the amount of street art. It was not just limited to a single area, but all over the place, in every crack and corner.”
Speedy Graphito (photo © Sandra Hoj)
While the current Street Art movement in French cities can be traced to the late 1970s and early 80s stencillists with names like Jef Aerosol, Mis Tic, Speedy Graphito, and the guy who Banksy credits for influencing his rodential proclivities, Blek Le Rat – the last decade has brought a new generation of wheat-pasters, pop appropriaters, culture jammers, and fine artists of every discipline who have put their own mark on the modern age. Some, like C215, are even called new masters of the stencil genre. This quick survey gives just a taste of what’s happening at the moment and there are many names regularly up in addition to these.
Sandra reports “There are pieces from the ever-present Space Invader, of course, and Jef Aerosol, Nick Walker, Jand & JS (Janaundjs), Fred le Chavalier, and Dast, as well as some I don’t know the names of. There is a lot of stencil work and many paste up’s, a rare freehand piece by Dast, and even some collage work from Frank Duval of FKDL.” Enjoy.
Jef Aerosol (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jef Aerosol (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Fred le Chevalier (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Fred le Chevalier (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Nick Walker (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Nick Walker (photo © Sandra Hoj)
FKDL (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Dast (photo © Sandra Hoj)
David Shillinglaw and Ben Slow (photo © Sandra Hoj)
David Shillinglaw and Ben Slow (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Pole Ka (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Pole Ka (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Jana & JS (photo © Sandra Hoj)
Click here to visit Sandra Hoj’s site Classic Copenhagen for more Street Art eye candy.
<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA
Please note: All content including images and text are © BrooklynStreetArt.com, unless otherwise noted. We like sharing BSA content for non-commercial purposes as long as you credit the photographer(s) and BSA, include a link to the original article URL and do not remove the photographer’s name from the .jpg file. Otherwise, please refrain from re-posting. Thanks!
<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA<<>>><><<>BSA<<>>><<<>><><BSA
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
Graffuturism in Barcelona today as KAZZIUS speaks geometry and abstraction on a wall for Contorno Urbano. Rapid fire planes of aqua, marine, and yellow all shoot along an invisible line, pile, c...
We're up to our necks in deep frosty wind-whipping winter, and yet the Street Art right now is verbose, detailed, bright eyed, distinct, political, critical, stylish, dense, richly colorful. ...
Louis Masai and his friends Tee and Emil are in Detroit right now on the 2nd city of The Art of BEEing tour, and the Gray Wolf is on their minds because it is endangered. Their numbers have been cut...
A sophisticated layering of pieces and decorative patterns create a very effective feat of perspective on this new wall in the Chelyabinsk region, Russia, by artist Daniil Danet at the "Our Mural" fe...
“Liberty Asleep” is the name of this image by French artist Liliwen who paints it at a time when liberty needs to be awake. Liliwenn. "Liberté endormie". Vannes, France. May 2017. (photo © Liliwenn...