
For French street artist Tuco Wallace, making and placing street art is a familial-friendly dialogue, unlike the traditional stereotype of the rebel graffiti writer or a street artist whose driving force is anti-social in nature. With his newest installation, he asked his closest relations to add their voice to the piece, which he calls Dream, Always Dream.
Tuco tells us that the themes touched upon relate to “dreams, astronauts’ helmets, pajamas, dreams, wooden boxes, lights, and clouds.”




Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
BSA Images Of The Week: 03.01.15
Happy March! With the brutally frigid temperatures we had for the whole month of February it is no small wonder that we can still find fresh new pieces on the streets. Some are weeks old and oth...
BSA Film Friday: 01.13.17
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.
Now screening :
1. OLEK: In The Blink Of An Eye
2. Москва - Artmossphere by Kevin Lüdicke
3. Morden Gore: Paintin...
Mando Marie - "Take Me Down" at Straat Gallery
Mando Marie, an American artist currently dividing her time between Amsterdam and Portugal, stands out with her unique blend of stencil art and painting. Her work subtly echos themes of childhood nos...
Adele Renault Takes Flight With a Message of "Feathers and Faces"
For many the shock of Silent Spring was not that the chemical industry had run roughshod over the rules and poisoned our water, air, and soil.
For a large number of readers it was the fact that Rache...
Barcelona: Open Walls Mural Festival and Conference 2015
Barcelona was known as a city at the epicenter of a bustling lively organic Street Art scene in the mid 2000s. Today that has greatly been cracked down upon by authorities but the Spanish city now boa...
BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY






