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Regaling the ‘Incompiuto Siciliano’; Said Dokins Mounts Brutal Towers

Regaling the ‘Incompiuto Siciliano’; Said Dokins Mounts Brutal Towers

The patrimonial value given to ruins: the unusual, vaguely explained, and hardly registered constellation of architectural behemoths that are sprinkled through Sicily may be hardly prized, yet a new art project seeks to bring them into the fold. “Incompiuto Siciliano”, a rather tongue-in-cheek title in the naming convention of architecture and its pantheon, is the name given to these incomplete buildings, nearly 350 of them.

Said Dokins. Babel. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Financial boondoggles of official and unofficial corruption during the last half-century or so, 160 of them are in Sicily, these incomplete water towers, hospitals, sports centers, and recreational building projects that rewarded those who conceived of them and washed money with them.

Quizzically they dot the countryside, giving communities colorful and incomplete stories to tell, and they may not contribute to history in the same manner as more famous structures that the country is known internationally for.

Said Dokins. Babel: The Prisoner. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Now a public art project seeking to adopt these orphaned buildings, the organizers of the “Incompiuto Siciliano” (Incomplete Sicilian) project say they are locating, registering, studying, and preserving them. Now they seek to regale these empty shells, these brutalist towers in the rolling green, and welcome them into communities.

Calling upon the calligraphic prowess and the talent for the written word of the Mexican painter Said Dokins, organizers say he was asked to intervene, conclude, or redefine one of these incomplete buildings. Today we bring you his exhausting works that cover the outward-facing visages of this confrontational arrangement of modern century fragmentation.

“It is made up of four Kubrickian monoliths that form a cross, but that represents a trick, a whirlwind of power, money, and politics,” says the press release. Never functional, they are nonetheless structural. By delving into the area’s history and that of Trapani, a small city on this Italian island of Sicily, Said creates his own complex tribute.

Below the images are descriptions of the project provided by the artist.

Said Dokins. Babel: The Prisoner. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Part – 1 The Prisoner

The “X”, conformed by gold and silver letters on a deep greenback, is presented as a symbol of cancellation, a way to cross out the logic of Incompiuto, through the re-writing of two ancient texts where the political language expands across time. The first one is the heartfelt call of a trapanese prisoner in Tunisia. It’s the last letter from Alberto Gaetani to his sister, dated in 1776, asking her to intercede for his life so he could go back home. The second text is a Trapanese Facio Communist manifesto, in which they described the rights workers should have access to. Their revolutionary demand, without a doubt, resists all that the Incompiuto stands for.


Said Dokins. Babel: The Dialectal Poet of Trapani. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Part – 2 The Dialectal Poet Of Trapani

Dokins takes the words from the Trapanese poet, Giuseppe Marco Calvino, bringing to our time his poem “U seculu decimu nonu“, a sharp critic on power abuse released more than 200 years ago. The artist plays with the contrast between the monumentality of his calligraphy in white and gold, which attributes to the text a sense of dignity and a voice of authority denied to the popular language used to write this poem, originally in Trapanese dialect.

Said Dokins. Babel: The Dialectal Poet of Trapani. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Said Dokins. Babel: The Slaves. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Part – 3 The Slaves

The artist takes a series of writings from the 18th century that contains a list of names, along with their physical characteristics and the work they did. It was a slave inventory. Dokins rewrites those names, making them appear in some sort of binnacle, a huge reticular design that resembles the motherboard of a computer, refer to the new cataloging and control systems, new ways to perpetuate the slavery logic in contemporary social relations.

Said Dokins. Babel: The Slaves. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Said Dokins. Babel: The Rose Window. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)

Part – 4 The Rose Window

Through the stylization of the iconic rose window of the church of Sant Agostino in Trapani, where symbolic elements of the three principal monotheist religions – Catholicism, Judaism, and Islam- can be found coexisting in the same sanctuary, Said Dokins turns the profane, an abandoned concrete wall, in a sacred place. The juxtaposition of traditions and cults reflected in the rose window, it’s an example of the cultural diversity that converges in the Sicilian territory, with its tensions and clash. The composition is constructed by the repetition of the sentence: “Everywhere I write is a sacred place”. Writing becomes a ritual act that serves the artist to dislocate the separation between the sacred and the earthly.

Said Dokins. Babel: The Rose Window. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)
Said Dokins. Babel: The Rose Window. Trapani Public Art. Sicily, Italy. (photo © Vincenzo Cascone)
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Icy And Sot Stay True in “Familiar / Stranger” at Danysz in Paris

Icy And Sot Stay True in “Familiar / Stranger” at Danysz in Paris

Human rights, unjust imprisonment, women’s equality, the plight of migrants and, the threats of climate change. The many pitfalls of unbridled capitalism.

These have been issues that Icy & Sot have been focusing on since we first knew of them, and later when we welcomed them to our city – and ever since. Undeterred by repression of their home country, they moved here to Brooklyn to pursue a new life, only to find that the fundamentals of human rights and the rule of law are globally, constantly in need of defense.

 

Icy & Sot. Open Door. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)

Without exception, their work has remained focused and insistent as it has changed venue from street to gallery. Those same values are unwavering as the materials have shifted from aerosol to barbed wire and iron, from stencil and mural to rigid sculpture. Whether their deliberately unflashy pieces are mounted against a Californian desert landscape, an expanse of Rockaway Beach, or floating a Georgian river, the world plays an integral roll in the success and the message of their artworks – an ultimate hewing to the street art axiom that physical context is paramount to the message of a piece.

Icy & Sot. Harmony. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)

As Icy and Sot begin their new Familiar / Stranger exhibition at Danysz gallery in Paris, they are unbowed by their discovery as fine artists, unimpressed with the charade, immune to unnecessary artifice, mindful of the world as it has presented itself. The work, some of it brand new, quietly yells. The canvasses are spectacular; a product of hand-made tools and hand-pressed paint in such a streaming plaintive state of consciousness that it will never be purely aesthetic despite its patterned abstraction. The work is, like its authors, authentic.

“I want you to panic. I want you to act as if your house was on fire.”
– Greta Thunberg

Icy & Sot. Break Free. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)
Icy & Sot. Shadow. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)
Icy & Sot. Our House Is On Fire. 2020. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)

The exhibition includes a set of video with an installation, as well as their more recent works ranging from sculpture to paintings all centered around the artists’ engagement for a more conscious world.

From the press release; “As writer Sasha Bogojev puts it, ‘In some way turning Greta’s inspiring words into poetic reality, Icy and Sot built a frame of an archetypal home and set it on fire. Allowing for the untouched surrounding nature to be seen between the blazing framework of the house, the artists suggest looking at the wider picture in which the Earth is our only home. The video shows the reversed footage of their installation being swallowed by flames and crumbling to the ground, creating an illusion of burning pieces of wood rising up and forming the familiar structure. With Greta’s voice in the background calling upon civil disobedience and rebellion, the video has a compelling incentive undertone reminding us that the change is possible if we put pressure on those in power.’ ”

Icy & Sot. Stuck in Time. 2020. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)
Icy & Sot. Passage. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)
Icy & Sot. Waves. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)
Icy & Sot. Borders II. 2021. Familiar / Stranger. Magda Danyz Gallery. Paris. (photo courtesy of Icy & Sot and Danysz Gallery)

Saturday, February 12, 2022 
From 3 to 7PM

On view from February 12, to April 9, 2022 

Danysz gallery
78 rue Amelot 
Paris (Marais)
M° Saint-Sébastien-Froissart 

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Luz Interruptus: ‘Life Lingers On Blank Pages” in Madrid

Luz Interruptus: ‘Life Lingers On Blank Pages” in Madrid

Imagine your private thoughts about enduring Covid in a diary. Now imagine them posted in public as part of a glowing block of art for the 1st Edition of the Madrid International Festival of Light.

Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)

That is the opportunity that the artist collective LuzInterruptus took when offered the chance to create new work here in the Plaza Mayor that the public could enjoy and interact with. “A great wall covered with countless notebooks with blank pages,” describes one of the organizers. It stood there day and night “imposing its overwhelming simplicity on the Baroque architecture around it.”

Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)

A smaller hut-sized version of the project delighted crowds during the holidays in Ghent, but this massive white (30 meters x 10 meters) fluttering book fringe radiated inside the Spanish capital with private musings from thousands of citizens and tourists. Some had just arrived to see it, while many senior citizens filled pages in advance of the installation. Of the total 4,000 notebooks used in the installation, “2,000 notebooks were distributed among Municipal Senior Centers in the city so that senior citizens could express on the pages their hopes, fears, and reflections during the lockdown.”

“They told us their stories with uncanny detail and others drew as well, in some cases showing great talent. With their letters, poems, accounts, words, images, and scribbles, a large panel of lighted memory was erected. Writing sessions were organized which turned into a time of reunion. Therapists, instructors, technicians and directors were also present to help materialize their accounts. People with disabilities and their caregivers participated as well.”

The results are probably moving, possibly mundane, and at some point, profoundly moist – thanks to a surprise rainstorm of intensity and duration that transformed many of the pages into objects far less geometric than the crisp flurry of quadrilateral finesse they began as. “The pages had acquired a more sculptural compact appearance,” on artist tells us, “so that the wind could not do its job and the sound of the pages could not be heard.”

Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)Luz Interruptus. Life Lingers On Blank Pages. International Festival of Light. Luz Madrid. Madrid, Spain. (photo © Luz Interruptus)
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Shepard Fairey Considers  “Strategies for a Revolution” in Rome

Shepard Fairey Considers “Strategies for a Revolution” in Rome

Starting the year with “Strategies for a Revolution”, Shepard Fairey exhibits in Italy at Wunderkammern.

Contemporary society is so subsumed into the corporate model that street artist/fine artist Shepard Fairey still appears revolutionary in his basic demands for equity, dignity, and justice.

Shepard Fairy. American Rage. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)

Thirty plus years have evolved his language of propaganda into a signature amalgam of Russian constructivist, punk rage, the so-called underground, and an evermore refined eye for high-note linework and ornate graphic patterning. Here in Milan, the Wunderhammern similarly have an eye for the finer sensibilities, after curating many primary and secondary street artists in the last 10+ years on community murals and in gallery exhibits; and have been financially successful enough at it to open this new second location in Via Giulia, auspiciously welcoming Fairey into this not-so-brave new Covid-bashed world.

Embracing his visual language and socially political wit, “Strategies” includes a series of unpublished works selected by Shepard, a review of the themes that resonate most now in this context personally and generally. It’s a good time to gaze at the messages, the art of delivery, the tenor of these works – all while assessing this time that feels like a turning. A re-set. A time no doubt that will include revolution. 

Shepard Fairy. Justice Woman. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. Louder than a bomb. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. No future (RED). “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. Radical Peace (BLUE). “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. Revolution in our time. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. Sonic firestorm. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)
Shepard Fairy. Eyes Open. “Strategies for a revolution” at Wunderkammern Gallery. Rome, Italy. (photo courtesy of Wunderkammern Gallery)

Shepard Fairey (OBEY)

 Strategies for a revolution

 Via Giulia 180, Roma

29 January – 22 February 2022

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BSA Images Of The Week: 01.30.22

BSA Images Of The Week: 01.30.22

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Welcome to BSA Images of the Week. Happy Snow Weekend!

We’re digging out from a ‘Nor’easter’ today in New York, a swirling blizzard of snow and strong winds that created such astonishing contrasts of bare ground and high-pointed drifts that kids and adults were playing together on these ledges, falling to the ground laughing.

It brings to mind the masses of Americans whose prospects and futures have been completely blown away, leaving nothing but bare soil – while bankers and corporate criminals have drifted all the wealth upwards to new stylish heights during the economic storm of the last 40 years. Feel like you are walking through two feet of snow and can never get ahead? Some would like you to think that it’s because of uncontrollable forces like the weather.

Meanwhile, it’s the calm after the storm now and we’re heading out to play in the snow this morning before it all gets dirty. It’s nice to see New York like a clean slate, full of possibility and promise. Let’s go for a walk!

And here’s our weekly interview with the streets in NYC, Miami, and Berlin; featuring ATOMS. Billy Barnacles, Boxer, Case Maclaim, Cupid, Dark Clouds, Jamie Hef, Joe Iurato, Kaynor, Klass, Modus. Smells, Ten! Tom Bob, Tony, and Wane.

Tom Bob (photo © Jaime Rojo)
A perfect Ten! (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Dark Clouds (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Dante in Berlin. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Case Maclaim in Miami for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Case Maclaim in Miami for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Case Maclaim in Miami for The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Cupid (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Billy Barnacles (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Atoms (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Wane (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Kaynor (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Modus (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Klass (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Joe Iurato. “The More Things Change”. The Bushwick Collective. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Smells Tony (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Jamie Hef (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Boxer (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. East River New York. January 2022. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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Snowed In, Snowman, Snow Graffiti

Snowed In, Snowman, Snow Graffiti

Many graffiti writers look forward to blizzard in New York because between the winds and the snowplows and slippery streets, nobody is paying attention to the lonely aerosol sprayer hitting up a wall.

On this New York Saturday when the streets are white, no cars in sight, we trudged in heavy boots, yet quietly, up the middle of the drifted path, looking for a good spot for a snowman. On the frosted way we spotted this freshly painted tag, the color of the sky and the ground, arriving suddenly like a blizzard.

Hest (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Snow cyclone January 2022. NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Snow cyclone January 2022. NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Snow cyclone January 2022. NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Snow cyclone January 2022. NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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BSA Film Friday: 01.28.22

BSA Film Friday: 01.28.22

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

Now screening:
1. BSA & Martha Cooper Discuss the Opening of MCL at UN

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BSA Special Feature: BSA & Martha Cooper Discuss the Opening of MCL at UN

IN CONVERSATION WITH MARTHA COOPER, STEVEN P. HARRINGTON, AND JAIME ROJO (BSA) AT THE OFFICIAL OPENING OF THE MARTHA COOPER LIBRARY AT URBAN NATION BERLIN.

In November 2021, Martha Cooper was in Berlin together with Jaime Rojo and Steven P. Harrington of Brooklyn Street Art for a viewing of her exhibition “Taking Pictures”. Simultaneously the three announced the official opening of the Martha Cooper Library. They were each presented with the first MCL library cards in the MCL Reading Room at the Museum. With this, the library was formally inaugurated and has been open to the public since the second of November.

With Chief Librarian Eveline Wilson at the desk and Library Director Dr. Hans-Michael Brey leading the way, we are pleased that BSA’s vision and Martha’s vision of establishing an unrivaled library resource for scholars and students of graffiti and street art and related art movements across the globe will now have a dedicated collection for all.

Martha Cooper. MC Library at Urban Nation Museum. Berlin. (photo © Nika Kramer)

Already, we are growing. Through the contact of Sascha Blasche, Hitzerot, we received a generous donation from the Dutch Graffiti Library in January of this year. The Dutch Graffiti Library was founded in 2018 by the twins Marcell and Richard van Tiggelen. Together with Sanne van Doorn, they built an extensive private collection on graffiti with a focus on the Netherlands and published several publications on the subject. Books from the Dutch Graffiti Library can be found in the OPAC. We also received an interesting donation from Kathryn Nussdorf. During a VHS (Berlin’s community education university) seminar, she created a fan book about the Berlin graffiti group CBS with many photos. In an exchange with the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Nancy we have also received more catalogs. And in April there will be the first event: “MCL presents…”

Together with Jaime Rojo and Steven P. Harrington of Brooklyn Street Art, UN interviewed Martha Cooper about the opening on its very first day – about their common ideas, wishes and visions for the library.

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“Torre Marti”, a Summer Country House Turned Market by Artists in Polinyà, Spain

“Torre Marti”, a Summer Country House Turned Market by Artists in Polinyà, Spain

Today we go to Polinyà, about 45 km from Barcelona, Spain, to visit the site of a historic summer country house.  Built during the 1900s, “within the so-called Catalan modernism,” says Lluis Olive, the home was inhabited by the Marti family in this municipality of 8,389 until about 10 years ago when it became a restaurant. According to a description in Wikipedia, “The façades have, within Italianate lines, symmetry and consistency in the design of openings and moldings used for framing balconies and windows at the top.”

Unfortunately, the restaurant venture didn’t succeed for long and the property became empty. You KNOW what happens next in this story. However, you may not guess that the artist Fullet Original hoped to help find a new buyer by filling all the rooms of the house with graffiti and mural art.

Zudi. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)

According to Olive, who shares his photos with BSA readers here today, Fullet carried “out a project that he had dreamed of many times.” His friend has purchased the property, plans to hold an alternative market in it, and “last weekend about 15 artists were painting practically all of the spaces,” says Olive. The rooms were flooded with light and aerosol and lively conversation as the former farmhouse came alive in January with so many artists and friends.

The cross-section of styles are indicative of tastes of the moment in Spain and should be finished within a week or two. Which is good timing because “the opening of the market is scheduled for March.”

Zudi. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Monique. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Monique. Detail. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Juanjo Surace. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Akore. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Valiente. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Work in progress. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original with Werens. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Fullet Original. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Atila. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Emak. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Emak. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Pibe. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Pibe. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Werens. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Reb. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
SM172. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Mesink. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Tage 53. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Tage 53. Work in progress. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Tage 53. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Dirty. Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
Torre Martí. Polinyà, Catalonia. Spain. (photo © Lluis Olive Bulbena)
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Ramz Graffiti Illustration and Style in Slovenia

Ramz Graffiti Illustration and Style in Slovenia

Yesterday we reported on the abandoned garage in the city of Ljubljana that attracts graffiti writers from all over the world wishing to leave their mark behind as they pass through this ancient city. Going deep on yesterday’s excursion into the graffiti garage, we give you a spotlight on local talent Maksim Azarkevič, an illustrator, fine artist, and commercial artist who also writes RAMZ and has a head-splitting imagination, a sense of humor, and enough style to make anything a surreality.

We begin with this lounging figure atop his name which has drawn the ire of a passerby for indulging the objectifying gaze of the straight male, or so it would seem. “ne jeben seksitov!” (no fucking sexists!).

Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Ramz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
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Graffiti Garage Ljubljana, Hidden Treasure in Slovenia

Graffiti Garage Ljubljana, Hidden Treasure in Slovenia

Clandestine abandoned former factories are ideal locations for graffiti writers to practice their skills. Regardless of your intuition or expectations, you never know what you’ll find. Graffiti pieces that go up, are dissed, or simply crumble – all of it is possible. For fans with cameras, it is a revolving exhibition and no two visits will ever be the same, lending the location and air of discovery – if you know where to go.

In Ljubljana, Slovenia, for the Ljubljana Art Festival last summer, veteran graffiti photographer Martha Cooper got into a hidden spot, a so-called graffiti garage near the capital. Here she found some fresh paint and some fresh ideas on her tour, and she shares them here with BSA readers exclusively.

Read more about the Ljubjana Art Festival HERE, HERE, AND HERE.

Mr. Never Satisfied. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Mr. Never Satisfied. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Good Guy Boris. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Good Guy Boris. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified writer. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Slopie. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified writer. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Boriz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Boriz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Boriz 1107 Klan. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
The Dragon is the symbol of Ljubljana and it appears on the city coat of arms, flag, and on the crest of the local soccer team. Perched ferociously on four corners of The Dragon Bridge he’s been the city’s sentinel for centuries. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Tasic. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Hrom. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified artist. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
It is NOT. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
1UP Crew. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Gor. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified writer. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Asxeas. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
ARZA. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
Unidentified writer. Ljubljana, Slovenia. (photo © Martha Cooper)
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INDECLINE Reverses Anti-Abortion Billboard in Mississippi on Roe V. Wade Anniversary

INDECLINE Reverses Anti-Abortion Billboard in Mississippi on Roe V. Wade Anniversary

An anti-abortion billboard in Corinth, Mississippi was vandalized last week by the activist art collective INDECLINE off of Highway 72 & Howell Drive (directly across from San Roque Tienda Mexicana), according to a press release from the anonymous visual interventionists.

Members of the collective used spray paint to quickly alter the original message of the advertisement, prompting drivers to visit a website offering information on how to order abortion pills, thus bypassing the potential shutdown of abortion clinics in the state.

Indecline. Corinth Mississippi. January 2022. (photo @ThisIsIndecline)

This action coincides with the 49th anniversary of Roe. V. Wade, the landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court that effectively legalized abortions in the country. Many are watching a decision by that same judicial body this June which may effectively prevent celebrations for its 50th anniversary in a case called Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

Billboard before it was intervened by Indecline. (photo @ThisIsIndecline)

This is not the first time the collective has used controversial direct action techniques to address the issue of abortion rights in the South. Last March, the members of the collective altered a billboard in Byhalia to promote abortion services at Planned Parenthood

Months later, the group scaled the iconic Christ of the Ozarks statue in Eureka Springs, Arkansas, and hung a massive banner from its arms reading: GOD BLESS ABORTIONS

Indecline. Christ of the Ozarks. Eureka Springs, Arkansas. (image/still from video (photo @ThisIsIndecline)
Indecline. Christ of the Ozarks. Eureka Springs, Arkansas. (image/still from video (photo @ThisIsIndecline)
Indecline. Christ of the Ozarks. Eureka Springs, Arkansas. (image/still from video @ThisIsIndicline)

The collective just released a film with footage documenting their interventions during the past two years including the Christ of the Ozarks banner. Click HERE to go to the full-length film.

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BSA Images Of The Week: 01.23.22

BSA Images Of The Week: 01.23.22

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Welcome to BSA Images of the Week.

Worried that voting rights are being stolen from black and brown people in a systematic way across the country? Let Mitch McConnell put your fears to rest.

The concern is misplaced, because if you look at the statistics, African American voters are voting in just as high a percentage as Americans.

Well, that’s a relief. Wait, what?

Mitch, please. Why are you still in office.

So here’s our weekly interview with the street in NYC and Miami, featuring Beautiful Mind, Bella Phame, BK Foxx, Claudia La Bianca, DAK PPP 907, Dek2DX, djaRodney, Gina Kiel, Gold Loxe, JJ Veronis, Lady JDay, Melski, Rumba Art, StyleOne, Tee Pop Art, and Tutto & Niente.

Rumba Art in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tee Pop Art quotes from James Baldwin: “Artists Are Here To Disturb Peace”. Amen. Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
…and so Why Aren’t We Yelling?! asks an unidentified artist in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
JJ Veronis (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Lady JDay portrait of Frida Kahlo. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Tutto & Niente, Our Lady of Graffiti…Mary is forever the Muse. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Claudia La Bianca in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
BK Foxx (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bella Phame in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Dek2DX (photo © Jaime Rojo)
DjaRodeny in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Melski in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gold Loxe (photo © Jaime Rojo)
StyleOne in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gina Kiel in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Beautiful Mind in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
New York Paste (photo © Jaime Rojo)
DAK PPP 907 in Wynwood, Miami. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. Sunrise. Hutchinson Island, Florida. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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