May 2010

Conor Harrington in Tel Aviv with Know Hope and Zero Cents

Conor Harrington (Image courtesy Conor Harrington)

Conor Harrington (Image courtesy Conor Harrington)

From Conor’s Blog

“I spent a week in the Middle East, painting in both Israel and Palestine. I brought my boy Andy with me to film it all so we’ll have a short lil film coming out at some stage. It was one of those trips where you’ve no idea whats ahead. You can only prepare for so much and remain open to all eventualities. I think I need a holiday.”

To continue reading and see more images about Conor’s Middle East trip please go here:

http://conorsaysboom.wordpress.com/2010/05/17/middle-east-part-1-tel-aviv/

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Ad Hoc Art Presents: Welling Court Mural Project

AD HOC ART PRESENTS
brooklyn-street-art-ad-hoc-art-welling-court-mural-project

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Welling Court Mural Project:

* The community is hosting an authentic NYC street party for the event. If you plan on joining the celebration, come on down with your favorite food, beverage, or street party fixins to share.

There’s never too much of a good thing…

Welling Court Artists include: Alice Mizrachi, Beast, Chris Mendoza, Chris Stain, Celso, Cern, Cey Adams, CR, Cycle, Dan Witz, Darkclouds, Daryll Peirce, Don Leicht, Ellis G, Free5, Gaia, Garrison & Alison Buxton, Greg Lamarche, JMR, John Fekner, Lady Pink, Leon Reid, Matt Siren, M-City, Michael De Feo, Mr. Kiji, Pablo Power, Peripheral Media Projects, R. Nicholas Kuszyk, Remi/Rough, Ron English, Royce Bannon, Sofia Maldonado, Stormie Mills, Sweet Toof, Swoon, TooFly, Tristan Eaton, and Veng RWK.

The project represents a great pairing of individuals and groups interested in making their communities and the world a more engaged and creative place. Members of the Welling Court neighborhood in Queens wanted to beautify their neighborhood walls and enliven their surroundings and Brooklyn’s Ad Hoc Art, an arts organization known for supporting and expanding the accessibility of street art to the masses in NYC and throughout the world, was an perfect fit.

Ad Hoc’s vision was to showcase the diverse and rich history of artists driven by their passion for expression and dreams for a better world. The project’s roster represents over 50 years of the expansive and diverse history of street art, bringing together artists whose productivity spans from pre/graffiti legends to the latest movers and shakers. While a strong New York City contingency represents the city’s legacy as a bubbling brew of public expression, international players reflect the global impact of the movement that burst from the Big Apple.

The project begins at the intersection of Welling Court, 30th Avenue and 12th Street and extends north along 30th Avenue and then east along Main Avenue, across the street from the Two Coves Community Garden. The street of Welling Court is a beautiful reminder to the rich diversity that exists within New York City. The block is a melting pot representing people of African American, Greek, Peruvian, Ecuadoran, Mexican, Brazilian, Chinese, Korean, Indian, and Italian origin, to name a few.

Likewise, the artists come from diverse origins with Latin American, African American, Caucasian, and Eastern artists represented, as well as natives from Australia, Nicaraugua, Poland, Puerto Rico, the UK, & Venezuela.

Welling Court Mural Project

Opening party: Saturday, May 22nd, 4-10pm

11-98 Welling Court, Queens, NY 11102

Directions: Take the N or W train to 30th Ave & walk 10 blocks towards the East River or take the Q18 bus down 30th Ave to 12th St.

www.adhocart.org

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Symbols and Signals: An Interview with Avoid Pi and “infinity”

Symbols and Signals: An Interview with Avoid Pi and “infinity”

brooklyn-street-art-infinit

“Babel Code <osmotic transmissions> Opens Tomorrow night at Mighty Tanaka

The Ozmotic Transmission Screen is luminescently iterative

The Ozmotic Transmission Screen is luminescently iterative. The artists stand behind the screen used for creating their show print. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

A visit to the studio with street artists “infinity” and Avoid Pi is much like a trip to a darkened pre-historic cave in the foothills of the Pyrenees with writings and symbols scratched into the wall. Main differences in this case are A. there was carpeting, and B. no archaeologists were there to help me decipher the markings on the walls, moldings, ceilings, tables, shelves, and art work.

Screening the new prints, the second series from Mighty Tanaka featuring a collaborative duo. 20 of the prints will be available. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Screening the new prints, the second series from Mighty Tanaka featuring a collaborative duo. 20 of the prints will be available. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

 

But I know a silkscreening when I see it, and one was in progress for the bi-color print created by both artists for their show opening tomorrow. The excited art scientists/ laboratory technicians/ secular shamans pulled art out of large zip-locked bags, pointed to pieces in progress on the wall, and hung new screen prints on a makeshift clothesline, – all while talking in great depth about their new collaborative show, and how much they have enjoyed preparing for it.

Hanging out the prints to dry (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Hanging the prints to dry after the first color is screened on. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

 

You will be hard pressed to find a more organized and intellectually charged approach to art-making in the street art milieu; the signs and exegesis and calendars – all handwritten – are helpfully displayed everywhere in the studio. If these methodic mad artfessors are not completely ready at showtime with a beaker of martini in hand, I’ll eat my pad of graph-paper.

The two artists took time to answer some questions for Brooklyn Street Art below:

The finished collabo print ready to fly out the window (photo Steven P. Harrington)

The finished collabo print ready to fly out the window (photo Steven P. Harrington)

 

Brooklyn Street Art: Is this your first collaboration in a show? AVOID pi : In 2009, we both painted the ceiling for the “Work To Do” group show at 112 Greene St . infinity: Later in the year, Avoid collaborated on a duo performance of my day-long composition, SPOOL: DRAWING IN SPACE .

An splash of collaborative inspiration from infinity and Avoid Pi (photo Steven P. Harrington)

An controlled explosion of collaborative inspiration from infinity and Avoid Pi (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Who had the idea that your styles would compliment one another? infinity: The first time i saw AVOID’s pi symbol in 2007, I posted a picture to Flickr with the title “Kindred Spirits.” Eventually we met, hit it off due to a surprising amount of shared interests, started including each other in group shows, and painting together. Specifically though, AVOID hooked up this exhibition last fall with Alex Emmart from The Mighty Tanaka Gallery. Alex used to work at AdHoc and has now started his own gallery in DUMBO.

Avoid's series of re "These were just secondary products made from the creative process. They are highly inspired by DarkClouds stickerboard pieces from his show with GoreB and Armer, where he used the leftover results from the sticker making process - and the incidental marks created.

Curtains from a Fung Wa Chinatown bus – I am not kidding. Avoid Pi sewed them together for this canvass and stretched it. DONE! Smells like cigarettes and Moo Goo Gai Pan. Kidding! (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Can you talk about the significance of symbols to you as an artist? AVOID pi : Symbols simplify complex concepts into easily and quickly understood images. The single or two-word street tag name can be isolated into a series of symbols or letters to allow for abstraction and reinterpretation while remaining in the graffiti tradition. Bronze and Peyote ADHD are currently leading the streets in symbolic tag innovation.

infinity: Culture is a semiotic haze of signs stratified and codified in the systems they inhabit, becoming an aura enshrouding, circumscribing, and permeating everything with a cerebral vibration, an osmotic transmission, signals mediating our interpretation of reality. From the tangible transmissions of fashion to the ethereal wraiths of language, symbols not only contain the consciously constructed messages of the sender, but also their cultural biases influence our comprehension of the world. The mentally-rendered shapes of symbols, these shadows of meaning, are ephemeral containers, historically maleable forms, constantly changing and evolving for many reasons, including the indefatigable imagination of the human spirit, the capitalist system’s need to feed its novelty engine, and for the anti-status quo’s mission to challenge and break down prevailing systems. Once a symbol is emitted as street art or graffiti into our culture, it becomes imbued with a subversive power that may irrupt into and infiltrate the dominant system through it’s demiurge circuitry, hopefully creating aspirational sparks that resonate on an immanent level, a DNA depth charge, uplifting and inspiring a positive trajectory for human kind’s next level mutation.

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Avoid’s series of re “These were just secondary products made from the creative process. They are highly inspired by DarkClouds stickerboard pieces from his show with GoreB and Armer, where he used the leftover results from the sticker making process – and the incidental marks created. “Incidental Abstractions”. In layman’s terms, the canvasses are clothing that Avoid Pi wore making art. It’s kind of like when Elvis used to mop his brow with a towel onstage and throw it into the audience. Avoid Pi does not have sideburns however. (photo Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: When you think about the art you both have done on the street, it appears to be a form of communication but the messages are not necessarily obvious. How would you like people to be affected by your work? AVOID pi : Whether it’s white out tags, scratchies, drip tags, spraypaint, stickers, wheatpaste, rollers, blasters, zines, videos, music or fine art; ALL MY SONGS ARE PROTEST SONGS. All of my artistic techniques and methods are DIY: accessible & reproducable by the public at large. I want the viewer to feel empowered to interact and participate in the public discussion.

infinity: Unlike many street artists, I am not a populist. More like a pure research scientist. The best form for visual or textual communication is not always the simplest and clearest presentation. In order to express some subjects or challenge prevailing forms, a new alien language may need to develop. Epiphany can’t always be expressed or understood through archaic or prosaic aesthetics. As time passes, new ideas become slogans and singular expressions become cultural cliches. Rallying the masses is one thing; Enlightenment is another. Mystification as cerebral provocation. Babel code.

A canvas too tall for the studio is merely accordion-folded up the wall onto the ceiling for "infinity".

A canvas too tall for the studio is merely accordion-folded up the wall onto the ceiling for “infinity”. Infinity, “Yeah, I like the way this started turning out, once I figured out how the materials worked. I got here because I enjoyed DeKooning so much and I like the way he tends to put a lot of lines down and then erase and like the palimpsest creates a lot of layers. I think the mistakes that you leave or the parts that maybe look unfinished create a certain tension that is more interesting than a piece that looks so completed and perfect” BSA: “There looks like a lot of nesting of your lines that create a tension.” Infinity: “Right. And also the grid between the more organic shapes. There is a lot of ‘going back-and-forth’. I end up erasing and re-drawing more than actually laying down the first lines. Some of my other pieces are totally improvised, which I like also. It’s very exciting, very primal.”

Street artists are such slackers, aren't they? (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Street artists are such slackers, aren’t they? Here are some “Notes To Self” from “infinity” on the completion of his piece. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: When you think of public art or street art, is the dialogue between artists only, or is it meant to create a dialogue with the public? I ask this because frequently the graffiti tradition was more about dialogue between writers as peers. This seems to have been dismantled with the opening up of “street art”.

AVOID pi: All public mark-making from modern graffiti, to advertisments and memorials functions simultainously on both the industry and layperson perspectives. Advertising insiders think about campaigns in a different way than their prospective customers. The average pedestrian sees public art differently than the artists themselves. Street Art has opened the dialogue between the artist and the viewer through placing the artists in the context of the gallery and museum; the understood cultural signifiers of artistic value.

infinity: I’m not intentionally out to create dialogue with anyone in particular. it’s more about the idea of a subtle influence, a homeopathic injection, an osmotic transmission of the sign through the walls of our buildings, our culture, our cell walls, our DNA.

Avoid in High Definition: a selection of pieces framed from Avoid Pi will also be on display (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Avoid in High Definition: a selection of pieces framed from Avoid Pi will also be on display (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: After the challenge of creating pieces collaboratively, how do you think your individual work will change, if at all? AVOID pi: infinity has enhanced my abillity to see culture as multiple layers of systems and symbols that constantly mutate, combine and divide. This helps me understand how multiple contradiciting theories and practices can co-exist.

infinity: Collaboration is essential for me because of the challenge and inspiration of exploring someone else’s aesthetic vocabulary in relation to my own. Burroughs and Gysin’s THIRD MIND is an interesting theory about the phenomenon of a “third mind” being created when artists collaborate. Our collaborative pieces were an experiment in this kind of supportive, complementary, and recombinant atmosphere. AVOID and I probably differ most in terms of composition. He tends towards a calmer, spacious feel, whereas I always want to fill every spot on the page with marks, creating a busy, frenetic space. So it was interesting attempting to leave the negative spaces alone or guide them into taking on a graphic quality. Also, more specifically, I bought a wood burning pen and carving set which I used in our collaborations, and plan to use more in the future.

A piece on the wall in the studio that will not be in the show but was obviously consulted in the planning. A table top from the studio that 'infinity' and Avoid and other visiting artists have added to over the last few years will be on sale as a canvas however. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

A piece on the wall in the studio that will not be in the show but was obviously consulted in the planning. A table top from the studio that ‘infinity’ and Avoid and other visiting artists have added to over the last few years will be on sale as a canvas however. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Can you talk about the cool zine you’ve made for the show? infinity: the zine is a collage of images and texts by current compatriots (Factory Fresh, ELC, ADHD, Pandemic, etc), historical aesthetic influences (McGee, Panter, Revs, Doury, etc), quotes from revolutionary readings of street art and graffiti (Baudrillard, Mailer, etc), and images of the art from BABEL CODE. Kind of a catalog in the format of a zine. It was inspired by AVOID’s zine series called PERMANENT INK *****************)(&)(^)*%*&_)(*_)*)(^(*%$(^(&**_)*(_)&)(^(^&$&^#!^$#*%* Avoid pi and infinity would like to give thanks to Skewville for preparing the silkscreens to print the cover, Royce Bannon for PR and marketing, Devon Groomes for PR and silkscreening, and Kat Amchentseva for photographing the art and the opening. And of course Alex Emmart at Mighty Tanaka Gallery, Brooklyn Street Art and Chashama, the arts organization. ………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA………….BSA

Babel Code : osmotic transmissions, Art from the minds of AVOID & Infinity – details

Location: Mighty Tanaka Studio in D.U.M.B.O Duration: May 21st – Jun 11th, 2010 Cost: FREE Contact: Mighty Tanaka , alex@mightytanaka.com MIGHYTANAKA.com

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GAIA in San Francisco – In the private and public gallery

Energetic and dancing animal Gaia has been banging up the tenderloin in San Francisco. If you are in the area be sure to check out his show “The Reinvention of Nature” at Gallery Heist and some of the pieces appearing in the street too with buddies like Blek Le Rat and Hugh Leeman.

"The Architect II" 24" x 24" Color pencil drawing on Lennox paper by Gaia at Gallery Heist in San Francisco (photo courtesy Gallery Heist)
“The Architect II” 24″ x 24″ Color pencil drawing on Lennox paper by Gaia at Gallery Heist in San Francisco (photo courtesy Gallery Heist)

Gaia's rooster on the right along with Hugh Leeman, Eddie, Blek le Rat and DYV. (photo courtesy the artist)

Gaia's rooster on the right along with Hugh Leeman, Eddie, Blek le Rat and DYV. (photo courtesy the artist)

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LUDO in Brooklyn, Pretty Malevolence Growing on the Wall

LUDO in Brooklyn, Pretty Malevolence Growing on the Wall

Giant green flowers with closed circuit televisions instead of pistols, drone planes with insect legs, cacti that turn into syringes, a cabbage that features a hardened metal dome and 5 gun turrets – all in black and acid green, all surreal hybrids of natural beauty and man’s darker nature.

That’s what LUDO has been creating in Paris and London and Milan for three years or so as part of his “Nature’s Revenge” series of wheat-pastes. The marrying of these two worlds is jarring and uncomfortable, and that’s his point. He wants you to think about man’s march toward technologically more sophisticated ways of being inhuman, of our mindless oggling of the next shiny electronic bauble and our subsequent shameless allegiance to it.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

In a way, the nature/technology hybrids are not as futuristic as we may like to think – nanotechnology has been talking about flying insect sized cameras since the dawn of this century – and greater awareness of the precarious discoveries man is making and his inability to meet them may be a side effect of the series. Plumes of oil, anyone?

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Now in New York, LUDO is already making us think, and I’ve got to admit I’m thrilled. I like it when art makes me think, even if it is about things I don’t understand or am uncomfortable with. It’s kind of like cloud computing. Or James Dobson. Or blue cheese.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA:  Did you ever see the movie called “Little Shop of Horrors” ?
LUDO: No.

BSA: Because it’s about a man-eating plant…
LUDO: No. I have to see it.

BSA: Okay, one down.  So it’s true that you studied sociology and graphic design. Do you see any connection between sociology and your street art?
LUDO: Yeah, certainly I am interested in people. I am interested in bringing a message to the street that can easily be understood.  Certainly street art is a bit of sociology. I mean you try to grab what you can from the society and incorporate it into your work and then take it back out to the streets with your personality in it.

Ludo

LUDO puts up a circuit-board butterfly (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: So you are using your art to communicate with people on the street?
LUDO: Yes, actually I try to go out in Paris on Sunday during the day – and while I am putting work out sometimes people come to talk to me.  Just normal people who just want to ask me about the work.  It is good.  Okay, maybe it is a little for your ego, or a lot for your ego but then it for me a study.  I won’t doing any art so people will hate me, or to fight with me. I’m not interested in that.  It’s better to have them in a good mood.

BSA: Tuthfully, you also like to watch the reaction of people who see your work.
LUDO: Yes because they are interested in the fact that it’s a kind of a naïve subject; with a flower or birds but they like to get a little closer and see that there are guns – it’s nice, it’s interesting.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: Right so let’s talk about that ; Guns, violence, implied threats of violence, high technology – is it about fear?
LUDO: No, it’s more about everything that stupidly rules the world.  I mean guns, technology, humans, new gadgets – That is what I like to take and remix and give a message.

BSA: Do you have any animals at home?
LUDO: Yeah, an English Bulldog.

BSA: That’s it?
LUDO: No no, I don’t have any insects.  I do have a garden for food, and an aromatic garden (herb garden).

BSA: You’ve been doing the “Nature’s Revenge” series for about two years?
LUDO: Maybe like three.  This butterfly is a new one for me.  I try to go out maybe every time with a new piece. I’m not interested in always put up the same stuff. I try to see the spot and imagine the pieces.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: Why was this butterfly so difficult today?
LUDO: The wind! The paste too.  Usually the paste I use is really strong and with a big piece it sticks immediately.

BSA: You have done some gallery work, mostly group shows. When street artists transition from the street to the gallery, many artists change their work. When you think about street artists that go into the gallery, who do you like?
LUDO:
I am a big fan of Neckface. And I’ve always been really interested in how he works in the streets. And his gallery work is awesome; it is so strong; it’s thin lines, it’s clean, it’s perfect – even if the message continues to be so strong.  That is what I like. If someone who is a street artist does gallery work, I think it has to be different, it needs to reach a different level.

Ludo and Armsrock

LUDO and Armsrock (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: So who are some of your favorite street artists right now?
LUDO: Yeah Neckface will always be. I love Bast.  I like also Sweet Toof.  Yeah so those are the three.

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DEBUT VIDEO: ROA Alights Atop a Brooklyn Roof and Hits the Water Tower

Monday while most of New York street art enthusiasts were frantically chasing after Banksy’s new offerings in our city, BSA had the good fortune to spend the afternoon with ROA witnessing the Belgian’s masterstrokes with a spray can on the side of one of Brooklyn’s iconic water towers.

CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE.  SEE BRAND NEW VIDEO BELOW.

Roa ©Photo Jaime Rojo

ROA ©Photo Jaime Rojo

It was gray and warmish, the sun was somewhere radiating behind the clouds, and enough spring was in the air to bring a mocking bird to the roof to dart from spot to spot and sit atop a satellite dish.

Roa ©Photo Jaime Rojo

ROA ©Photo Jaime Rojo

While ROA lithely paced the roof looking for the right position on the tower and tracing it with his fingers in the air, our fine flying city visitor popped off a few jazzy notes in search of a lady bird who might find his downy wings a refuge from the dirty breeze.

ROA
ROA (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Any cityscape depiction of Brooklyn always includes the silhouette of a water tower or two, and having one of ROA’s distinctive animals embellished with peculiar sooty urbanity across the side of this icon completes some kind of cycle.

ROA
ROA (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Once he began, it wasn’t long before ROA’s bird was poking his head out of the water tank to take a gander at the roof and the river and the industrial gray day that spread across New York.

Our little friend the mocking bird may have known what was happening, but he may have been more interested in the female that also darted by once or twice, and that’s why he kept singing.  Looks like a cycle of spring was completed in front of our eyes.

This beautiful mocking bird joined us in and kept up the pace with a steady repertoire of chirpy songs and fly overs. He loved the attention all day.
This smartly attired mocking bird hung out with us and kept up the pace with a steady repertoire of chirpy songs and fly-overs. He loved the attention all afternoon. He also liked dried fruit. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

ROA
ROA (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Witnessing ROA at work, one sees that the decision of placement is key – and the execution is tempered and thoughtful. His singular animals are frank and unromanticized – at home on this unvarnished post, a counterweight to caged dilettantes posturing inside glass towers.

ROA
When the breeze picked up ROA picked up his hoody. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

ROA
The finished bird poking his big head out of the water tower. (ROA )(photo © Jaime Rojo)

SEE our other video of ROA’s installation of a 35 foot high bird HERE:

READ the Interview Part 1 HERE :

Winging It With ROA – FreeStyle Urban Naturalist Lands Feet First in Brooklyn

READ the Interview Part 2 HERE :

Flying High With ROA in Brooklyn, NYC

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Stencils of the Week 05.18.10 from BSA

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History X

Stencil artist Indigo from Vancouver BC has quickly become one to watch.
Stencil artist Indigo from Vancouver BC has quickly become one to watch. This piece comes from a small festival she took part in last months called “Paint Your Faith”, in part sponsored by a Church in Vancouver. See link to this event below.
Si Senor! SR X has been working out (image courtesy SR X)

Si Senor! SR X has been working out (image courtesy SR X)

Bogota based artist Stinkfish is doing fine work on trains in Oaxaca, Mexico, including this stencil made from a photo fo a young girl. Stencil in this case is used here as a basis for painting. (photo courtesy Stinkfish)

Bogota based artist Stinkfish is doing fine work on trains in Oaxaca, Mexico, including this stencil made from a photo fo a young girl. Stencil in this case is used here as a basis for painting. (photo courtesy Stinkfish)

This wall appeared this week in Paris: Attributed to Mosko et Associés, Artiste-Ouvrier, Miss,Tic, Jérôme Mesnager, Da Cruz  (photo © Morac)

This wall appeared this week in Paris: Attributed to Mosko et Associés, Artiste-Ouvrier, Miss,Tic, Jérôme Mesnager, Da Cruz (photo © Morac)

Mural @ Studio Orizzonte, via Barberini 60 www.fefeproject.com/Copyright Romefotoblog

C215's mural @ Studio Orizzonte in Italy (© Romefotoblog)

Read more about “Paint Your Faith” here.

Read more about Indigo here.

See more Sr. X here

See more Stinkfish here.

C215’s show at Fefe Project

Stencil History X


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Jake Spots a Banksy in NYC

This just in, Jake Dobkin of Streetsy reports that a brand new piece by British street art sensation Banksy has been discovered in NYC.  One anonymous source wrote to report it is in lower Manhattan.  Breathless fans will be keeping their eyes peeled for more as they have been showing up by the half dozen in different cities in North America over the last couple of months…

Image © Jake Dobkin
(photo © thebanksyforum.com)

For more go to STREETSY.com

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Images of the Week 05.16.10 on BSA

Our Weekly Interview With the Street

Luna Park and Billi Kid with friends at Barneys Window
Luna Park and Billi Kid with 20 street art friends custom designed the classic Eames chair for a charity auction that ultimately mentors and helps other artists: this is a view of the whole collection in the Barneys window that debuted Thursday in Manhattan. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Artists participating are Aakash Nihalani, Billi Kid, Blanco, Cake, Celso, Cern, Damon Ginandes, Darkcloud, David Cooper, Elbow-Toe, James and Karla Murray, Joe Iurato, Matt Siren, NohJColey, Peru Ana Ana Peru, Skewville, Sofia Maldonado, Stikman, UR®New York and Veng.

The Whole Window
The Eames Inspiration window (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile "Everything under the sky on the wings of Faile"
Faile “Everything Under The Sky On The Wings Of Faile” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Mr. Kern in Belfast Photo ©Richard Skinner
Richard Skinner shot this in Belfast of a local street artist named Mr. Kern.  Plus, I like that little pod-like car in the foreground – It’s the Apple ICar !   (photo ©Richard Skinner)

Dain
It’s INSTA-MATIC!  (Dain) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile Support Single Moms
FAILE Supports Single Moms (© Jaime Rojo)

Primo
Primo sporting a Lady Gaga mask of some sort, with a curiously shaped purple friend on his lapel (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Ron English tribute?
Ron English tribute? Is this what Ronald McDonald looks like after a steady diet of fast food? (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile "Happens Everyday!"
Faile “Happens Everyday!” Actually, it hasn’t happened in a while (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Shepard Fairey
Seeing all these new green leaves just make me break out into a smile. (Shepard Fairey) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

And We Are Still Finding Treasures Left Behind by Various And Gould
More construction in the neighborhood! (Various And Gould) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Aakash Nihalani, Billi Kid, Blanco, Cake, Celso, Cern, Damon Ginandes, Darkcloud, David Cooper, Elbow-Toe, James and Karla Murray, Joe Iurato, Matt Siren, NohJColey, Peru Ana Ana Peru, Skewville, Sofia Maldonado, Stikman, UR®New York, Veng, Faile, Shepard Fairey, Various & Gould, Ron English,Mr. Kern, DAIN, and Primo.

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From Right Coast to Left: The Street Art Players Overlap Sometimes

Somebody just sent us this shot of a favorite wall for Street Artists in San Francisco’s Mission District – and the thing that strikes me is it’s similarity to a big abandoned place in Soho just above Canal in Manhattan. Looks like you can see some of New York’s street artists as easily crossing the Golden Gate as the George Washington.

fsasd
Let’s see now, there’s Gaia on the left, Sean Desmond, Hugh Leeman, Shepard Fairey….

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NEW VIDEO DEBUT : Logan Hicks talks about Upcoming Show and Life in the City

“It’s this idea about feeling alone in the busiest place in the world.”

In this new video shot and directed by Stephanie Johnes, Logan gives a good idea about his current state as an astutely mighty stencil artist and his status as a citizen of Brooklyn, NYC. In a new show opening Wednesday at Opera Gallery with his fellow street artist Anthony Lister, he will be showing a new collection that reveals an ever more focused attention to clean lines that results from a new technique he’s using.

See Sneak Peeks from Our Earlier Posting HERE

In his ongoing fixation with “vanishing perspectives”, daddy Hicks has been researching historical photography of New York and it’s architectural wonders of the early 1900’s: Beaux Arts to Banal Tenements to Industrial Soullessness. Hicks channels the empty solitude of the single figure (apparent or implied) amidst the hard angles and stream lines of his city with a new set of crisp and reflective stencils.

Says Logan, “(It’s) either serenity or depression, depending on your mindset”. Looks like serenity from here.

Logan's show flyer from Opera Gallery

Logan's show flyer from Opera Gallery

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