Editorz

Martha Cooper and Roger Gastman Release “Spray Nation”: “Subway Art” on Steroids

Martha Cooper and Roger Gastman Release “Spray Nation”: “Subway Art” on Steroids

Subway Art on Steroids: Spray Nation Sorts Through Mountains of Kodachromes

Spray Nation by Martha Cooper and Roger Gastman, with a foreword by Roger Gastman and essays by Steven P. Harrington, Miss Rosen, Jayson Edlin, and Brian Wallis.

Page after page of golden NYC hits from the Martha Cooper archive; this new hardcover tome expands the galaxy for fans and academics of that amber-soaked period when it seemed like New York was leading a Spray Nation of graffiti for cities across the country. Known for her ability to capture graffiti writers’ work in its original urban context, Ms. Cooper once again proves that her reputation as the documentarian of an underground/overground aesthetics scene is no joke.

With an academics’ respect for the work, the practice, and the practitioners, Cooper recorded volumes of images methodically for history – and your appreciation. With the vibrant and sometimes vicious city framing their pieces, an uncounted legion of aerosol-wielding street players raced city-wide at top speed, ducking cops and cavorting with a confident abandon in the rusted and screeching steel cityscape. By capturing these scenes without unnecessary editorializing, Cooper gives you access to the organically chaotic graffiti subculture on the move at that moment – directly through her unflinching eyes.

Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman

Culled from thousands of her Kodachrome slides from the early 1980s, the celebrated photographer and ethnologist worked with American graffiti historian Roger Gastman over many months during the initial Covid period to select this rich collection of images of tags, walls, and pieces. Each turn of the page more profoundly deepens your understanding of the graffiti-writing culture Cooper captured with Henry Chalfant in their book Subway Art nearly forty years ago. That clarion call to a worldwide audience took years to reverberate and shake culture everywhere. With time that book became the standard root documentation for what many see as the largest global democratic people’s art movement in history.

A smartly laid-out and thick volume (as well as its “Outtakes” collection), the high-quality printing and spare design hew to the photographer’s reliably straightforward approach, preferring to let the photos tell the story. From this perspective, Spray Nation is likewise a sleeper; We’ll probably only wholly appreciate its pivotal value and cultural importance with time.

Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman
Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edition Box Set. Published by Beyond The Streets/Roger Gastman

Martha Cooper: Spray Nation. Signed Limited Edtion Box Set is published by Beyond The Streets. With a foreword by Roger Gastman and essays by Steven P. Harrington, Miss Rosen, Jayson Edlin, and Brian Wallis. Click HERE to purchase the book.

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BSA Film Friday: 06.17.22

BSA Film Friday: 06.17.22

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Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.

Now screening:
1. Grand Opening of “TALKING…& OTHER BANANA SKINS / UNARTIG
2. Footprint by The Krank
3. Six N. Five: “The circle”

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BSA Special Feature: Grand Opening of “TALKING…& OTHER BANANA SKINS / UNARTIG

TALKING… & OTHER BANANA SKINS

In the UK and English-speaking Europe, the term “banana skins” means a sudden unexpected situation that makes a person appear silly or causes them some difficulty. We have no idea what it means in the US because we’ve never heard the saying. To paraphrase, you could slip and make a sudden problem with your words these days.

At Urban Nation this weekend, a new show aims to broadly address the fact that attitudes are so polarized today that almost any opinion threatens to antagonize someone else and start a heated discussion. With a wide range of artworks expressing different viewpoints in vastly different ways, UN encourages visitors to question some of our perspectives. When it comes to graffiti and street art and nearly six decades of history in cities worldwide, you are guaranteed many views will be expressed.

“Conflicts and issues are multi-faceted, not to be pigeonholed,” says curator Michele Houston and the team who are mixing permanent collection pieces with brand new ones. “The artworks presented in the eight chapters of the exhibition are asking how and what is being communicated within society and the urban environment,” she says. “-Putting exchange and dialogue back at the center.”

Footprint by The Krank

How big is your footprint? A new one on the island of Paxos, Greece is 1.000m2.

“Footprint’ deals with the meaning of loss. Nature, ecosystems, and biodiversity are all in a variable state with a negative sign. The parallelism that emerges through the impermanence of my work, and our presence as a species, reinforces the message I wanted to communicate. Everything is fluid, and nothing should be taken for granted.” – The Krank

Six N. Five: “The circle”

Part of the Moco Museum in Amsterdam and Barcelona, this short film by Ezequiel Pini of Six n. Five is ‘an introspective journey of wonder and imagination through these glimpses of time.’

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ZED1 and Bonobolabo Build “An Ark of Love” for Everyone in Russi, Italy

ZED1 and Bonobolabo Build “An Ark of Love” for Everyone in Russi, Italy

Most right-wing Christians are probably irritated by that liberal lefty Noah; who built an ark in advance of the flooding of the entire Earth – and invited two of EVERYONE to come. Typical.

Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)

It’s one of those stories in Genesis that shows God as a bitter vindictive punisher-in-chief with anger issues. According to the tale, the Lord saw how utterly wicked people on earth had become; so he said, “I will destroy from the earth the people I have created. And with them, the animals, birds, and creeping things” (Genesis 6:5–7).

This is where Italian street artists Zed1 and Bonobolabo, frequent artistic collaborators, took their inspiration for this new mural painted in a small town 37 miles from Bologna called Russi. In a whimsical fashion they decide what kind of couples – and simply friends – might have gotten on the “Ark of Love” – a modern twist on the story that included only baby-making duos. It made sense if the earth was going to be repopulated after the mass-killing God had planned, but these artists have decided to open the cast to inter-racial, same-sex, even simply friends – because that is how love is.

Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)

“On this utopian ark everyone loves without impositions, limits, and arrogance,” say the artists. “The boundaries of stereotypes and violence are broken down and no one is judged.” The illustrators have made skateboard decks and prints together these last few years that combine their mutual talents for eclectic characters who could be your neighbors, could be your family, could be people who work at the local grocery store or laundromat. All of them should be saved from the flood, right?

Like Zed1 says, the seas can get pretty rough so you are better off with someone who can help you weather the storms – regardless of the actual nature of your relationship. “Noah’s Ark is revisited in a modern key that includes many nuances of the same love which connects all living beings on our planet,” say the artists.

Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)

“The selection of animals that have boarded the boat was not made only for the purpose of reproduction of the species, according to tradition, but from love’s point of view, which doesn’t follow rules. Alligators hug walruses and cranes, a zebra kisses a cow, two lions with thick manes huddle together, two people weave their bodies, a rooster stares at a hen, while the red-dressed artist looks into the eyes of his pug, showing what love means to him.”

In the original Biblical story, even the crusty old man in the sky reconsiders his original plan to flood the world and accepts that humans are permanently imperfect. “Never again will I curse the ground because of man or send a flood to destroy all living things, even though mankind’s heart is evil from childhood.” Always has to get in a last zing, doesn’t he?

By the way, thanks for the Rainbow, big guy. So, so pretty.

Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)
Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)
Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)
Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)
Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)

Zed1. “An ark of love”. In collaboration with Bonobolabo. Russi, Italy, 2022. (photo © Marco Miccoli)

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The Bushwick Collective 11th Annual Block Party – 2022

The Bushwick Collective 11th Annual Block Party – 2022

Joe Ficalora and the Bushwick Collective crew took over the streets of Bushwick again this year to entertain the locals, the visitors, and everybody else with his annual block party. When you look at the variety and quality of murals produced on these streets regularly, you realize that it’s a splendid fusion that you rarely find in organized festivals.

Elm Status. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Maybe it’s just us talking, but these artists are not usually hamstrung by organizers’ dictates or those of advertisers – they just let their imaginations go. Yes, there are still beefs, and there are battles between styles and histories and all the baggage that writers and artists carry. But in general, this is a somewhat mediated part of street culture, with an opportunity for you to shine if you have the skillz.

We published a handful of the completed walls on BSA HERE; now we bring you the rest…

Elm Status. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Elm Status. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Jason Naylor. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. June. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. June. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. June. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. June. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Dean Zeus Colman tribute to ZEXOR. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Loste. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Robert Vargas. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Cody James. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Cody James. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Cody James. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
1440. Detail. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
HUETEK tribute to DEZ. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
HUETEK tribute to DEZ. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
HUETEK tribute to DEZ. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
HUETEK tribute to DEZ. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Nap Don’t Sleep. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Stem And Thorn. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Stem And Thorn. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Urban Ruben. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Urban Ruben. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Urban Ruben. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Urban Ruben. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. Hydde. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mr. Hydde. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hoddy. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hoddy. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
MR. Blob. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
MR. Blob. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hops Art. The Bushwick Collective. 11th Annual Block Party. Brooklyn, NY. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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Uriginal: “Athena and Minerva” Goddesses Fractalized in Madrid

Uriginal: “Athena and Minerva” Goddesses Fractalized in Madrid

A contemporary apparition of the goddess. Or goddesses.

Two of them are merged here in the geometric mosaic of a face in Madrid, thanks to the genuinely original portraitist named Uriginal.

Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)

Give up on who they are? This new woman is Athena, the Greek goddess of war and civilization, merged with Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom and the arts. Of course. Now you see it. And the faithful lush and furry wolf/German Shepard at her hand, who points his ears forward and ready to rip out the neck of his prey? He is similarly treated with Uriginals’ deconstruction of the portrait – organic forms sheared by geometric ones, blinking and winking at you, clapping and spinning, commanding the powers of nature, their fractal-formed facades as mysterious as it is forward.

With its free sampling across cultures and significance, a nervous twitching of screen-jumping eye candy and associations, it’s a brilliant reclaiming of the classics on this 138-square meter wall for a real estate company client. This is not fashion; its art – this is full-on gamer goddess of power – fed through a few filters. The kids are going to love this one.

Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
Uriginal. “Athena and Minerva”. Rebobinart/Livensa Living Studios. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Fer Taranco)
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Fabio Petani and Luogo Comune Collaborate: Illustrating Natural Ecosystems in Turin

Fabio Petani and Luogo Comune Collaborate: Illustrating Natural Ecosystems in Turin

“CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”

Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © ToNite)

When we consider the role of the citizen in society, the interdependence of every participant eventually comes into play. It determines what direction we go, despite what your neighborhood anarchist might have you think.

Similarly, as one is studying the numerous elements at play in the natural world, the dynamics of interdependence among all the actors is even more apparent and evident. The whole is only possible by collaboration, and the result is often spectacular – perhaps because trees don’t have egos. Or do they?

Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © ToNite)

Study this new illustration-style ecosystem by artists Fabio Petani and Luogo Comune (Jacopo Ghisoni) in Turin, and you’ll think about the showy prowess of the tree during all the seasons and the industrial guile of the insects that are always at work. Not to anthropomorphize too much, but the natural world seems full of characters – like the people you see on city streets. It is an ecosystem formed from need, often mutual.

“Plants need insects, just as insects need plants to be able to feed, find shelter and reproduce,” the artists say in a statement – and they explain that the collaborative process of painting together is an additional layer to the story.

“This theme is further explored from the formal point of view by the artists who have worked in synergy, creating a composition where the two styles mix, interact and compensate each other.”

Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © ToNite)

On the Campus Einaudi and working with the ToNite Project, Petani and Comune say that their compositional interpretation is entirely considered and pertinent to the ecosystem as an interaction between plants and insects. “Here, insects play a non-secondary role compared to the plants represented and are juxtaposed in the composition as necessary otherness for the flora.”

Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
Fabio Petani & Luogo Comune. “CHITINA & PRUNUS CERASUS”. ToNite Project. Turin, Italy. (photo © Fabio Jacopo)
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BSA Images Of The Week: 06.12.22

BSA Images Of The Week: 06.12.22

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Welcome to BSA Images of the Week!

There are always so many hype-dope-cool-rad-slaps things to do in New York period – and often plenty graffiti and street art options. There’s the new Remembering Bast show with 26 new paintings by the street artist at Allouche, the new Cope2-Dr. Revolt-Tkid-Martha Cooper show at Outlaw Arts, the ongoing King Pleasure Basquiat show, yet another Banksy exhibition, the 60 Collective Art show in DUMBO is still up for another week, the new mural by Os Gemeos and Futura at the Cardoza High School in Queens…. Speaking of Futura, the organization whom we first brought street art to in 2008/2010 with two benefit auctions – Free Arts NYC – this week raised more money from the street art/graffiti community and their fans with a special honorary event for Futura. We’re glad BSA spearheaded that relationship to help this arts organization immersed in the street art scene all those years ago.

Just for fun, here’s a list of the artists we brought to that first auction in April 2008 – any of them sound familiar? Anera, Armsrock, Borf, Celso, C.Damage, DAIN, Dark Clouds, Deeks, DiRQuo, Elbowtoe, ELC, Fauxreel, Flower Face Killah, Gaia, GoreB, Haculla, Infinity, Judith Supine, Jp, McMutt, MOMO, Noah Sparkes, Royce Bannon, Skewville, Swoon, Dan Witz, and WK Interact.

How many of these names are still in the game? Some have faded, some have accelerated, and there are many new names bandied about on New York streets; It’s a constantly changing tableau.

Here’s our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring: Matt Siren, City Kitty, Hijack, Li-Hill, Raddington Falls, Rose Cory, HOACS, Voxx Romana, Jet, Nite Owl, HEFS, and HAVOC.

Rose Cory. PRIDE 2022. Let the celebrations begin. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Raddington Falls (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hefs (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hefs (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hijack (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Detail from the above photo. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Li-Hill for East Village Walls. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Li-Hill for East Village Walls. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
HOME (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bowery/Houston Wall. June 2nd. 2022, drive-by photo. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bowery/Houston Wall. June 9th. 2022. Ollin. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Matt Siren (photo © Jaime Rojo)
The Raven. Window sill taxidermy. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before.” … The Raven. Edgar Allan Poe

Unidentified artist (photo © Jaime Rojo)
XTRA HAVOC (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Nite Owl (photo © Jaime Rojo)
City Kitty/Voxx Romana (photo © Jaime Rojo)
JET (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Drecks (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Hoacs (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. Lower East Side. NYC. June 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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Richt Paints Barnstaples’ 1st Mural, a Tribute to the Natural Beauty of His Hometown

Richt Paints Barnstaples’ 1st Mural, a Tribute to the Natural Beauty of His Hometown

Artist Rich Thorne aka Richt is lucky to be from a UNESCO world heritage site. A river port town of 25,000, his hometown of Barnstaple in North Devon, England has a “biosphere status”; a category reserved for places of great natural beauty.

Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Tom Ham)

So it made perfect sense when the multidisciplinary artist who is now based in Bristol, UK was chosen to create the first mural in the town. With a background in commercial, corporate, and individual art projects in illustration, painting, toy design, and animation, he has a well-developed sense for what audiences like. He also has up-close familiarity with the UK graffiti scene in the early 2000s.

Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Tom Ham)

This month Richt is participating in the new exhibition opening at Urban Nation in Berlin, another city to add to his list of public art projects and commissions in Barcelona, Amsterdam and London.  For today, we are showcasing this new public art mural for his hometown in Barnstaple.

“Returning to my home town to engage young people through art feels very significant to me,” he says, adding that he hopes the new mural can bridge a local conversation on the value of art to inspire positive action. Judging from the workshop he did with local kids to practice their graffiti tags, Richt is also part of that positive inspiration.

Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Tom Ham)
Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Tom Ham)
Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Rob Tibbles)
Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Rob Tibbles)
Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Hanna Söderholm)
Richt. A North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO Collaboration. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Rob Tibbles)
Richt. North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO partnership supported workshop. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Hanna Söderholm)
Richt. North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO partnership supported workshop. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Hanna Söderholm)
Richt. North Devon Biosphere and UNESCO partnership supported workshop. Barnstaple, North Devon England. (photo © Hanna Söderholm)
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BSA Film Friday: 06.10.22

BSA Film Friday: 06.10.22

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Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities.

Now screening:
1. MuralFest Kosovo 2022
2. PichiAvo in Linz, Austria
3. Graffiti TV 103: Ler2

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BSA Special Feature: MuralFest Kosovo 2022

Doug Gillen’s register has dropped to something deeper in this new video at the Kosovo 2022 MuralFest that he does for his brand FifthWall TV. As ever, he seeks to connect you with the people who are working to engage their city with art in the streets. Adopting the theme “Offline” – the same as the 2018 Moscow Artmossphere International Urban Art Festival that we co-curated – the MuralFest artists are reconsidering life and community in a way that is free from the electronic platforms we have all been communicating on. It makes sense because art in the streets began here with the people and with the city.

MuralFest Kosovo 2022 via FithWall TV

PichiAvo in Linz, Austria

A quick soundless timelapse of the PichiAvo magicians doing their mural at Promenade Galerien in Linz in Austria.

Graffiti TV 103: Ler2

This episode of Graff TV features graffiti writer Ler2!

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Sebas Velasco is Well Aligned in Ontiyent, Spain, with “Alenar”

Sebas Velasco is Well Aligned in Ontiyent, Spain, with “Alenar”

There is a discernible difference between mural festivals created as commercial endeavors and those led by artists, like the Murart 22 in Ontiyent in Spain. It captures the city’s light and the alignment with the culture. Here we see Sebas Velasco musing over a local waitress whom he and photographer Jose Delou met over a meal one night in this city.

Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)

A perfect figure to represent the night glow on the outskirts of Ontiyent, Claudia is cast in the cooler tone of industrial neighborhoods, the warmth vanished under this street lighting. Known for his unique portraits, Sebas reveals her delicate features under the hum of cool gas station lights. The compelling result is balanced and elegant, well within its element.

We’re looking forward to more thoughtful work from Murart 22 with artists Mantra, Marina Capdevilla, Lidia Cao and DULK.

Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
Sebas Velasco. Claudia. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
Sebas Velasco. “Alenar”. Murart 22, a project by DULK studio. Ontiyent, Spain. (photo © Jose Delou)
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Robert Proch Sketches from ’03 to ’18 Released by Family and Friends

Robert Proch Sketches from ’03 to ’18 Released by Family and Friends

“ROBERT PROCH – SKETCHES” : a collection of all the preserved drawings and sketches created by the artist in the years 2003-2018.

We had the opportunity to hang around with artist Robert Proch in 2015 at the No Limit festival in Boras, Sweden. Unassuming and bright, the artist was creating a painting on a massive wall that seemed to us to be insurmountable. He excitedly and with great ease jumped on the cherry picker and dove into the explosion he had sketched – pouring color and gesture into his futurist composition, bending and twisting the axis, capturing the flying energy and elements that appeared to jump off toward the viewer.

Later at dinner in a private home, it was a pleasure to speak with him. A warm, polite, and thoughtful guy – you would not necessarily know that his internal art view was so expansive, except to see his darting eyes perhaps, which didn’t appear to miss anything.

Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)

Taken from us all too soon, Proch already had made such an impression artistically in the street art/mural art/fine art worlds as someone who had a true talent and a drive to go where he wanted to. In light of this, we’re pleased to see this new collection of his sketches published by his family and friends, with all proceeds going to the Robert Foundation. We agree with them when the family says, “Let Robert’s art not be forgotten and keep bringing us happiness and joy.”

“The publication contains over 600 works, which were the starting point for the creation of paintings, murals, and animations. Arranged chronologically, they show the artistic evolution of Robert Proch and make it possible to distinguish periods that shape his work. All works are presented in their original format and colors, faithfully reflecting the uniqueness and style of Proch’s work.”

We’re pleased to share this book with the BSA family and are glad that we can help Robert’s family and foundation to bring his work to an appreciative audience.

Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)
Robert Proch. “Sketches 2003-2018”. Robert Proch Foundation. (photo courtesy of the Robert Proch Foundation)

Click HERE to purchase the book

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Lithuanian Artist Ernest Zacharevic Creates ‘Transboundary Haze’ in Kuala Lumpur

Lithuanian Artist Ernest Zacharevic Creates ‘Transboundary Haze’ in Kuala Lumpur

To coincide with world environment day the artist reveals ‘Transboundary Haze’.

“The main drivers of transboundary haze are man-made fires,” says street artist/fine artist Ernest Zacharevic in a statement about his new ‘Transboundary Haze’. “Palm oil and acacia, which are used for pulp and paper products, are burned. It results in a variety of ecological, economic and health effects.”

Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Wei Ming)

Leaving you to participate in this crossword in Malaysia, the street piece anticipates a rise in temperature along with the haze phenomenon this summer and demands that the topic be addressed during upcoming elections.

Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Wei Ming)

The Lithuanian artivist has used his talents to raise awareness of environmental issues previously and is hoping this new one will raise the level of awareness. “Living in Malaysia, the transboundary haze has become a natural part of life,” he says.”It’s a regular occurrence for many and from what I can see, it seems like people are just trying to learn to live with it rather than finding ways to prevent or solve it.”

The government should enhance air quality governance, and strengthen the recognition of environmental rights,” says Greenpeace Malaysia campaigner Heng Kiah Chun, with whom Zacharevic worked on this new project. “Having a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment is a human right.”

Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Wei Ming)
Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Joshua Kok)
Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Wei Ming)
Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Wei Ming)
Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Joshua Kok)
Ernest Zacharevic. “Transboundary Haze”. Splash & Burn / Greenpeace. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. (photo © Joshua Kok)

Our special thanks to Charlotte Pyatt and to Ernest Zacharevic and the whole team for sharing this news with BSA readers.

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