Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.
Now screening: Voice of Art – Migration is Beautiful with Favianna Rodriguez, Project Brave with WK Interact,We Will Know When We Are Home with Creepy, and Innerfields: DIY in Berlin.
BSA Special Feature:
Voice of Art – Migration is Beautiful
“Art has the power to shape our laws, change society, and to speak truth to power, “ says Favianna Rodriguez in this new documentary that quickly traces the relationship between immigration law and greed and what is effectively a new system of slavery. In an upbeat way. HOW does she do it?
WK Interact: Project Brave
“A way of giving back to the city,” is how Street Artist WK Interact talks about the inception and development of “Project Brave” – an incredible distillation of the chaos of the events in New York on September 11, 2001.
Kyle Hughes-Odgers: “We Will Know When We Are Home”
A visually rich video showing the Street Artist Creepy as he wanders Port Hedlund Australia through fields and weathered abandoned industrial carcasses in search of surfaces.
Innerfields: DIY in Berlin
Started as a graffiti crew, Innerfields continued to perfect their craft and apply it to commercial work very successfully. But they still love the street.
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
A ROA/SEGO Colab is Defaced and Replaced (VIDEO) “It’s not illegal graffiti, it’s a contemporary mural,” says a passerby who is watching the new collaboration by Tiburon 7ö4, Navajas, and Shente in M...
BLU re-creates his mural from 2009 and gives the neighborhood of Carmel, in Barcelona, Spain reasons to be overwhelmed with joy. The internationally known and respected muralist, street artist, an...
This week BSA takes you to the French Polynesian Islands to see the new murals going up for this tropical island cultural festival called ONO'U Tahiti 2017. We're happy to bring you the daily events...
The word “apocalypse” has such a ring to it. "Late-stage capitalism"? Too heavy; sounds sort of industrial, like that Goth kid in college with the thick-soled boots and big words. “Apocalypse” so...
It’s the poster rip, achieved in tile. Since the 1960s, with the Nouveau Réalisme art group, people like Jacques Villeglé became one of the first street artists to rip and lacerate posters wheat-paste...