White Walls Gallery Presents: D Young V “The New Race” A solo Exhibition. (San Francisco, CA)

White Walls is pleased to present “The New Race,” new works by D Young V. The show will be a culmination of the themes Young has been working on for several years, portions of which were shown at Gallery 3 in late 2010 and at White Walls in the summer of 2011. The opening reception will be Saturday, January 12th, from 7-11 pm, and the exhibition:
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Faile Going to the NYC Ballet (VIDEO)

Screenshot of Faile video below (© New York City Ballet and Faile)

Tickets go on sale Tuesday to see Faile at the New York City Ballet – a perfectly unconventional pairing for the pair of Patricks and a hugely inspirational way to start the year by marrying the arts. The Faile tower will be unveiled at Lincoln Center in a week, and each performance of the ballet will leave you with an original piece of Faile in your hands.

Screenshot of Faile video below (© New York City Ballet and Faile)

The best part from our perspective is the very reasonable ticket price that will allow Street Art fans who have followed Faile for the last decade to have a great time at the ballet and see the art show together.

Tickets go on sale on Tuesday, January 8 at 12pm noon. For more information on New York City Ballet’s Art Series click here.

FAILE’s site is here.  Also L Magazine has an opportunity for you to win free tickets here.

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Entes Y Pesimo On The Hills of Lima

Peruvian Street Artists Entes y Pesimo collaborated with the Alegrarte Festival in Lima, Peru recently to bring color and art to an otherwise barren landscape on the hills of Lima. So much of the current building that spread across the sides of hills in the last two decades has been characterized as a veritable architectural chaos, especially in zones where poorer people live.

Entes y Pesimo really enlivened some of this neighborhood with their recent murals. The bright and cheerful colors of the one-story houses may make these mountains look attractive from a distance, but the daily life is very difficult.

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Alegrarte)

“The festival takes place in very economically devastated and crowded areas where many are eager to leave,” says Entes, “For us, it’s purely a way to give a social support; to give color to a very grey area outside of town.”

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Alegrarte)

Pesimo talks about the people who live here and why they participated, “These people represent the engine of our capital – that’s why we fully engaged ourselves in the project.  We were only interested in giving color and joy to the families who traverse these hills every day.”

While the colors are bright, thematically the images depict a people who are submerged in water that comes up to their necks. It doesn’t take a master analyst to infer that Entes y Pesimo are painting their countrymen and women as people awash in a struggle with the perils of very hard economic and social challenges.

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Alegrarte)

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Entes y Pesimo)

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Entes y Pesimo)

Entes y Pesimo. Lima, Peru outskirts. (photo courtesy © Entes y Pesimo)

Entes in Miami 2012. (photo courtesy © Entes y Pesimo)

 

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Images of the Week 01.06.13

Here’s our first collection for 2013 from BSA’s ongoing interview with the street, this week featuring 907, Smells, Bast, Bunny M, Captain Baby, Droid, Enzo & Nio, Jilly Ballistic, Mr. Toll, Paolo Pivi, Shin Shin, and The Migra.

Top image from the current installation by Paola Pivi at the High Line Park in NYC. Untitled (zebras) 2003. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Shin Shin (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Mr. Toll double billing. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Droid 907, Smells (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hey Charlie, need a light? Enzo & Nio (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The Migra (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The Migra. Detail. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Jilly Ballistic (Iphone photo © Jaime Rojo)

Captain Baby (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Whoops, got a little on my bike. Dang. Bast (photo © Jaime Rojo)

bunny M (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Artist Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Untitled. 6th Avenue subway tunnel L train. Manhattan, January 04-13 (Iphone photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Blanco Freezes Street Art to Wall in Mongolia at -25 Degrees

Blanco Freezes Street Art to Wall in Mongolia at -25 Degrees

New Yorkers are now complaining bitterly about the cold January weather because, well, it’s our job. In a city where opinions collide into each other daily about all topics like bumper cars at Coney Island, you can always get someone to complain about the weather, no matter the season.

Brooklyn native and Street Artist Blanco has you all beat with his first installation on a wall that uses only water – because that’s the only thing that works when the temperature is -25 degrees fahrenheit.

“Its currently -20F outside my ger,” he says as he refers to the house he is staying in as he talks to us from the the frigid lands he is visiting for a while. “The overnight low is expected to be -36F and this isn’t even bad yet.” Okay we get the point, sounds disgusting.

So what about that new wheat-paste he just made of his friend Nandia?

“Nandia”, Blanco in Mongolia (photo © Patrick Findler)

“Last week I did that experiment where you throw boiling water up in the air and it didn’t hit the ground because it froze into an icy mist in mid-air. It has not been above freezing here for about two months and it wont be above freezing again for a couple more,” he says.

“This makes it almost impossible to wheat-paste anything for about 4 months of the year. The paste will freeze to the surface of a wall before you can even get the paper on it. I have a couple pieces waiting for the spring. But I decided to try something new.”

“On New Years Day I froze a piece to a door using water instead of paste. It should stay there for a couple months until the thaw sets in. The climate will dictate the lifespan,” describes Blanco. Let us know when the crocuses are popping up and maybe we’ll come and take a look.

“Nandia”, Blanco in Mongolia (photo © Patrick Findler)

“Nandia”, Blanco in Mongolia (photo © Patrick Findler)

“Nandia”, Blanco in Mongolia (photo © Patrick Findler)

“Nandia”, Blanco in Mongolia (photo © Patrick Findler)

 

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BSA Film Friday 01.04.12

BSA Film Friday 01.04.12

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

Now screening: NYC in One Minute, Basquiat & Patti Astor At The Fun Gallery, and The Brooklyn Subway Circus.

NYC in One Minute

Basquiat & Patti Astor At The Fun Gallery – Classic Street Art

The Brooklyn Subway Circus

This cold January weather is so rough on the skin, yo! Gotta keep it moisturized and smooth.

Send us your submission and you might see it next week on BSA Film Friday!

FilmFriday at brooklynstreetart.com

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“All City – Street Art From Germany” Art Exhibition Featuring Luna Park and Lord Jim at The Goethe Institut – Chicago. (Chicago, IL)

All City – Street Art from Germany

With an introduction and Q+A by the photographer “Lord Jim”

Exhibition
Friday, January 11, 2013 at 6PM through Thursday, January 31, 2013
Goethe-Institut, 150 N. Michigan Ave. Suite 200, Chicago, IL
On the occasion of All City, a citywide Graffiti and Street Art initiative, launched by the National Museum of Mexican Art, the Goethe-Institut Chicago dedicates the month of January to Street Art in Germany. Stefan Kloo (* 1963) aka “Lord Jim” hails from Germany but has, together with his wife and two sons called Los Angeles his home for the past 25 years. As a collector and pop culture enthusiast he has been photographing the anomalies in the streets that would then be labeled Street Art in a concerted effort since 2005.
Luna Park is a Brooklyn-based street art and graffiti enthusiast, photographer and curator. She spends her free time exploring NYC’s decaying, post-industrial fringes in search of beauty in unexpected locations.
She is passionate about urban art and supportive of all creative endeavors to redefine public space.Her photographs have been exhibited in New York and Los Angeles and have appeared in publications such as the New York Times, Juxtapoz, TimeOutNewYork, Paper, as well as in leading street art books.
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The 2nd Annual Supersonic Electronic Invitational at Spoke Art Gallery. (San Francisco, CA)

The 2nd Annual Supersonic Electronic Invitational

January 3rd, 6pm-10pm

Spoke Art Gallery, San Francisco

Spoke Art is proud to present the 2nd Annual Supersonic Electronic Invitational art show at our San Francisco gallery location, debuting this Thursday evening, January 3rd.

Following last year’s wildly successful showing of contemporary art hand chosen by the influential art and Tumblr tastemaker Zach Tutor, the curator returns to Spoke Art for the second year in a row to present a survey of his favorite young contemporary artists.

“The 32 artists in this years Supersonic Electronic Invitational were chosen not only for their outstanding ability to create dynamic art but also for their position as innovators at the forefront of a generation of artists. Artists whose lives have been saturated with visual ephemera and who have had access to endless amounts of inspiration via the Internet.”

https://www.facebook.com/events/135867639904130/

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FAILE and New York City Ballet Art Series present Les BALLETS de FAILE (Manhattan, NYC)

New York City Ballet is launching the NYCB Art Series, which will commission contemporary artists to create original works of art inspired by our unique energy, spectacular dancers, and one-of-a-kind repertory of ballets. New York City Ballet has worked with leading and emerging artists throughout the Company’s history — luminaries like Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, and Julian Schnabel. We are proud to continue this tradition by partnering with Brooklyn-based artists FAILE for the inaugural year of Art Series.

http://www.nycballet.com/artseries

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BSA Covers the Globe, Top Stories with HuffPost in ’12

BSA is not just Brooklyn, you know. Last year we brought you new Street Art from Atlanta, Arizona, Baltimore, Berlin, Boston, Bronx, Brooklyn, Brisbane, Bristol, Costa Rica, Chicago, China, Dominican Republic, The Gambia, Guatemala, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Istanbul, Italy, Jamaica, Johannesburg, Kenya, Los Angeles, London, Mexico City, Miami, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Norway, NYC, Palestine, Panama, Paris, Perth, Queens, Reno, Spain, South Korea, Sweden, and Trinidad. And that is a partial, incomplete list. Remember that the next time someone says we cover just Brooklyn and New York. Not quite.

Also while we were surveying what we did in 2012, we were curious to see which were the top stories we covered for the Huffington Post, measured by hits, social sharing, and emails sent to us. Here are the top stories you liked the most of the 44 we cross-published with Huffington Post Arts & Culture in 2012. (A complete list at the end of the posting)

Baltimore Opens Its Walls To Street Art

 

MOMO. Open Walls Baltimore 2012. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Atlanta Hosts First All Female Street Art Conference 

Neuzz (photo © Wil Hughes)

OS Gemeos And “The Giant Of Boston” 

Os Gemeos “The Giant of Boston” at the Rose Kennedy Greenway at Dewey Square, Boston. This side of the van was with Graffiti Artist Rize. (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

(VIDEO) 2012 Street Art Images of the Year from BSA 

Slideshow cover image of Vinz on the streets of Brooklyn (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Mexico City: High Art in Thin Air

Escif (photo © courtesy of All City Canvas)

UFO Crashes at Brooklyn Academy of Music

UFO 907 and William Thomas Porter (photo © Jaime Rojo)

‘See No Evil’ in Bristol Brings Thousands to the Streets 

El Mac. (photo © Ian Cox 2012)

What’s New in Bushwick: A Quick Street Art Survey 

QRST in the wild. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Sex In The City: Street Art That is NSFW

Anthony Lister in NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

NUART 2012: International Street Art Catalysts in Norway 

Ben Eine (photo © Ian Cox)

Springtime in Paris : Une Petite Revue of New Street Art

David Shillinglaw and Ben Slow (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Pulling Strings in Berlin; “Heinrich” The Public Marionette

Various & Gould “Heinrich” (photo © Lucky Cat)

“Poorhouse for the Rich” Revitalized by the Arts

Adam Parker Smith. “I Lost Of My Money In The Great Depression And All I Got Was This Room”, 2012. Installation in progress in collaboration with Wave Hill. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Here is the complete list of BSA / Huffington Post pieces for 2012

 

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Looking Ahead at 2013

 Huffington iPad Magazine Features BSA

Our new essay appearing in Huffington Magazine was just published December 30, 2012 where BSA takes a look at the new developments on the street in 2012 and makes some predictions about 2013. We’re honored to be in this new edition (their 30th issue) and psyched to share some of it here with you. If you have an iPad, you can download Huffington for free along with this issue right now here.

The Year Behind and the Year Ahead 2012/13

2012 was an exciting year for Street Art around the globe as it continued to climb into the consciousness of the mainstream with phone apps, museum exhibitions, public panels and workshops, street tours, auctions, gallery shows, and an increased recognition, if not a full-body bear hug by cities with street art festivals. Rooted in an urban aerosol tradition that comingled the concepts of outlaw with public art while many of today’s Street Artists were children, this is clearly not your fathers’ graffiti.

 

Street Art today is following an explosive and almost organic route for creative expression that is being fueled by the ubiquitous capturing and sharing by handheld devices across personal networks instantly. Because of this spawning and regeneration at this intersection of tangible, virtual, and eye candy, we continue to say that Street Art is now the first worldwide peoples art movement in history.  No admission is charged, no gatekeepers are obeyed, anyone participates, and everyone is a critic.

 

Through hundreds of interviews and postings, and thousands of photos published, we have had the opportunity to take the pulse of the street while it’s big heart was beating hard and it’s big mouth was talking loud. There is a new Street Artist on the scene almost daily at this point (some with press releases) and their styles and abilities are in continuous flux. Much of the work today can be said to take as many cues from formal art training and Western art history as it does from pop, commercial, and sort of “traditional” graffiti-skater-punk-hiphop cultural influences.

To help define 2012, we would say that over the last couple of years we’ve seen a diversion from the pop-irony and repetitive replication of the 2010s variety of Street Art. With hand painting and wheat-pasting there has been a renewed interest in one-off, highly labor-intensive storytelling that can only be described as D.I.Y.  In 2012 we saw an increasing “hybridism” of graffiti and Street Art styles in completely surprising and often successful ways; a sort of visual détente declared between the two, now more intertwined. This hybridism could also be due to collaboration that often takes place on the street and the fact that street work by nature regards its venue as laboratory; a sketchbook for trying out new ideas where the pressure for perfection is not as high as, say, a gallery show.

As ever, we saw bodies exposed and a range of emotion expressed, but this year we noticed a thick swelling of sexual themes and sensual depictions, surprising because of the (duh) public nature of the work – and because it sparks so little outrage or censoring as it competes with advertising that is always pushing the envelope. Ironically, one of our photo essays this year contained so many blatantly sexual works found on the public street that we had to label the posting as NSFW. (Sex In The City: Street Art That is NSFW)

Finally, and most significantly for the formalists, we saw a sizeable number of artists working abstractly – embracing color, pattern, geometry, and grand scale simultaneously. Almost overnight, the work is the signature, and the signature is the work in these eye-popping asymetric vibrations that marry the clarity of a modern 20th mid-century with the irrational colorful explosions of the disco hippies. We were so blown away by this non-figurative, non-tagged cacophony we mounted our own small show called Geometricks this fall in New York, while unbeknownst to us a larger and similar show called Graffuturism was being culled by very like-minded observers of the street in LA.

For 2013 we’re forecasting more interest in sharing this digital eye-candy, a greater inclusion of influences, the further growth of commercialism, and a regular parade of Street Artists marching into galleries, museums, and private collections.

Periodically over the last decade or so we have heard someone declaring to have discovered the signpost for the Death Of Street Art, but they have ejaculated their pronouncement prematurely. Every year of this century has marked an expansion, and it seems to take on more life and languages as it reinvents itself.  Undoubtedly there is an ebb and flow for all art movements and we have seen a fair amount of regurgitation and derivative work out there, but the practice of Street Art, or whatever it is called next year in New York, London, LA, Paris, Miami, Barcelona, Rio de Janeiro, Mexico City, Johannesburg, and a hundred more cities, continues to capture the interest and imagination of new fans and practitioners every week.

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First published on Huffington Magazine,. Screenshots © Huffington Magazine, photos © Jaime Rojo. Huffington is available as an iPad app at the App Store

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