July 2010

Ben Aine: Street Art and The White House

Ben Aine (Photo © PA)
Ben Aine  “Twenty First Century City” (Photo © PA)

Street Art continues to keep its vertiginous trip towards total recognition and full popularity among the masses. This trend was solidified with the recent news that upon this week’s visit to the White House, David Cameron, the newly minted British Prime Minister, presented The Obamas a painting by Ben Aine. Mr. Aine is one of the most visible street artists working today in England. The painter was chosen by Mr. Cameron’s wife, Samantha, to give to the Obamas. Mr. Aine is said to be one of Mrs. Cameron’s favorite artists.

To read more about this story go here:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1296453/Samantha-Cameron-gives-Ben-Eine-street-art-Barak-Obama.html

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Book Signing Tomorrow Night of “Street Art New York”

Looking forward to meeting YOU tomorrow night at the Spoonbill and Sugartown bookstore in Williamsburg Brooklyn.  If you know anything about publishing you know that your local independently run bookstore has been on the endangered list for about a decade. That’s why it’s important to us to support our neighbors when possible and help keep independent and independently-minded bookstores alive and well.

Street-Art-New-York-Book-Cover-JUDITH-SUPINE-copyright-Jaime-Rojo-medium

Spoonbill and Sugartown, owned by Jonas Kyle and Miles Bellamy, arrived in Williamsburg the same year we did and since then they have steadily supported the artists and art lovers who live in Brooklyn offering rare, unusual titles, tomes, zines, magazines, handmade books, and even some gorgeous coffee table books. Also, inflateable mooseheads.  You can’t find many of these titles in the chain bookstores.  Even if you already have “Street Art New York” or even if you are broke, come on down tonight and lend your presence and your enthusiasm for the creative spirit – that will be a great way to help keep your local small bookseller encouraged and alive. We will be really happy to meet you.

Read more details here.

Spoonbill and Sugartown
218 Bedford Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Tel. 718.387.7322
sugar@spoonbillbooks.com

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On the Street Art Continuum He’s Overunder.

On the Street Art Continuum He’s Overunder.

In Jonathan Swifts Letter to a Young Poet the satirist writes at length about the daily exigencies and the less obvious qualities that will be necessary to pursue a life of letters and creativity.

“..it is to me a plain account why our present set of poets are, and hold themselves obliged to be, free thinkers.”

Outside the rigors of academia and the confines of the white box, our street artists continually challenge all of us to be free thinkers.  Of course, we’re not all going to be free. Maybe because thinking is only one route to understanding.

Among Street Artists who can suspend their limiting thoughts and embrace an inner discovery of the creative spirit, Overunder is fluid enough to explore and discover before your eyes without concern about matters that may hinder his peers. To him, process trumps product, and exploring may produce an  expertise previously unfound. The act of collaboration colors the experience in ways he could not possibly have accessed singularly. His roots in graffiti are not reason for stylistic rigidity, rather a route to other paths that may include Street Art and fine art, abstraction, absurdity, symbolism, signage.

In a grueling journey by bicycle with street artist OTHER this spring, Overunder traveled by bicycle through 7 countries in Europe with little more than a backpack and sketchbook. He stopped in small towns and hamlets after exhaustive hours of plumbing an inner world he accessed on mind-numbing rhythmic rides in silence for hours. Somewhere along the way Overunder pierced the veil of his conventional thought and opened a portal for his creativity. Since returning to New York, he’s discovered brand new work that is flowing without judgment, and he is reveling it it’s direction without questioning it. A free thinker yes, and a free spirit too.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: You recently returned from a trip across Europe. For seven weeks you pedaled your way through seven countries in your bike. Was that trip the inspiration for your new art?
Overunder:
The trip definitely exposed me to a new way of working and inspired me but I can’t quite pinpoint where these new figurative works came from. On the surface it makes sense where these pieces came from. I mean I’m on this crazy bike ride with OTHER, a guy that has mastered portraiture and creates phenomenal situations where life-like characters are decked out in beautifully crafted patterns and goofy demeanors but, to me, my new works are more connected to graffiti.

The new pieces on paper are actually letter studies in the guise of nudes. I use traditional graffiti and signage as my muse to paint these spontaneous and dirty translations that take on human form. I’ve never been one into nudes or figurative work but these pieces came out of somewhere inside of me and I’m the type of person that believes in chance, serendipity, and all the hogwash of following where the wind blows you; such as biking across Europe with a sleeping bag and a mean streak.

Overunder

Over Under (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Quote-OverUnder-mother-loverBSA: You are now drawing and painting males and females nudes. Do you use a live model or are you painting from your imagination?
Overunder: All the new work is not from live models or photos or even really my imagination but my hand. I don’t know if that makes too much sense but what I’m getting at is a looser, gestural, non-overworked or over-thought process.

Painting should be fun so I try to treat it playfully. The pieces are excuses to loosen up and laugh at myself. Coming from a graffiti background will tighten ones’ bolt, most likely strip most of ’em, so what I love about these new wheat pastes is that they balance my two worlds while giving me incentive to get up.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: With the colorful head portraits you are collaborating with ND’A. Many artists shy away from collabs. You seem to thrive doing them. Why?
Overunder: I think collaborations are important for artists, and people in general, to understand themselves. When I work by myself I may tend to have a higher output and tailor the work to exactly how I see it in my mind but the work is more closed. It’s like working behind a castle wall. For me, collaborations allow me to drop the draw-bridge and open up the work to new concepts, aesthetics, even accidents. The pieces with ND’A are testament to that and we bounce a lot of ideas off of each other. I’m excited to see where he takes his work in the next year and it’s a pleasure to merge our styles.  In some ways each collaboration is an extension of oneself, almost more like a separate personality, that you can let run its course or its mouth.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

N.D’A (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Quote-OverUnder-residencyBSA: You lived briefly in San Francisco. What’s the difference, at this time in your life as an artist from living in SF and living in NYC?
Overunder: I can’t really speak generally about the difference but for me personally SF is a dead city. I grew up in Reno and would go to SF in the early 90’s when it was crushed. There were abandoned buildings, foundations, tunnels, you name it. It was all up for grabs and it was a graffiti writer’s paradise. That city erased its graff-cosmetics and replaced it with an urban-tummy tuck and facelift. You can still find good work there but I believe that a city has a responsibility to an artist. A city needs to nurture a person like a mother or a lover. It needs to inspire them and afford them places to explore, run wild, and f*ck sh*t up a little. You can do that a bit in SF but it will be a one-course meal and you’ll still be hungry when you’re through. At least that’s my take on it after moving to NYC. I think NYC is the best unadvertised residency program an artist could ever have. It’s got a constant flow of new work on the streets, visiting artists, and resident artists. Rent is affordable when you get out a bit and the further out you get, the more it forces you to explore the city. SF was just too expensive, obsessed with food, and like the try-hard little brother of NY. The big apple has fermented and is intoxicating with absurd realness.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder  and N.D’A(Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Quote-OverUnder-LickBSA: Are you being inspired by other artists now or by music to do your work?
Overunder: There are so many artists that inspire me but just the other day I was walking through Brooklyn and thinking that my favorite artists are my close friends. CASH4 inspires me with his work ethic, bluntness, and invented visual language. OTHER inspires me with his proclivity to travel, storytelling, and use of the word “wicked” in most sentences, ha! READ MORE inspires me with his typography and lifestyle. Adriana Valdez Young influences my drive to have fun while being smart about it. The list is long but the ones on the top are buZ blurr, Matthias Wermke, ADAMS, Broken Crow, JoinsOne, NohJColey, and Specter. As far as music I’m on a kick of Reno bands like Bindle Stiffs, Molesters, and the Frontiersmen.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

N.D’A (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: How important is it for an artist to take risks?
Overunder: If art was baking, risks are like the eggs and flour of art-making. Now I’m not trying to make some Vegan cupcakes or some bullsh*t like that; I’m talking about fried-chicken-and-waffles-at-5a.m.-art. For me personally, I wouldn’t have a lick of work to show for if I didn’t take risks.  It’s not something one should really discuss or think about, it just is part of the whole picture.

People take shits, artists take risks.

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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San Diego’s Streets Alive as “Viva la Revolución” Opens at MCASD

Opening night at MCASD's first Street Art Exhibition - a crushing crowd in two lines which formed an hour before the doors opened. (photo © Geoff Hargadon)
Opening night at MCASD’s first Street Art exhibition this weekend – a crushing crowd in two lines which formed an hour before the doors opened. (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

“Never Trust Your Own Eyes. Believe What You Are Told,” says the ironic slogan in the freshly wheat-pasted graphic piece by street artist Shepard Fairey on the side of a clothing store in San Diego, the town that chased him out for doing street art. One may believe Fairey’s politics to be Orwellian reference. Just as easily it could be applied to the academics, historians and would-be art critics struggling daily to describe with any authority what street art is and how it should be regarded. Luckily, we have been able to trust our eyes to make this analysis so far.

Read more (and leave your comments) on The Huffington Post

Invader and friends in San Diego (image © Geoff Hargadon)
Invader and friends in San Diego (image © Geoff Hargadon)

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Images of the Week 07.18.10

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010

Our weekly interview with the street; this week featuring 907, Bast, Faro, Goya, Hellbent, Nick Walker, Nutterfly, Pan Am, Sadue, Shin Shin, Specter, Swamp Donkey, TWA, UFO, and Conor Harrington.

Bast. Detail (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Mashing up childhood memories. Bast. Detail (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Double Bast. Kiss of Death (Vader) (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Double Bast. Kiss of Death (Vader) (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hellbent

Hellbent (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

UFO, 907(detail), Sadue (detail) (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

A very colorful nearly block long installation appeared almost overnight in Brooklyn.  Here are a couple of the artists UFO, 907 (detail), Sadue (detail) (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Nick Walker "Nutterfly". Connor Harrington (detail) (Photo © Jaime Rojo) Editors Note: The placement of the Nick Walker was over a crappy piece of advertisement that had covered part of the Connor Harrington piece.

Nick Walker traveled to Manhattan after his first stops with BSA in Brooklyn. This one is called “Nutterfly” . Conor Harrington (detail) (Photo © Jaime Rojo) Editors Note: The placement of the Nick Walker was over a crappy piece of advertisement that had covered part of the Conor Harrington piece. Nick Walker did not go over Conor.

Nick Walker. Detail. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Nick Walker. Detail. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faro (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faro (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Bast Pan Am (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
One of Bast’s older pieces, a camera, next to a new Fly Bast Air Pan Am (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Shin Shin (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

A 3-D perspective on one of summers’ most cherished sights.  Shin Shin (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hellbent

Hellbent (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Goya (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Goya (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Using what has become a signature image in his work, the orange shopping cart stacked high with returnable bottles, Specter flips realism into abstract by turning it on its side and submerging it in this sculpture. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Bast TWA (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Bast TWA (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Swampy and Goya (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Swampy and Goya (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

The oppressive heat has really started to fry Specter’s mind, and most New Yorker’s for that matter. All elements are being cut and pasted back into place. This appears to appropriate graffitied metal wall segments.  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Bast La Sinistra (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Bast La Sinistra (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Sarah Palin Walking the Streets of New York in a New Piece by Billi Kid

We’d like to say it’s political street art, but as time goes by the tabloid star, former newsreader and half-term serving former governor Sarah Palin is not really as politically relevant as we thought she would become. But she is purty ain’t she? At least she is in this slick archetype of an airline stewardess/beauty contestant depiction by Street Artist Billi Kid that just hit New York this week.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-WEBUnitedWeTeabagBilliKid

The personality driven street artist usually inserts his name into the bubble of his pieces, which can confuse the message. But we get this one – United is also an airline, and the “Teabaggers” referred to are the loosely connected right wingers sprung from astroturf who feature more rabid infighting than, ironically, the Democratic party. It’s all a sad milieu we are stuck in, and once again, street art reflects us back to ourselves mercilessly. But she is purty.

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Circus Gold Presents: Neighborhood Watch At Live With Animals Gallery

Circus Gold
brooklyn-street-art-circus-gold-2

Circus Gold Presents: Neighborhood Watch
July 29th/30th/31st  2010
Live With Animals Gallery
210 Kent Avenue
Brooklyn, NY. 11211
www.LIVEWITHANIMALSGALLERY.BLOGSPOT.COM
www.circusgold.com
email:circusgold@gmail.com

3-day Event Featuring:  Art/Movies/Puppet Dj dance party/Music/Raffle/Games/Kung Fu/Costume party/and more
Suggested donation at door.
For daily event schedule and to RVSP go to the circus gold page on face book.
Artist Showing:
Briar Bonifacio/ Austin, Texas
JLaw/Austin, Texas
Zach McDonald/ Austin, Texas
Patrick Griffen/ New York
David Perez/ San Antonio, Texas
Stephen Fitzgerald/Brooklyn, Texas
Kim Swift/Brooklyn, Texas
Cherie Weaver/ Austin, Texas
Hayden Dunham/ New York
Arden Fanning/ New York
Trinh Huynh/ New York
Elizabeth Huey/ New York
Joesph Phillips/ Austin, Texas
Carly Rabalias/ Brooklyn, Texas
LaBrona/ Canada
and many more…….
Event includes
Film screenings: Break in/Beat Street/Street Wise/Rumble Fish/Cool Hand Luke/Eat Flies/Big Bad Love/
Daily games for prizes with raffle drawing sponsored by: Ghetto Olympics which include musical chairs/pull up contest/bing bag toss
Dj Dojo drawing room/kung fu class
Puppet Dj dance costume party
Sponsors include: Patron/Cafe Bastelo/Zico/(Possible Brooklyn Lager)
Food:Bruce Lee Smoothies/Popcorn/and more
Clothing/Accesories by: darkeyes clothing/Circus Gold

brooklyn-street-art-circus-gold-1

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Fun Friday 07.16.10 from BSA

Fun-Friday

And The Award for Best Fluffer Goes To…

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Lister-WEB-He-Who-Kneels-ShowTell-0710

Remember those awards they used to give in high school to the graduating class to recognize, commemorate, and bestow the outgoing students with a sense of self worth and set an example for the rest of the current alumni?  “Best Biology Student”, “Class Thespian”, “Most Likely to Succeed” – how many of these titles had a predictive power that could be verified in later years is a funny question. Street Artist Anthony Lister is giving his own interpretation of the awards (and punishment) systems that course through our daily life in his first show in Canada, “Beauty of Failure”.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Lister-WEB-Day-Spa-Award-ShowTell-0710

Thanks to an increasingly warped view of the world presented by moneyed interests in the commercial and tabloid driven media universe, some argue that our very ability to critically evaluate what is to be valued in society is at risk. With his sharply pointed depictions of frothy socialites and his signature super heroes receiving gold statuettes for imaginary awards, Lister challenges viewers to evaluate their own perceptions of what is valued, and why.  Equally interesting, of course, are the awards that are missing.

www.anthonylister.com

Images courtesy of Show & Tell Gallery

7 Day Weekend

“7 Day Weekend” is a chaotic look at footage of Lister that was edited into a montage looking for a storyline. It’s characterized as “Sick Fun from the Whole Lister Family”

“Art From The Underground”

Speaking of Lister, here’s a new promo video for the show in San Diego next week at Edgeware Gallery. Among artists like Shepard Fairey and Chor Boogie, street art photographer Jaime Rojo will be showing images from New York, including a huge Anthony Lister piece on the street in Brooklyn.

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Nomadé Gallops Through Los Angeles with “The Chariot”

Nomadé "The Chariot" Los Angeles (Photo © Cullin Tobin)
Nomadé “The Chariot” Los Angeles (Photo © BSA)

Street Art collective Nomadé harnesses the majestic power of a galloping team of white stallions in this large scale paste up discovered among the ruins of Los Angeles.  The spear wielding Greco-Roman-artist soldier is not about to let his Empire to decline further, his paint splattered shield protecting from assault as he commands his oiled and strapping squadron through the streets. Nomadé continues to forcefully impale the warlike subtext permeating popular consciousness with cleverly surrealist depictions of proud warriors defending the detritus of a crumbling urban infrastructure.

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“Street Art New York” Authors Book Signing at Spoonbill & Sugartown in Williamsburg, Brooklyn

Street Art New York
Street-Art-New-York-Book-Cover-JUDITH-SUPINE-copyright-Jaime-Rojo-medium

Book Signing of Street Art New York coming Thursday, July 22

The first book-signing for the new book is coming up at Spoonbill and Sugartown, this Thursday, July 22 at 7:00 PM. Spoonbill and Sugartown is a Williamsburg Brooklyn favorite. In addition to stocking erudite, eclectic art titles, used and rare books, Spoonbill has always supported artists and the arts community.
Come and meet Steve and Jaime and some special guests from the book that Juxtapoz describes as “A genuine who’s who of current renowned street artists, this book’s made even better thanks to publishing by Prestel, well reputed for producing classy tomes. The paper’s heavy and fantastic, image colors vibrant and rich, while the selection of photographs and artwork by Rojo and Harrington go unmatched to recent urban art updates.”
See images from the book on Meighan O’Tooles recent posting here.
Spoonbill & Sugartown, Booksellers was born in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in 1999. We pride ourselves on the books we offer, but our greatest achievement can be seen in the eyes and heard in the testimonies of our loyal customers.
218 Bedford Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Tel. 718.387.7322
sugar@spoonbillbooks.com
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Göla in Montreal: Mind, Body and Spirt in an Era of Change

Göla in Montreal: Mind, Body and Spirt in an Era of Change

Street Artist Göla Is Killing the Establishment With a Smile

Göla

If the axiom that your art is autobiographical is true then Street Artist Göla has taken his work to heart. And mind. And spirit.  His giant symbolist and fantasy figures are born directly from his gut, where he stays engaged with the world. The colorful and excited personality of the Italian bolts with graphic clarity across the gray mottled walls of the universe, and a street wall in Montreal recently during the Danse Mur Festival.  Even if you don’t know his ideas and feelings about the world and our current place in historical evolution, you cannot remain unmoved by his enthusiasm.

Göla

Göla

Brooklyn Street Art: What’s the significance of your characters in your work?
Göla:
The two characters are actually two sides of one face. They represent the condition of the humanity today.  The blue gorilla on the left side (like the left side of the brain) represents the instinct, our connection with our feelings and our animal nature.  He is looking at the egg/planet heart in his hands for a long time – and now he perceives that a new beginning is coming, a new kind of relationship between humans and the rest of the biosphere is at the door.

The yellow anthropomorphic characters on the right (right side of the brain) represents rationality; a sick rationality that life that humans have been operating with for too long, as the dominator of the biosphere.

The character has a head full of worms (but “colorful worms”, good ones) and factories, pollution, from the last centuries. He is opening his belly to allow his desire for change, to free his spirit. This is the third element of this portrait of humanity.  The spirit is represented as a mimetic three, in which the leaves are stylized monarch butterflies that fly into the future.

This is the body, mind, and spirit in an era of change.

Göla

Göla

BSA: You use a lot of vibrant colors in your work. Were you influenced by the colors used in 1980’s  album covers, TV, and advertising?
Göla:
For sure I was influenced by 80s graphics and esthetics. I grew up during that period. I think of 80s toys, cartoons and puppets. Do you remember exogini (www.exogini.com ) ? I’m not sure if you had that in the U.S. and by many other characters.  But this influence was passive, and it hid inside me for a long time.  Those colors started to come out from my inner cave at the beginning of 2000, after I started to travel around. I can say that a great influence on me was moving to Barcelona in 2003 to learn how artists were painting there. Then on my trip to India in 2005 I discovered their fashion style and their advertising, the old figurative art, and nature. I think every trip, every connection, teaches us a lot.

Göla

Göla

BSA: How do you think the People in Montreal like your work?
Göla:
I don’t know, you should ask them! During the time when I painted this I received many compliments. People were stopping in the middle of the street and screaming “Yeah!”. Many people told me that my style is not really common; it is like symbolism and is less related to the 90s graff figuration, especially for pieces of this proportion.  I don’t know if everybody liked my work there but I’m sure a lot of them did.

Göla

BSA: Do you try to project a message of optimism with your colorful characters? Is it your intention to bring a smile on people faces when they see your paintings?
Göla:
I’m interest in giving people an opened door. I mean these colors are the colors of my spirit actually; Enthusiastic and vibrant. But I think using bright color is also a good way of catching the interest of people. When a spectator is seeing bright colors he feels the piece is friendly and he’ll stop to have a look.

Then I come to them with the meanings, and there are usually many entangled meanings. And some are not so peaceful. But for sure I want to bring joy to people. I don’t like humans, but I like people. Years ago a friend told me that according the Mayan calendar this is my mission in the world; to bring joy to the people and to destroy the bad establishment with the force of a smile. I like to think that it is true. I feel it.

I also wanted to mention that I painted this wall as part of a D.I.Y. festival of contemporary art called “Danse Mur” organized by my friend 500M, a street artist from Montreal.  I think I will go back next year for the festival. See you there!

http://dansemur.blogspot.com

Göla

Göla does an interpretive dance in front of his new piece.

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Lyons Wier Gallery Presents: Mint and Serf “SGU” (Special Graffiti Unit)

Lyons Weir Gallery
Mint and Serf

Mint & Serf

Special Graffiti Unit

Opening:

Wednesday, July 28

6:00 – 10:00 pm

Exhibition Dates:

July 28– August 15

Gallery Hours: Monday – Saturday 11-7, Sunday 12-6

Gallery Located: 175 Seventh Avenue on the NE corner of 20th and 7th Ave.

Nearest Subway: C, E exit 23rd @ 8th Ave., 1, 9 exit 23rd @ 7th Ave.

Contact: Michael Lyons Wier, Gallery@LyonsWierGallery.com

Mint&Serf SGU (Special Graffiti Unit) is an exhibition at Lyons Wier Gallery, curated by Derrick B. Harden, featuring new work by New York visual artists Mint&Serf.  The exhibition pays homage to the longest running television program that defines  New York City. Mint&Serf SGU is a multi-disciplinary exhibition incorporating painting, photography and video that is an interpretation of the artists’ personal encounters with the law in New York City and within their community.

Mint&Serf SGU (Special Graffiti Unit) cleverly captures Mint&Serf and company in their habitat by placing them in their own adapted version of Law & Order. By appropriating this iconic television drama, Mint&Serf: SGU turns photographed moments of vandalism, street-art and nightlife into a series of silk-screened vignettes. In Mint&Serf: SGU, the two artists portray themselves as part of the “Special Graffiti Unit,” an elite graffiti squad.

Most recently, Mint&Serf created and curated original artwork for the Ace Hotel in New York City.  However, for the past ten years, Mint&Serf have been collaboratively producing artwork generating a vast range of large-scale murals, paintings, photographs, sculpture and street art throughout New York City and around the world. In 2005, as an extension to their art, they launched The Canal Chapter, a gallery platform for emerging artists, designers and musicians. In 2008, after the success of The Canal Chapter, they launched The Stanton Chapter, a street level art space in Lower East Side neighborhood of New York City. Mint&Serfhave exhibited throughout the United States and abroad. They have created commissioned work for the Ace Hotel, Nike, Marc Jacobs, Red Bull, Ogilvy&Mather, Adidas, Yahoo, Boost Mobile, PowerHouse Books among other clients.

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