Artists

BSA Images Of The Week: 07.18.21. Chihuahua Special II

BSA Images Of The Week: 07.18.21. Chihuahua Special II

Welcome to BSA Images of the Week.

People are so careful sometimes to let you know that certain artists are self-taught. You wouldn’t think it so necessary to make the distinction but it’s often an important demarcation for the academic or self-appointed expert who wants to preserve the class divide, assuring that only persons from families who can afford luxury branded education could possibly be awarded highest distinction in any category.

Consider even newer terms like “Outsider Art”. It’s right there in the name, people.

Talk about so-called “outsider artists,” and there is a certain air of incredulity that such original, imaginative, high-quality work and brilliance could come from those who haven’t been to an art academy. The occurrence is likened to a supernatural fluke, something mystical perhaps channeled through this vessel of a person, not indicative of their own talents necessarily.

“Self-taught” is a source of pride for graffiti writers – taught by the university of the streets, a few will tell you. Some street artists like to say they evolved from the Do It Yourself (DIY) subcultures of punk and anarchists. It’s a source of pride, often hard-won. For those making money selling graffiti or street artists’ work in a gallery, however, they’ll check your resume in addition to your canvas. Its easier to assure potential buyers that an artist attended an accredited, if not acclaimed, university or program, or studied under the tutelage of an art star. It’s about branding, for sure, but it is also infused with class.

The Mata Ortiz pottery style from the northern central region of Mexico took hold in the 1990s when the Santa Fe style of home décor became popular in parts of the US. Originating from the Indigenous peoples who lived here and in this region before the Europeans arrived, the geometric designs and stylized animal patterning on pottery fragments from prehistoric cultures like the Mimbres and Casas Grandes inspired a new interest among ceramicists and potters.

A farmer who liked to explore near the remains of Paquime countryside and to discover pottery remnants in this desert and forest region, Juan Quesada took inspiration and began to develop his own pottery designs beginning in the 1960s. Over the course of the next decades, his work was “discovered” by an anthropologist and ceramic collector north of the border, and he helped Quesada to develop a sustainable business of sales and to spread word of his talent. These prized pottery works that later became part of museum private collections eventually spawned a small cottage industry in the surrounding area that is primarily known for ranching and lumber. Today Quesada continues to create his own art and has helped hundreds of family and friends to participate, learn, and thrive with the opportunity he authored.

He was also self-taught.

So, we lift a glass of tequila to him and all the self-taught artists and artisans – and those who share their skills with others.

Here’s our weekly interview with the street here in Mexico, this week featuring ARSK, Aser, Bianca S, BN One, CFN, Damasco, EXPm, Llario, Jeack, Juan Quezada, Mabe, Mecivo, Neth, Pese, RCW, Seyk, and Shutney.

Damasco. Portrait of Juan Quezada. Mata Ortiz Village. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Damasco. Portrait of Juan Quezada. Mata Ortiz Village. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Pese. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mabe. Sue. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Aser. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
EXPm. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Chih. Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Blanca S. Mata Ortiz Village. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
RCW. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Senor. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bubbles. Several artists. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Jeack. Seyck. TCK. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Yoek Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
ARSK. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Shutney. Neth. BN.One. CFN. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Ilario. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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Elfo’s Neo-Dada Butchering Diagram in Turin

Elfo’s Neo-Dada Butchering Diagram in Turin

Elfo’s furtive and artful wanderings can veer off into the neo-Dadaist fields at times, sometimes wittily so, and textually. The Italian graffiti writer and street artist uses the simplest of devices to capture attention, a reductive and deliberate strategy born of careful consideration girded by impulses to broadcast his view, to be seen and heard.

Elfo. “I’m a Vegetarian”. Inspired by the work of G. A. Cavellini. Torino, Italy. (photo © Elfo)

Here in Turin (Torino) the artist diagrams the messages in a butcherly way – a triangulation of views on class structures, the street-to-gallery continuum, and the tensions separating carnivores and herbivores. Oink!  

He says it is “a new ironic artwork” and pays tribute to the late Italian artist and art collector G.A. Cavellini.

Elfo. “I’m a Vegetarian”. Inspired by the work of G. A. Cavellini. Torino, Italy. (photo © Elfo)
Guglielmo Achille Cavellini. Informazione. n.d. Cavellini artist file, MoMA Library

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BSA Film Friday: 07.16.21

BSA Film Friday: 07.16.21

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

Now screening:
1. Vhils Explodes in Slow-Mo at Nifty Gateway
2. Giulio Vesprini: No Comply // Struttura G0055
3. RIDE a Film by Paul Bush

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BSA Special Feature: Vhils Explodes in Slow-Mo at Nifty Gateway

The time elapsed between blasting a new artwork and destroying it? 2 seconds.

Thanks to documentation, you can luxuriate in this human/natural cycle of creation and destruction over two and a half minutes. Portuguese street artist VHILS explores the space in between, and the rapturous flight of atoms and molecules, volume, velocity, light and dark.

Giulio Vesprini: No Comply // Struttura G0055

Skate parks are sacred spaces for those believers whom you find there endless hours, meditating, catching air, lying prostrate. Giulio Vesprini helps us to understand his process for this artists commission to adorn the temple.

RIDE a Film by Paul Bush

Summer is prime season for bikes, no matter what kind. In a little more than 5 minutes filmmaker Paul Bush bowls us over with stop action bicycles, motorbikes, and your nostalgia.

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“Beyond The Streets” On Paper Opens in Southampton

“Beyond The Streets” On Paper Opens in Southampton

This time of year, it is hard to find people in Manhattan on the weekends – they’re “weekending” in the Hamptons, darling.

Khari Turner, Hands

Not exactly the original setting you might associate with graffiti, street art, hip-hop, punk rock, zines, and underground art culture but where else can curators Evan Pricco and Kim Stephens sell these works on paper while sipping cool drinks poolside?

“Beyond the Streets” carries the mobile party to Southampton Arts Center this Saturday with a wide swath of styles – 500 works from over 100 artists in an art fair-sized venue. It may remind you of the Urban Air Fair tried in Manhattan in summer 2017, but this one has something that one didn’t: Roger Gastman.

Shepard Fairey, Elysium Lotus

If it’s here, it’s because it is quality work and has a connection to the roots of these subcultural scenes usually as well. Expanding now to the more nebulous category of Contemporary, you may be surprised to see more accessible interpretive variations on the themes. Let’s see that paper, people. 

Jane Dickson, Fourth of July 2

Artists include: Action Bronson, Addam Yekutieli, agnès b, AIKO, André Saraiva, Andrew Schoultz, Andrew Thiele, Andy Rementer, Aryz, Bert Krak, Brandon Breaux, Broken Fingaz, Bryant Giles, Camille Walala, CES, Cey Adams, Charlie Ahearn, Chloe Early, Chris FREEDOM Pape, Clark Fox, Cody Hudson, Conor Harrington, Craig Costello, CRASH, DABSMYLA, Daniel Rich, David “Mr StarCity” White, DAZE, DEFER, Emily Manwaring, Eric Haze, Ermsy, Escif, FAILE, Faith XLVII, Fucci, Greg SPONE Lamarche, Gustavo Zermeno, Hilda Palafox, House 33, HuskMitNavn, Ian Reid, Icy & Sot, Jaime Muñoz, Jamilla Okuba, Jane Dickson, JEC*, Jeremy Shockley, Jillian Evelyn, JK5, John Konstantine, Julian Pace, KATSU, KC Ortiz, Kelsey Brookes, Khari Turner, Kime Buzzelli, LeRoy Neiman, Linas Garsys, Liz Flores, Lucy McLauchlan, Lujan Perez, Maripol, Mark Mothersbaugh, Martha Cooper, Marshall LaCount, Matt McCormick, Maya Hayuk, Michael Vasquez, MIKE 171, Mister CARTOON, Neena Ellora, Nehemiah Cisneros, Nettie Wakefield, NUNCA, Otto183, Paije Fuller, Paul Insect, POSE, Rebecca Morgan, Reko Rennie, Rello, Richard Colman, RISK, Ron English, Ryan McGinness, Sage Vaughn, Saladeen Johnson, Scott Campbell, Sean from Texas, Senon Williams, Shantell Martin, Shepard Fairey, SJK 171, Sofía Enriquez, SNOEMAN, Spacebrat, STASH, Steve ESPO Powers, SWOON, TAKI 183, The Perez Bros., Timothy Curtis, Todd James, Troy Lamarr Chew II, Umar Rashid, Victor Reyes, Wasted Rita, Wulffvnky, Yarrow Slaps, Yusuke Hanai, ZESER, ZOER and 45RPM.

BEYOND THE STREETS on PAPER
July 17—August 28, 2021
Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, New York, 11968

For more details, schedules, etc. click HERE

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Asbestos’ Soul and Transitioning Between Levels of Existence in Dublin

Asbestos’ Soul and Transitioning Between Levels of Existence in Dublin

“I drew inspiration from Joseph Beuys’ visit to Ireland where he spoke in the gallery about the soul and its transition between different levels of existence.” Street artist Asbestos is talking about the near ritualist manner of creation he used for this new mural he’s painted in Dublin.

By uttering an incantation after completing each extinguished match stick, the artist may have held the hand of a dearly departed individual as they passed from this life to the next.

Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)

Each of the nearly five thousand people who passed away during the pandemic in Ireland is intimated here – a searing tribute that he completed over ten days. “Each match represents the life of a person… each extinguished at a different stage of existence,” he tells us. “Each life cut short, along with their hopes, ambitions, and the memories.” 

Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)

Part of a new initiative for the Hugh Lane Gallery, and the new exhibition ‘From Secret Block to ROSC’ by Joseph Beuys, Asbestos tells us about the anonymous figure made of figures just completed.

“When you stand back and view the work from a distance, it forms a profile of me standing and looking up, with my hands raised to the sky,” he says. “This symbol unites the many intertwined matches to form a single representation of hope. United, we are stronger.” 

Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)
Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)
Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)
Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)
Asbestos. “Pass Freely” in collaboration with Hugh Lane Gallery. Dublin, Ireland. (photo © Sean Curtis)

Credits:

Artist: Asbestos – @artofasbestos

Hugh Lane Gallery @thehughlane

Film and Photography Sean Curtis @designmaketake

Mural Assisted by Colm Weakliam @withoutmatter

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Selections From Poli Urban Colors 2021 in Milan

Selections From Poli Urban Colors 2021 in Milan

20 students took part in painting at the 2nd edition of Poli Urban Colors last month in Milan, which is appropriate since its mounted hand in hand with a university. The rich diversity of styles combined with a few big names illustrates the wisdom of involving local talents and the community in a street art festival.

Peeta. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)

Curated by Luca Mayr with the support of Politecnico of Milan, the self-described urban design festival invited 45 Urban Artists in all, each following their individual style and technique, whether formally or self-trained. As many students of Politecnico have gone on to pursue careers as designers, engineers, architects, and illustrators, you get a real sense of the level of appreciation here for the work of the artists on the street.

Peeta. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)

Among the works most talked about, perhaps, was the mural of the graffiti writer from Veneto named Peeta, who disobeyed laws of perception once again with the artist’s command of spray can and brushes; effectively removing the wall and creating a new sculptural construction entirely. At a university of two campuses dedicated separately to design and industrial engineering, it is easy to see how Peeta nailed the top spot with his intervention. Known for his brain-fooling paintings, the Italian wizard with a solid foundation in graffiti is able to play with dimensions and hold them on a leash. 

Sorte. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)

Poli Urban Colors 21 organizers say they wanted to present viewers with a healthy survey of the Italian and worldwide Graffiti Writing movement – and they did. With the range of talents and styles on display, they gave the nod to the roots of modern graffiti history here as well as a strong representation of where it continues to take us in public space.

Krep & Tmps at work. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
KayOne, Fly Cat, Teso, Krep and Tmps. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Emans. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Strex WIP. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Caribes. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Caribes, Strex. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Fosk. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Fosk, Prosa, Tawa and Dada. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Marco Teatro. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
Rancy. Poli Urban Colors Festival 2021. Milan, Italy. (photo © Luca Rancy)
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BustArt Knows What Time it is in Le Locle : Swiss Time

BustArt Knows What Time it is in Le Locle : Swiss Time

Bad weather and two broken lifts later – Bustart has created this tribute to the precision of Swiss watchmakers in the small town of Le Locle (population 10,200) in the Canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. Known as one center of Swiss watchmaking since the 1600s, the town is famous for numerous watchmakers and watch companies respected around the world.

BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)

“I have highlighted the precise and complicated gears of the watch,” he tells us of the crisp illustration-styled mural he created in his home country. “As in life itself, it’s the gears in the background that make the outside work.” He calls the mural “Time Out.”

Opening this week here in New York, Bustart has new works on display in his first solo show in the city at Krause Gallery, entitled “Graffiti Pop.” He planned to attend but sadly will not due to current visa regulations and the ongoing Covid situation affecting international travel. If only all things worked as precisely as a Swiss watch!

BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)
BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)
BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)
BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)
BustArt. “Time Out”. In collaboration with EXOMUSE. Locle, Switzerland. (photo © Francoise Balmer)
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BSA Images Of The Week: 07.11.21

BSA Images Of The Week: 07.11.21

Welcome to BSA Images of the Week. While New York suffered a heatwave followed by tropical storms from Hurricane Elsa flying up the East Coast and flooding the subways, this week, we checked in with the evolution of a city in sunny, arid, colorful Mexico.

The aesthetics and language of street art and graffiti are so pervasive, so woven into the international culture in cities, that it hardly surprises us to see it absorbed and re-interpreted wherever we go. We like to return to places that we’ve traveled to previously; it is an opportunity to gauge the changes, the tempo, perhaps to appreciate the influence of the Internet and social media in connecting and re-sorting people based on their interests rather than geography.

In the case of the northern Mexican city of Chihuahua, we see a lively mural program, a small but fervent and well-crafted graffiti, and tattoo scene, and now even a sticker storm of sorts in specific parts of this desert home to international corporate maquiladoras and a proud sense of commitment to traditional culture and history. Topics and influences range from gender roles, machismo, Christian iconography, Japanese anime, tattoo culture, Warhol’s version of POP, empowered female sexuality, devils, angels, wildlife, drugs, economics, and subtly played political critique.

At almost a million people and with its focus on education, its primarily one- and two-story cityscape is only interrupted briefly by a historic colonial downtown, peppered with a few modern glass boxes. Chihuahua is vying for tourists and corporations to come with a redrawn city center, the historical monuments and fountains now modernized with an open and welcoming street plan. But stylistically, we like the margins, where the messages are rather less vetted…

When exploring the street art here, you’ll see international styles filtered through Mexican culture and iconography; However, in the case of OBEY aesthetics repeated on stickers, one could argue that Shepard Faireys’ original fascination with the fantasy of Andre the Giant has as much to do with the Mexican “Luchador” subculture and its films of the 1950s/60s as any subversive impulses from punk that appealed to him in his college years.

Similarly, the one-color small stencil didn’t originate with the Army or Bristol’s Banksy – it has appeared for decades throughout the decorative folk arts here, not to mention the robustly social and politically inspired Mexican mural tradition of the 20th century that is in the creative DNA of street artists worldwide. As the so-called First World de-industrialized in the last three decades, their neighbors have been equally looking for new footing. In the case of cultures like Mexico’s, there is a spirit of innovation and a respect for tradition, an amalgam that may materialize now as something more modern than you expected.

Here’s our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Ale Poire, Ayari Ludeas, Bideo TCK, Celest Alonso, Cesar Duarte, David Glezzg, Joker, Maker, Maru Campos, and Mittuh.

Ale Poire in collaboration with Colectivo Tomate. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Davidd Glezzg. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Maker. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Several artists on a sticker wall. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Several artists on a sticker wall. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Several artists on a sticker wall. Detail. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Several artists on a sticker wall. Detail. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Several artists on a sticker wall. Detail. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Mitthu in collaboration with Colectivo Tomate. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. (we couldn’t find the artist’s signature on this mural) Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Joker. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Iris Alexa in collaboration with Colectivo Tomate. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)a
An Obey like political campaign with the intention to tie the Governor Elect of Chihuahua, Ms. Maru Campos with the corrupt former governor, Cesar Duarte, presently in a federal prison in the USA awaiting extradition to be tried in Mexico. Obviously, the smear campaign didn’t work. Ms. Campos won the election. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Vivas Nos Queremos. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Eajalle. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bideo TCK. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Celeste Alonso. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Ayari Ludeas. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Unidentified artist. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Terre. TCK. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Bring the Ruckus. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. Colonial Aqueduct. Chihuahua, Mexico. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
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Giulio Vesprini: H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052.

Giulio Vesprini: H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052.

Giulio Vesprini is all over the Italian basketball court, so to speak, covering 5 of these playgrounds this spring and summer. His canvas is huge, and he’s using it to experiment stylistically, all the while realizing that athletes throughout their game will consciously and subconsciously absorb his tones, shapes, and patterns.

Giulio Vesprini. “H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052. Treviglio, Italy. (photo © Hori VideoProduction)

With “Horizon” in Treviglio/Bergamo, Giulio says he is lifting direct inspiration again from the surrounding environment, “the green of the park that delineates the basketball court, the blues of the sky and the reds of the scorching sun during the games; a color-space that affirms itself in the urban fabric.”

Composed in situ, this original work will not be repeated elsewhere, a bespoke rendering of this moment and this place.

Giulio Vesprini. “H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052. Treviglio, Italy. (photo © Hori VideoProduction)
Giulio Vesprini. “H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052. Treviglio, Italy. (photo © Hori VideoProduction)
Giulio Vesprini. “H O R I Z O N” / Struttura G052. Treviglio, Italy. (photo © Hori VideoProduction)

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BSA Film Friday: 07.09.21

BSA Film Friday: 07.09.21

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

Now screening:
1. Case Maclaim for WallStoryTown in Bad Vilbel, Germany
2. Sofles / Blood Moon
3. Okuda San Miguel. RONDA
4. Riton x Nightcrawlers – Friday ft. Mufasa & Hypeman (Dopamine Re-edit)

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BSA Special Feature: Case Maclaim for WallStoryTown in Bad Vilbel, Germany

Delabrave coming on strong in the one-minute category with Raül Acuña directing and a concise track progression on a master. Here in Bad Vilbel, Case Maclaim has no bad angles.

Case Maclaim for WallStoryTown in Bad Vilbel, Germany.


With mastery of a differently complex language using only cans, Sofles generates a fantasy with cities in clouds and the reflections of the Blood Moon overhead, a plump and racing belt of graffiti adventures sustaining the action underneath. High marks to After Midnight Film for editing and solid choice of Spooky Bizzle for the soundtrack.

Sofles / Blood Moon


Ever loosening his familiar components of representation, OKUDA reappropriates with skill and humor to create this dual portrait. Intercut with the majesty of flamenco, the strumming, swirling, finger-snapping, hand clapping bailaora lays the foundation for our visual cantanto, Okuda San Miguel.

Okuda San Miguel. RONDA


Riton x Nightcrawlers – Friday ft. Mufasa & Hypeman (Dopamine Re-edit)

The newest anthem that helps you dance your way into the weekend!


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Gaia, Oranges, and Honoring Immigrant Lue Gim Gong in Massachusetts

Gaia, Oranges, and Honoring Immigrant Lue Gim Gong in Massachusetts

Lue Gim Gong is looking one way; a kid is looking the other. The Chinese immigrant came to California as a preteen later here in North Adams, Massachusetts, and worked as a laborer. Eventually, he developed horticultural techniques using cross-pollination to create a cold-resistant kind of orange that greatly impacted the agricultural industry.

Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)

The USDA and the city itself have recognized the life and Lue Gim Gong (Chinese: 呂金功, 1860-1925) for his contributions to the economy and community, and now mural artist GAIA has done the same. In 2000, seventy-five years after his death, he was recognized by the Great Floridian program for significant contributions to that state’s history and culture

Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)

Using realism and dynamic repositioning of geometries, the Baltimore-based artist transforms a North Adams Housing Authority along the so-called Ashland Street corridor. Figures and faces are within the lively composition, bringing history alive with a contemporary style of storytelling. “Valencia Oranges and Autumnal leaves surround the figures,” says the project description that GAIA sent us.

“In the intersecting shapes of the bodies emerges children from a neighboring Eclipse Mill shot by photographer Lewis Hine in 1911. Below the children, within the legs, are two scenes of women working on circuitry inside the old Sprague electric plant.”

Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)

In a project nearly hamstrung by the Covid-19 epidemic, GAIA sometimes wondered if the project would come to fruition, but he stuck to it. “This mural happened in spite of covid after a year and a half of planning and surveying!” he says.

Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
Gaia. “Portrait of Lue Gim Gong“. NAMAzing Initiative. Northadams, Massachusetts. (photo @ Nick Mantello)
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Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. Installation Shots

Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. Installation Shots

You saw our announcement for the new exhibit At the Vanguard: Bristol Opens Exhibition On Evolution of Global Movement of Street Art and now you get a chance to see the actual shoe newly installed. Dense and rich with original artwork, photography, and ephemera, Vanguard is a studious presentation that confidently lays claim to Bristols place in the history of graffiti and street art.

Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)
Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement. General install shot. Bristol Museums. Bristol, UK. (photo © Doug Gillen)

Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement is kindly supported by Vans. Vanguard | Bristol Street Art: The Evolution of a Global Movement
M Shed, Bristol, BS1 4RN
Saturday 26 June 2021 – Sunday 31 October 2021
Admission £8 adult* / £7 concession* (*Tickets include £1 voluntary donation to Bristol Museums Development Trust)

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