BSA Film Friday

BSA Film Friday: 09.02.22

BSA Film Friday: 09.02.22

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

Now screening:
1. Do Not Feed the Pigeons, Antonin Niclass’s short film
2. Pigeon Fanciers in Brooklyn set to Chopin’s One Minute Waltz. Video by Jaime Rojo
3. Playing with pigeons on the sidewalks of Manhattan. Video by Jaime Rojo
4. Duke Riley performance with pigeons of “Fly By Night” in Brooklyn Navy Yard, 2016. Video by Jaime Rojo

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BSA Special Feature: For Your Consideration; Pigeons

We dedicate today’s edition of BSA Film Friday to the pigeons of the world, with a mix of film and still photography. The first offering is Antonin Niclass’s short film “Do Not Feed the Pigeons,” wherein a flock becomes a source of unexpected wonder for a group of weary travelers. Extra points for sound editing on this one. After the film we have the visual poetry of BSA’s own Jaime Rojo in short video and photography. Enjoy it.

Do Not Feed the Pigeons: A Moment of Magic, Courtesy of Pigeons / Via The New Yorker

Untitled. Pigeon. Manhattan, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Pigeon Fanciers in Brooklyn set to Chopin’s One Minute Waltz. Video by Jaime Rojo

Untitled. Pigeons. Brooklyn, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Playing with pigeons on the sidewalks of Manhattan. Video by Jaime Rojo

Untitled. Pigeon. Jersey City, NJ. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. Pigeons. Manhattan, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Duke Riley performance with pigeons of “Fly By Night” in Brooklyn Navy Yard, 2016. Video by Jaime Rojo

Untitled. Pigeon. Brooklyn, NYC. (photo © Jaime Rojo)
Untitled. Pigeons. (photo © Jaime Rojo)


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BSA Film Friday: 08.26.22

BSA Film Friday: 08.26.22

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

Now screening:
1. Bandaloop. Excerpts from Field. Part II of the multi-year work LOOM.
2. Bandaloop. FLOOD, World premiere.
3. Bandaloop. Redemption Too, at Least Some / A Work-in-Progress Collaboration from DBR and Bandaloop.
4. Bandaloop teams up with BMW to celebrate its headquarters’ 50th anniversary in Munich.

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BSA Special Feature: Bandaloop

As you survey the world of breaking (rocking) that blossomed in the Hip Hop era that enveloped graffiti writing among its elements, one may conclude that public performance itself has undergone revolution in the last 4 or 5 decades. A hybrid of rock-climbing, rappelling, parkour and high-flying feats, the vertical dance company has challenged expectations frequently in its battle with gravity – often in view of an awestruck public. This is redefining, reclaiming public space at its finest.

Bandaloop. Excerpts from Field. Part II of the multi-year work LOOM.

Bandaloop. FLOOD, World premiere.

Bandaloop. Redemption Too, at Least Some / A Work-in-Progress Collaboration from DBR and Bandaloop.

Bandaloop teams up with BMW to celebrate its headquarters’ 50th anniversary in Munich.

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BSA Film Friday 08.19.22

BSA Film Friday 08.19.22

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

Now screening:
1. Black Power in Hair: Babybangz
2. Hair on Fire – Emergency on Planet Earth
3. Land Graffiti or Grass Graffiti? Why Split Hairs? Saype via Arte.tv
4. When Hair Bands Wandered the Earth – “Hot for Teacher” – Mutoid Man

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BSA Special Feature: Black Power in Hair: Babybangz

“In a documentary by Juliana Kasumu, a group of Black women gathers at Babybangz salon to discuss natural hair, the impact of gentrification in New Orleans, and their personal journeys toward self-love.”

All bow to the power of hair.

Black Power in Hair: Babybangz



Emergency on Planet Earth

A new exhibition featuring artist from the graffiti/street art spheres is drawing attention to the fragile moment humans are in as we are reaping the harvest of years of abusing the Earth.  The show presents 12 different spaces in situ to address different environmental issues of our day. This is a time of emergency on Planet Earth.



Saype Documentary via Arte.tv



Hot for Teacher – Mutoid Man

It’s about time for Back-To-School shopping! It’s also time for bad attitude and unrequited misdirected hormones for your teacher, courtesy of heavy metal. Check out Gina Gleason on guitar!

Click HERE to learn more about Generation Equality Forum.

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BSA Film Friday 08.12.22

BSA Film Friday 08.12.22

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

Now screening:
1. Accelerating Progress for Gender Equality

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BSA Special Feature: Accelerating Progress for Gender Equality

A mural program to raise awareness of the Generation Equality Forum, we have today videos of murals created in Mexico City, Paris, and New York. A coalition of banks, social organizations, UN organizations, and nations, the Forum says that it has a five year plan culminating in 2026 that “is built around a Global Acceleration Plan  – a global road map for gender equality that aims to fulfil the promise of the Beijing Platform for Action and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. It involves every sector of society – governments, civil society, private sector, entrepreneurs, trade unions, artists, academia and social influencers – to drive urgent action and accountability.”

“Generation Equality” Mural by Adry del Rocio. Mexico City, Mexico.

“Generation Equality” Mural by Lula Goce. Paris. France.

Generation Equality” Mural by Vinie. New York City.

Click HERE to learn more about Generation Equality Forum.

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BSA Film Friday: 08.05.22

BSA Film Friday: 08.05.22

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

Now screening:
1. Ñatinta Festival Comforts the Grieving and Brings “Ajayu” in Bolivia

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BSA Special Feature: Ñatinta Festival Comforts the Grieving and Brings “Ajayu” in Bolivia

It’s only August, so you have time to prepare for Ñatinta.

Its fascinating to see this outpouring; of public performance and art created during this festival in the General Cemetery in La Paz, Bolivia. Reaching through the depths of sorrow and despair, the living are here to pay tribute to the dead and our memories of them. The artists interact with the place, in some way facilitating the living.

A festival organized by artists and cultural workers with ties to urban art, the group named Perros Sueltos pulls together the talents and encourages collaboration. The results are outstanding. Participants share creatively, define personal and public space, and create dialogue and interconnectivity.

According to some Andean beliefs, the “ajayu” is the spirit of the deceased – which returns to earth during the festivity of all saints and may communicate with the living. It is a beautiful and comforting story that says the spirit doesn’t disappear but stays in communication, becoming a complement to life.

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BSA Film Friday: 07.29.22

BSA Film Friday: 07.29.22

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

Now screening:
1. Damien Hirst: The Currency and Burning Art
2. Paola Pivi: Statue of Liberty at The Highline Park in NYC
3. Jorge Rodríguez-Gerada: “Outsight

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BSA Special Feature: Damien Hirst: The Currency and Burning Art

Love me or hate me, please don’t stop talking about me. Just in time for currencies like the dollar and the pound to reduce to little more than colored paper: This cultural currency of this modern contemporary artist who is best known for colorful dots, sharks, and Banksy rumours is placed before you, courtesy Stephen Fry. To hear the marketing that goes into this release feels rather stunt-like, and just the kind of thing that the kids will adore. But they must make a choice of what kind of Damian Hirst artwork they would like…

Damien Hirst – The Currency and Burning Art



Paola Pivi: Statue of Liberty at The Highline Park in NYC

Possibly the oddest pairing of musical soundtrack and rapid fire documentation to accompany the making of a sculpture, this Emoji-faced statue of Liberty will surely confuse passersby as well.



Jorge Rodríguez-Gerada: “Outsight”

A ‘making-of’ video for this mural we brought you a couple of days ago, here is the artist at work.

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BSA Film Friday 07.22.22

BSA Film Friday 07.22.22

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

Now screening:
1. URBAN NATION 2022 – “Talking… & Other Banana Skins” – on FWTV
2. Flower Punk”- Azuma Makoto
3. JR: Can Art Change the World?

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BSA Special Feature: URBAN NATION 2022 – “Talking… & Other Banana Skins” – on FWTV

In his first official visit back to Urban Nation since its opening in 2017, Fifth Wall host Doug Gillen finds a more democratic collection of artists from various points in the street art/urban art constellation. That impression is understandable due to the heavy presence of commercial interests involved in the selection of bankable street art stars and OGs chosen to represent five decades of graffiti/street art at the opening of a new institution dedicated to the scene. Curators were careful to program several relative unknowns and lesser-recognized artists into that initial grab-bag collection, but we take the point.

It’s refreshing to hear the current show’s curator Michelle Houston speak about her personal and professional philosophy toward street art and our collective relationship to it. A hybrid of the existing UN permanent collection and new works, it comes off as a rather wholistic approach that respects more players and their contribution to what has proven to be a very democratic grassroots art movement on streets around the world.

With decidedly less focus on the ever-more codified, commodified, and blue-chip-ivy-league-endorsed criterion of exclusivity that plagues the ‘art world’, this varied collection may represent a retaining wall against trends we witness that threaten to erect the same sort of structures of exclusivity that unbridled art-in-the-streets set out to destroy. Of course, every modern counterculture eventually gets transformed on its way to accepted culture, and we’re somewhat resigned to that reality. However rather than zapping the life out of the free-wheeling nature of graffiti and street art, Urban Nation may be staking a claim of departure from peers to defend some of those original tenets – in this insistently self-defining scene.

URBAN NATION 2022 – “Talking… & Other Banana Skins” – Exhibition Review | FWTV



“Flower Punk”- Azuma Makoto

And speaking of every modern counterculture that eventually gets transformed on its way to accepted culture, we present the Punk Florist, artist Azuma Makoto, who uses plants in a sculptural manner. It is a practice that he hopes can connect humanity and nature. It may help if you are listening to Dead Kennedys or Black Flag – or perhaps something more industrial, or no-wave. But when he and his team send a ragged bundle of beauty literally into space, all bets are off. It’s a new game.



JR: Can Art Change the World?

In yet another TED talk, JR speaks for himself.

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BSA Film Friday: 07.15.22

BSA Film Friday: 07.15.22

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

Now screening:
1. Turnout – Michael Van Swearingen
2. ENTER via Graffiti TV
3. Carlos Mare – 12 Levels of Graffiti: Easy to Complex

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BSA Special Feature: Turnout – Michael Van Swearingen

Motion Designer Michael Van Swearingen somehow converts graffiti culture into a loveable squishy clean place to break the law, and breaks your heart gently doing so. “Tobin and Sven are street artists involved in a shady lifestyle as middle-men. After Tobin announces leaving his criminal past behind, along with the city, they proceed to finish one last drop off of an unmarked bag. Upon entering a graffiti soaked alley way, they’re confronted by a police officer and make a run for it. Ducking and diving through the glowing alley, they make their way towards a trainyard. With the cops following close behind, a split second decision decides their future.”

Turnout – Michael Van Swearingen



ENTER via Graffiti TV

Mexican graffiti futurist is a cyber punk influenced by Japanese style. Part of the 217 crew, Enter here shows you some of his tricks on this new flick from Graffiti TV.



Carlos Mare – 12 Levels of Graffiti: Easy to Complex via WIRED

NYC Old Skool graffiti originalist Mare 139 schools us all on the 12 Levels of graffiti. Everybody listen up.

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BSA Film Friday: 07.08.22

BSA Film Friday: 07.08.22

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

Now screening:
1. Invader: Invasion Potosi, Mission 4000
2. A VHILS Reel edited by Jose Pando Lucas/Solid Dogma
3. Os Gemeos: “El dibujo es el alma de todo proceso” (Drawing is the soul of every process)

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BSA Special Feature: Invader: Invasion Potosi, Mission 4000

Llamas, demons, Scoopy Doo, the Clash.

The French Invader, with his Western symbols painted with tiles takes you to Potosi, one of the highest cities in the world. “Located in Bolivia at 4000m above sea level it was a perfect place to install the 4000th space invader,” says the artist.

Invader installs his 4000 space invader in Potosi, Bolivia.

A VHILS Reel edited by Jose Pando Lucas/Solid Dogma

Os Gemeos: “El dibujo es el alma de todo proceso” (Drawing is the soul of every process). Via Domestika.

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BSA Film Friday: 07.01.22

BSA Film Friday: 07.01.22

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

Now screening:
1. David Fullarton: I Lied About Being An Artist. A short film by Blake Bogosian
2. PLASTIK. Directed by Philip Rom
3. Catherine Opie b. 1961
4. On the Fringe of Remembering: a Lecture on Memoryscapes on the Street

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BSA Special Feature: David Fullarton: I Lied About Being An Artist. A short film by Blake Bogosian

Wouldn’t be the first time, this imposter’s syndrome variant crops up in many people’s lives – that one where you feel that you may be misrepresenting yourself as an artist.

“It’s like I’m inhabiting a character.”

“I mean it’s not really me. It is. Maybe it is, I don’t know.”

An irked and uncomfortable Gen X white artist guy is bemused by life, after the rage has died down into a realization of the absurdity of it all.

Using illustration, collage, word-smithing and artful sloganeering, the artist has developed his own process and version of this thing called ‘visual language’.

“I hope that the humor can maybe make people be a bit more accepting and forgiving of our shared human flaws.”

David Fullarton: I Lied About Being An Artist. A short film by Blake Bogosian


PLASTIK. Directed by Philip Rom

Blissful daily scenes revealed as dystopian – but delivered in the sweetest way. Hopefully not so sweet that you won’t do anything about all that plastic you are using and throwing away….


Catherine Opie b. 1961

“I think that my portraits hold people,” says the realist photographer without irony. It’s good to hear the re-telling of her own story to appreciate the evolution of an artists life and how it is reflected in their work, and vice versa.

“I’m making the work because it was really important for me….” begins one sentence about one of her chapters as a photographer, but it can apply to all of them. Bearing witness, observing the temporality of life, looking at relationships of modern people to modern society.


On the Fringe of Remembering: a Lecture on Memoryscapes on the Street

Ljubljana Street Art Festival 2022 is underway as we reported HERE yesterday. The festival includes a day of conferences, talks, and panel discussions including practitioners of the art form, academics, cultural workers, and scholars. Below we share with you the last panel of the day. If you are interested in the first 4 panels click HERE.

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BSA Film Friday: 06.24.22

BSA Film Friday: 06.24.22

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

Now screening:
1. Chile Estyle, from Pablo Aravena
2. ARCHIFONT
3. Tartu Street Art Comes to Berlin – Hello Mister Police Officer | FWTV

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BSA Special Feature: Chile Estyle, from Pablo Aravena

The evolution of a graffiti/street art movement is not unilateral in its formative influences nor its cities of germination. Not only does Chile have a unique genesis story born of oppression and rebellion that is written into the history of the modern street art movement, it has produced a number of strong proponents of the current global scene.

“Young people took to the streets with political muralism all over Chile in the late 60’s at the same time as young people in New York were starting Modern graffiti and May 68 happened in Paris. Chile Estyle is a documentary film that explores the past and present of Chile’s unique street art tradition which comes from a remix of political muralism and graffiti and has been part of the Chilean cultural and political life since the 60s, resulting in a visually arresting, informative and entertaining film.”

Chile Estyle – Trailer – Pablo Aravena


ARCHIFONT

“I kept looking at it and saying, ‘I could do a whole alphabet based on it.'”

ARCHIFONT Letters dressed in architecture. For the fonts lovers and the architecture lovers this little video of the names of master architects, past and present will stir emotions, we are certain of that. But we also know a thing or two about the letter form art we call graffiti…certainly, our emotions were stirred…will yours?


Tartu Street Art Comes to Berlin – Hello Mister Police Officer | FWTV

It’s been a little while since we’ve seen the folks from Tartu and are happy to see them doing a show in Berlin. Doug from Fifth wall interviews 4 of the originators/artists from the “Stencibility” festival in Estonia – as they mount their exhibition in Berlin. Open till June 25th!

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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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