June 2009

25th Anniversary of Subway Art at Black Rat (UK)

Black Rat Press will be hosting a book launch to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the legendary book Subway Art by Martha Cooper and Henry Chalfant. In 1984 Thames and Hudson made the brave decision to publish a book of photographs of graffiti covered trains from New York subways. The original print run was limited to only 5000 copies. Subway Art has been in print ever since and the then little known scene which Martha and Henry documented has gone on to be an international phenomenon, in part thanks to the book itself. Black Rat Press are delighted to be hosting this event and that both Martha Cooper and Henry Chalfant will be in London to attend the launch. The central pull out pages of Subway Art feature a train painted by legendary New York writer Blade. We are excited to announce that Blade will also be making his way to London this Thursday to attend the opening. For anyone interested in the history of graffiti this is a great opportunity to celebrate 25 years of its documentation and to meet some of this scenes legendary figures.

At the launch the gallery will be showing works by the Burning Candy Crew all of whom site Subway Art as one of the main reasons they started painting.

Read more

Fundraiser for India Street Mural Project

The North Brooklyn Public Art Coalition (NbPac) is proud to present:
RE/PAINT
RE/BUILD
A fundraiser to benefit the India Street Mural Project.
Taking place at:
Gallery 1889
Wednesday, June 24th, 2009
7PM to 11PM.
1066 Manhattan Avenue and Eagle Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn
The India Street Mural Project is the kickoff project for the North Brooklyn Public Art Coalition (NbPac),a new initiative whose goal is to work with local artists, community members, arts organizations and businesses in order to increase the presence of public art in North Brooklyn. By doing so, NbPac hopes to beautify, revitalize, and energize the Williamsburg, Greenpoint and Bushwick neighborhoods through public art. Visit our website (http://nbpac.wordpress.com) for more details.

The event will feature:
RE/WARD – Silent auction featuring art from the mural project artists (8-10pm)
RE/FUEL – Food by Chef Michael Sullivan from new Greenpoint restaurant Anella
RE/CLAIM – Live found object portraits by artist Zito
RE/DESIGN – Live screenprinting by the Brooklyn Printmaking Collective (bring your screenprintable goods!)
RE/IMAGINE – Haircuts by designer/inventor/sculptor Dan Harper
DJ Painted will be mixing music all night, and we’ll have wine and beer on hand from
North Brooklyn businesses Brooklyn Oenology (www.brooklynoenology.com) and
Brouwerij Lane. (http://brouwerijlane.com)
Tickets are only $20 and can be purchased through PayPal or by paying cash at the
door. All proceeds go to benefit the India Street Mural Project.
Gallery 1889 is a new gallery and event space located at 1066 Manhattan Avenue and
Eagle Street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. The space has been transformed from a long-vacant storefront to a bustling site for art, design, architecture, and unique events. For a map and
to find out more about Gallery 1889, visit the website (www.thegallery1889.com).

Event designed & produced by: Ray Cross and Susie Watkins (susiewatkins.blogspot.com)

Read more
Images of Week 06.21.09

Images of Week 06.21.09

Cake
Kinda Blue (Cake) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Flower Face
Two new pieces from Flower Face Killah (photo Jaime Rojo)

Flower Face
Creature from the book of Revelations. (Flower Face Killah) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Mister MN
I’ve been Framed, I tell you! (Mister MN) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Rainbow
“Fresh Bricks, Drown Out, Heals Clicked” (Rainbow) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Wishful Thinking
Wishful Thinking (photo Jaime Rojo)

Judith Supine
Hush liitle bluebird don’t you cry. (Judith Supine) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Mister MN
Mister MN (photo Jaime Rojo)

Sweet Toof
Sweet Toof (photo Jaime Rojo)

Sweet Toof
BC, Cept, Sweet Toof (photo Jaime Rojo)

Cake
Yes, I am looking at you. (Cake) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Judith Supine
Excuse me, how many stops till Freaken? (Judith Supine) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Cake Charms Nosferatu
Cake Charms Nosferatu and tries to win his heart (Cake) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Nosferatu Loves Cake
Nosferatu steals a kiss in the hull of the ghost ship. (Cake) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Sweet Toof needs some flossing

Sweet Toof gets some flossing (Sweet Toof) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Two Face Cake
Two Face Cake (photo Jaime Rojo)

Flower Face Killah
Flower Face Killah is back and battier than ever! (photo Jaime Rojo)

Veng

Veng RWK (photo Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster
Imminent Disaster (photo Jaime Rojo)

Read more

Following the Shepard to Boston

E Pluribus Amtrakem

Obey the Giant Fairey

Wait, that doesn’t sound right. He isn’t exactly giant, like the 7’4″ 520lb Andre the Giant, but Shepard Fairey cuts a pretty impressive figure at the Institute for Contemporary Art (ICA) on the gorgeous Boston waterfront.  Open till the end of the summer, the show takes almost the entire 4th floor of the museum with signature graphics and politics by the most popular name in street art at the moment (at least on this side of the Atlantic).  After this show, you’ll know why.

This used to be on the side of a wall in an abandoned lot in the neighborhood.  It wasn't framed though.
This image used to be on the side of a wall in an abandoned lot in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. It wasn’t in a frame however.

If you are still reading this, you are like me and don’t get invited to the opening of a paper bag and you probably already have read all about this show elsewhere since it opened in February anyway but, hey, it’s a mind-trip to leave the street art in Brooklyn to see the same art ensconced in a museum 5 hours away.  And Boston is really pretty and clean, and the waterfront and geese and tall ships were picturesque, so it’s not like you are suffering or anything.

Had to take a picture of this thug in front of the sticker covered paper boxes in the lobby - the only place I was allowed to shoot pics.

Had to take a picture of this thug in front of the sticker covered paper boxes in the lobby. Hope those hand signs don’t trigger an East Coast West Coast thug war or something.

After THIS show, if you don’t know what Shepard Fairey, the man and the artist are all about, you should continue the meds and stay away from operating heavy machinery because you get posters, prints, stencils, paintings, the actual cut-out stencils, stickers, videos, muddy sneakers, and a letter from a presidential candidate. You get to see all of his styles since ’89 throughout hundreds of pieces – the Russian propaganda style, the ornate Middle Eastern filigreed style, the layered collage style, the flat monochromatic music poster style.

And don’t forget the people; the rock icons like Joey Ramone, Debbie Harry, and David Bowie, and the depictions of Black Panthers, Chairman Mao, Stalin, Malcolm X and god knows who else. Oh that’s right, Obama.  The ever-debated part about this list of historical figures that Fairey has depicted in his art is that he doesn’t tell you how to think about them; they are seperated from context and judgement, and that p*sses a lot of people off.  Makes them nervous.  Since he’s a master of graphic design, I didn’t really care – the stuff looks cool and he keeps challenging himself as an artist and as a person.

When we got out of there I scoured the streets for some more home-grown street art, and found that it’s pretty squeaky clean in Boston, at least the area we were in. Of course there was the hullabaloo about Fairey himself putting up a bunch of pieces when he was there, but you might need a car and a map to the abandoned, run down, drug and sex-worker part of town to find it.  But here are a couple of pieces on the way back to the train.

TV Head!  Nice boats in the background.

TV Head! Nice boats in the background.

This N.R.A. girl has a ferverent prayer, but I can tell you right now what Yoko is going to say once she sees that gun.

This N.R.A. girl has a ferverent prayer, but I can tell you right now what Yoko is going to say once she sees that gun.

So, this show is curated by Pedro Alonzo and Emily Brouille and totally recommended and if you have a camera be super sly about it because the ever attentive and cute gallery guards will smack you in the head if they catch you taking pictures.  If it’s on the street, that’s a whole other bowl of spaghetti.

There are great pictures and observations at Fecal Face from Manuel Bello about the show too, so you can see more of the art.

Read more

Banksy Rocks the Bristol: “a unique collaboration (with) the city’s foremost cultural institution”

Oh everyone is all a twitter and a twatter about the not so secret “secret” opening

of the reigning king of street satire, Banksy, at the Bristol Museum this past Sunday, June 13th.

Billed as “Banksy Versus the Bristol Museum” the show features a great number of smart-aleck visual puns and devilish devices throughout the 3-story Edwardian museum, mostly toying with traditional art subjects and such as that and so on and so forth as you like. Look at me, I’m speaking British just describing it! That’s not mockery, mind you, just watched too many episodes of “Brideshead Revisted”.

At any rate, we’re not possibly going to be able to write a review of this very varied collection, so we’ll just show you the promo video below and tell you that the true Banksy fans are picking their favorites already – among them the painting of the obese American tourist couple sitting in a rickshaw taking their own picture with a cell-phone while the tiny boy attempts to pull them along.

Banksy Vs Bristol Museum
Creative Commons License photo credit: unusualimage

Not precisely the subtlety in cultural criticism one might expect from the main partner of  the Coalition of the … what WAS that called again?

Banksy Vs Bristol Museum
Creative Commons License photo credit: unusualimage

Another favorite of Banksy fans is the house-mom making final adjustments to the kerchief of her adorable anarchist son before he goes out to protest the capitalist pigs.

We thought for sure the winner would be the “Greek God Gone Hellbent for Leather” installation because it takes something revered and respected and with the ADDITION of clothing re-contextualizes it in a Christopher Street backroom sort of way. What’s that in his hand, lollipops?  Don’t say it! I KNOW what you are thinking.

Banksy Vs Bristol Museum
Creative Commons License photo credit: unusualimage

Alas, everyone has an opinion when a show of this size by someone of this infamy is suddenly sprung on us.  And since we tend to trust the word of the guy or gal on the street, let’s just see what this cheery lad Dannyreillyboy from Ireland has to say on the Youtube rollcall of opinion,

“i never heard of banksy until tonight and i really enjoyed the content of this video. Very amusing and it visually conveys a unique message that the bulk of the populous can savour!
i love it when all you pretentious, obnoxious ‘art’ knobs get so threatened by works that don’t conform to your arrogant expectations of what art should be! This guy is a 1000 times more interesting than that prick who pickles sharks! Oh, I don’t conform to your views therefore I am a ‘lesser’ intellect! Toss off..”

Read more

Invader Covers the Beatles and the Clash

Technology has an integral effect on contemporary culture – and it’s changes continue to change us individually – the new stuff always sucks us in.  Remember radical new Friendster a few years ago and how your actual friend Clyde Fromage was nearly wetting himself because he had all these virtual friends on the computer and you thought he was raving mad and a shallow idiot? Did you just check Twitter twice during the previous sentence?

LOL!

A lot of today’s street artists grew up with video games around and they have a romantic nostalgia for the 8-bit characters of the “early” age of joysticks and chords and 2-color screens. For example Matt Siren bases his ghost-girl on his formative years with Pac Man.
The little orange ghost girls were greatly influenced by Pac Man. "Skinny Drip" by Matt Siren and Lee Holin (for "Street Crush" show)

The little orange ghost girls were greatly influenced by Pac Man. "Skinny Drip" by Matt Siren and Lee Holin (for "Street Crush" show curated by Brooklyn Street Art)

Reaching back to that same nostalgic simplicity, the street artist Invader references the 1978 Atari video game that featured Space Invaders.  The pointillism of his countryman Seurat a hundred years earlier was updated by Invader when he began putting mosaics up in the streets of Paris in the late 1990s. The irony lies in the unique choice of medium – the tile; as old as fire urns, at once mass-produced and hand-hewn, makes up the “bit”.
This month Invader will be showing his new work, and his choice of medium is again unusual, but not out of character.  The Rubik’s Cube was a mind-stumping 3-d mechanical puzzle invented in 1974 that became a “hot” toy for kids around the same time as the Space Invader video game.  You can see pretty quickly why this toy is a turn-on to an artist like Invader.  In the video below, Invader pays homage to famous covers of vinyl album, a technology that has since been digitized too.
Top 10, Invaders first solo show in the U.S. opens June 27 at Jonathan Levine,

Read more
Images of Week 06.14.09

Images of Week 06.14.09

Bishop 203

Black Heart in the Sun (Bishop 203)  (photo Steven P. Harrington)

JMR
Yo, check out the color! (JMR) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Judith Supine
Department of Parks Pool Rules: No. 4: Please check that there is water before you dive into the pool. (Judith Supine) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Noah Spark and?
Portrait of a barmaid. (Noah Sparkes and?)  (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shark Toof

Department of Parks Pool Rules: No. 7: Inspect pool for sharks (Shark Toof) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Sol 25
“Why you haven’t changed a BIT.  You look just as good as when we graduated.  How do you do it?” (Sol 25) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter Bishop203

It's an upside down world we are living in. (Spector & Bishop203) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Tian
Waiting for something to fall out of your burrito (Tian) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Veng RWK
Cracking a smile? (Veng RWK) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Gaia
Hunny, there’s a bear on the roof! (Gaia)  (photo Jaime Rojo)

Leif Mcllwaine
A tribute, to say the least (Leif Mcllwaine) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Read more

Open Studios and the Street

Graff started on the street, I think.  Street art started in the studio.

Main difference. That was easy, right?

Now graff keeps going into the studio, the gallery, the museum.  And now we are watching as fine art, or some approximation of it, is continuallly leaving the home studio (kitchen table), gallery, collective, etc. and flooding the streets.  The explosion of street art is having it’s effect and the opinions it produces are as varied as, um, people.  The point is that the veil has been punctured, and the creative spirit is not willingly being confined today. Everything and everyone is becoming a hybrid.

Last weekend in a neighborhood in Brooklyn that’s home to a lot of variety at the moment – Bushwick –  a three day Bushwick Open Studios event took place, featuring over 200 open studios, live music, parties, workshops, panels, student art shows, puppet shows, the whole enchilada.  Don’t worry, it’s not all high-minded, or necessarily thought provoking. It’s just an indication of where we are moving. It’s impossible to see everything so you just have to pick and choose a few of your favorites and see which way the slimey wind leads you.

Started off at “2012” the new show at Factory Fresh featuring the work of graff/street art youth – the place was pretty young and sweaty and full of excitement, and parts of the inside looked like it could have been outside – plywood, tags, partial messages, and organized chaos.  Sorry for the crappy pics from the phone, but you get the idea.

A wall of 9"x9" wood pieces with work by Faro, Bloke and Avoid.

A wall of 9"x9" pieces by Faro, Bloke, and Avoid. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Faro, UFO, others that you may know at "2012" at Factory Fresh (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Faro, UFO, others that you may know at "2012" at Factory Fresh (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Bad Kids, Krink markers  (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Bad Kids, Erotic Kids, Charles Barkley, Krink markers (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Apple, Aiko, Anarchist, Arriviste, Artist, Avoid

A is for Apple, Abbreviation, Aiko, Anarchist, Arriviste, Artist? In this case, probably it's for Avoid (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Then Kings County Bar also hosted a show that night for ELC and their new collaborations, which were kind of hard to see because it was, uh, a dark bar.  Also there were other gyrating distractions that may have taken patron’s focus off their art show.  Included in the show were Royce Bannon, Anera, Infinity, Celso, Abe Lincoln Jr., Ad Deville, Dark Clouds, and Matt Siren.

A quick way to cut through a crowded bar

A quick way to cut through a crowded bar is to tiptoe across the top of it. (photo (cc) Hrag Vartanian)

Following a rainy Friday, the rest of weekend was nice. In fact, a new Bishop 203 appeared out of nowhere on this abandoned building, like an urban flower.

Bishop 203

Bishop 203 with a black heart (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Pocket Utopia had it’s last show this weekend, featuring a 16 foot tall fiberglass monster that dispensed beer in the back yard, a performance by artist/musician/dynamo Andrew Hurst in the basement that was viewable through a hole drilled in the floor, and this large scary portrait by Kevin Regan. You might recognize the revolutionary jowls. It’s not street art, per se, but certainly we’ve seen this king of photographic mutation on the street in the work of MBW, Judith Supine, Dain, Bast, and others.

Kevin Regan (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Kevin Regan at Pocket Utopia (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Speaking of Judith Supine, English Kills was showing a large piece by said street artist called “God of Mars”  Chris Harding, visionary owner of the space, explained that this is the biggest canvas Supine has ever done, and that numerology figured into it’s actual dimensions to bring good luck to the piece.

Chris points out a detail on the Judith Supine piece (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Chris points out a detail on the Judith Supine piece (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Large new canvass by Judith Supine "God of Mars" (courtesy English Kills)

Large new canvas by Judith Supine (courtesy English Kills)

Later, after too many beers, we stumbled into a salon of 20-something Illinois settlers (Illinois in the House!), a true sign of the everchanging makeup of the music and art scene. An appreciate audience of 50+ people were spread out over salvaged furniture (and one in a bathtub) to listen to old timey folk inspired singers and bands.

Rockin the autoharp, which is slightly older than wearing trucker caps

Rockin the autoharp, which is slightly older than wearing trucker caps (photo Steven P. Harrington)

While thumping house music from down the block and the occasional police siren wafted in the cracked 4th floor factory windows, singer-songwriters plucked on autoharp, glockenspiel, electric guitar, and a variety of hand held percussion instruments.  The really remarkable part was the lack of manic cell-phone snapping, texting, or Twittering among such an assembled group of youthful beauty during the performances. They appeared to be paying attention.  Is that even POSSIBLE?  Maybe this was a movie set. Or maybe Illinois artist-peeps are just more respectful.  I was going to try to get through this paragraph without mentioning Sufjan Stevens, but there, I’ve said it.  Baahhhhhhhhhh!

The tunes were folky, but she did say "f*ck" quite a few times in one song.

The tunes were folky and relationship-centric, but she did say "f*ck" a few times in one song, so that's what gives it the edge. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

So there you have it, one shard of a giant shattered crystal mirror that is Bushwick.  The torch is passed again to a new generation of weirdos and misfits to develop beauty.  Since most of the real estate developers are trying to hatch their stalled projects in Billyburg and lure in more “consumers”, maybe the recession has bought some time and the multi-feathered flock of “creatives” will continue to fly here for a while.  That way the nests will stay affordable, and the space aplenty.

The art on the street, naturally, has plenty to say on these and other matters…

Read more

Gaia & Imminent Disaster at Ad Hoc

Gaia & Imminent Disaster

Front Gallery

Hiro Kurata & Tommii Lim

Project Room

Nancie Yang

Alcove

June 26th – July 26th

Opening Reception: Friday, June 26th 2009

Choosing a moniker after the Greek goddess of the earth, Gaia uses animals, folklore, fairytales and stories from other cultures to convey a narrative within his pieces. Having first been exposed to street art by Cheekz, Gaia’s awareness of street art came as a truly momentous direction for his artistic endeavors. Gaia continues to experiment with different processes as he brings his works to the galleries and the streets of NYC and beyond.

Imminent Disaster first started doing street art as a way of culture jamming. Since then she has gradually been developing pieces that explore the tensions between present day and historical New York. From bits of cobblestone and defunct tramlines to old warehouses gutted and resold as hip condos, Imminent Disaster turns a classical eye toward modern urban life, and reveals what has been lost.

IN THE FRONT GALLERY

Image

Read more

Swoon, Chris Stain, and the Poloroid Kid

Mid-Week beauty to consider.

When we talk about street art, graff, fine art, high art, low-brow art, or peanut butter and jelly sandwich art, it’s all about the CREATIVE SPIRIT.  Like an orgasm, pretty much whatever it takes to access it, people are best served by tapping into the creative spirit.

Here’s a threesome everyone can enjoy – Swoon, Chris Stain, and the Poloroid Kid.

Read more

Collaboration without Consent

So, when two artists do it together, it’s a collabo, right?

(That’s a fancy abbreviation for collaboration, for those of us who are sequestered on the inside of coolness.)

And when one artist smacks their stuff over top of another artist’s piece, that is a sign of disrespect right? Diss.

How about when one artist deliberately puts a piece on top of the work of another artist and subsequently a NEW piece of art is created by it?  Serendipity?

Who the heck knows these things?  And who the heck put this Audrey Hepburn head on top of a 19th century “call-girl” body by the artist Imminent Disaster?

Breakfast at Disaster (photo Steven P. Harrington)
Breakfast at Disaster (photo Steven P. Harrington)

It sort of looks good though, right? This stuff can only happen on the street, by the way – where the rules seem to be rather unruly, and completely ineffective anyway.  As soon as you try to write a definitive statement about the rules of the street, you will suffer street-hotdog heartburn. Don’t even.

For example, you don’t find people bringing their handy Bob Ross Master Paint Set into the Francis Bacon show at the Met just to brighten up the pieces, do you?

Now that I mention it, did you see the arrows on that Bacon piece?

Francis Bacon "A Piece of Wasteland"

"A Piece of Wasteland" by Francis Bacon

Holy Canoli! Do you see what I see?

Do you think street artist Jef Aerosol went to see the show and smacked it up with some of those red arrows when the security guard was eyeballing the Miss Cataract’s 8th Grade Art Appreciation Field Trip? He seems pretty sneaky.

Probably not, but that would be a new twist wouldn’t it?

Les mythiques
Creative Commons License photo credit: kikozbi1

Francis Bacon has been dead for a while, so if somebody started doing their art on top of his art, that would be kind of like Natalie Cole doing a duet with her father Nat King Cole on that record, “Unforgettable”.  As long as it’s a “tribute” can it really be called “desecration”?  It’s rumored that on Frank Sinatra’s final “Duets” album he didn’t even sing with half of his other halfs.  They just sang by themselves and mailed his studio a disk.  Two alive artists making art together, separately.

And let’s not even talk about Jim Morrison’s grave.

Jim Morrison's Grave Graffiti, Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris, France.
Creative Commons License photo credit: Jim Linwood

Back to the “Breakfast at Disaster” piece at the top. Is this fine art?  Street Art?  Street Art 3.0?  Non-permission-based Art, Hybrid, Mashup, Sampling, Bootleg, Marbled Bundt Cake Art?

Damn, son, somebody better get some labels up in here!

Read more

Images of the Week 06.07.09

Aakash Nihalani_Poster Boy

Summer Action Adventure Staycation (Aakash Nihalani, Poster Boy) (photo Jaime Rojo)

look for artist's name

Fitful growths of irregularity (Pork) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Aakash

Less boxy, more planular (I made up that word), Mr. Nihalani is experimenting with new abstractions. (Aakash Nihalani) (photo Jaime Rojo)

General Howe

On the lookout for incoming battalions of duncery approaching in their cargo shorts and Abercrombie t-shirts (General Howe) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Hellbent

Hey everybody! Come look at this new Jack Black movie! I won't bite, promise (Hellbent) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Herakut

A needed Herakut (photo Jaime Rojo)

KH1

Boy, the way Glenn Miller played.... (KH1) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Nine Flies

Its a Revolution! (Nine Flies) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Nomade keeps good company

Nomade keeps good company (photo Jaime Rojo)

Roof top art

Roof Pork (Pork) (Photo Jaime Rojo)

Space Invader

Which way? I'm always getting lost in this part of town. (Space Invader) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Sexy Blossoms

Sexy Blossoms of Wisteria only this time of year (photo Jaime Rojo)

Akash Nihalani Poster Boy Passenger Pigeon

Akash Nihalani, Poster Boy, and Passenger Pigeon become far out and psychedelic (photo Jaime Rojo)

Dein

Welcome back to the hideout (Dain) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Leif Mcllwaine EllisG

These beer-swilling men, they're all flat and grey to me. I need someone with excitement, know what I mean? (EllisG, Leif Mcllwaine) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shark Toof

Shark Toof flies the friendly skies (photo Jaime Rojo)

Unknown

Sometimes we have no idea what is on the wall. One of the many mysteries of the street art scene. (photo Jaime Rojo)

Hellbent

A great dislocation (Hellbent) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Read more