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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Happy New Year From BSA

The Best, The Best, The Best to you and yours for 2013!

Here’s pure serendipity that we found on the street just as it started to snow near the edge of Central Park this week. Not often do you see a ballerina flying through the freezing air, right? Since she was a block of so from Carnegie Hall and not too far from Lincoln Center, maybe this is a just a daily activity for her to dance around in her pink satin slippers on the sidewalk.

Street Ballerina. Manhattan, December 2012 (iPhone photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Alice Pasquini Photographed by Jessica Stewart

Alice Pasquini Photographed by Jessica Stewart

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our twelfth and final nomination for the year comes from the proud mother of a photographer who writes in to nominate a photo by her daughter, Jessica Stewart, a dedicated Street Art fan and documentarian. It’s good to see how many people nominated loved ones and friends photos for this special series, and it feels perfect for the holiday spirit of generosity and compassion we all would like to espouse during the end of the year and the beginning of the next.  Who can forget the person who gave you encouragement and confidence while pursuing your goals?

Stewie is living in Hopkinton, Massachusetts and sends in this image of an Alice Paquini piece and tells us all  about her daughter, “Jessica has lived in Rome, Italy for the past 7 years and has recently published a book about her street art photos and the artists behind them.”


Alice Pasquini (photo © Jessica Stewart)

Visit Jessica’s Flickr page to see more photos of her work here.  And the book features a collection of images from the Rome Street Art scene. Check it out!

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A Special Note to all the BSA readers who wrote in and sent images of their favorite Street Art images this month. We are sincerely thankful for your nominations, and there were so many excellent and incredible images to choose from thanks to you. We tried to pick a cross section of images from different perspectives, and it was completely unscientific so please don’t take it personally if your image didn’t appear in one of the 12 spots. We value your participation, and we sincerely thank you for writing to us.

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Adam Parker Smith at Storefront Bushwick (BKLN)

Adam Parker Smith is an artist whose work mixes cultural critique, ontological trickery, and mordant fetishism to create works of humor, pathos, and irony. Underpinned by a knowing conceptual framework ranging across the media landscape, the work employs painting, sculpture, video, assemblage, and collage to create arresting tableaux and objects.
For More information Click here

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Os Gemeos Photographed by Geoff Hargadon

Os Gemeos Photographed by Geoff Hargadon

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our eleventh entry comes from photographer Geoff Hargadon and it was taken in Boston, Ma. This mural was nominated by Daniel LaHoda from Los Angeles, CA as one of the best of the year and we’re glad Geoff, one of the most enthusiastically deadpan Street Art supporters we know, was there to capture this shot on a green summer day.

Os Gemeos (photo © Geoff Hargadon)

The Brazilian Twins painted this huge mural as part of their first solo show at the ICA Museum in Boston, organized by Pedro Alonzo.

Daniel LaHoda is the founder of LA Freewalls Project in Los Angeles, CA.

Visit Geoff Hargadon’s Flickr page to see more photos of his work here.

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Mobstr Photographed by Ian Cox

Mobstr Photographed by Ian Cox

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our tenth entry comes from photographer Ian Cox and was taken at this year’s NUART Festival in Stavanger, Norway. This entry was nominated by Martyn Reed, founder of NUART, who waxes below about the photo and it’s taker.

“Ian Cox, fast becoming one of the scenes’ leading documentarians, captured this perfect shot of Mobstr’s piece for Nuart. Ian headed out during a relentless downpour and waited for his moment. For me, it captures so much of what is usually missed when documenting street works; its site specificity (The downhill sloping wall was a nightmare to source), how it’s not only seen but also “activated” by people passing by, its humour, the concept and how it allows a photographer to also add new layers of meaning.”

The initial pun is elevated to new levels when viewed through the lens of a remarkable photographer,” remarks Mr. Reed.

Mobstr (photo © Ian Cox)

Visit Ian Cox Flickr page to see more photos of his work here.

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Rime MSK Photographed by Oliver Correa

Rime MSK Photographed by Oliver Correa

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a great photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our ninth entry comes from photographer Oliver Correa and it was taken in the Wynwood Arts District of Miami during Art Basel 2012. Often the shot is about recording the art. The less featured view is the one that reveals the personal, even intimate relationship people can feel toward it on the street.

In Miami during Basel you’ll see many people posing hard with their crews in front of walls, and then you’ll see friends taking cellphone shots of each other, and couples, families…. all kinds of affinities are posed in front to remember that moment. This one from Oliver somehow goes a little deeper – giving you a sense of the warmth and connection people feel with art in the streets when it speaks to them. The RIME piece goes along the block on North Miami Avenue with a variety of faces and expressions, mimicing the party atmosphere and the multiple conversations taking place – ultimately it was one of the most engaging for many.

“The person in the photo is a friend I made wandering Wynwood,” says the photographer.

Rime MSK (photo © Oliver Correa)

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Ericailcane Photographed by Henrik Haven

Ericailcane Photographed by Henrik Haven


We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a great photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our eighth entry comes from photographer Henrik Haven, a mural by Ericailcane. The photo was taken in Grottaglie, Italy during the FAME Festival 2012.

“What a journey this has been!,” says Henrik, “I had such a good time in Grottaglie at this years Fame Festival. Tasty food, good coffee, great people, lots of sunshine and last but not least, I saw and photographed a bunch of excellent public art pieces in the streets of the town. I spent many days walking around the whole town to find most of the pieces, just like a treasure hunt.”

Ericailcane (photo © Henrik Haven)

Visit Henrik’s site to see more photos of his work here.

 

 

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Faile Photographed by Robin Pope

Faile Photographed by Robin Pope

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a great photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our seventh entry comes from photographer Robin Pope and it was nominated by Anne Trotman; a large image of a down-on-his-luck fella by Brooklyn collective Faile that says, “I Used to Be Worth Something.” The figure sits on a curb with his head in his hands and the New York skyline behind him, and it became one of the most photographed pieces this year – perhaps because the ever-more rough economy in New York has become so challenging and even frightening to average and poor New Yorkers.  Trotman says this image on Wythe Street, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn was taken “on one of the only days of snow in 2012.”

Faile “I Used to be Worth Something” (photo © Robin Pope)

For more Street Art shots and his other photography by Robin Pope visit his Flickr HERE.

 

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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Apexer Photographed by Jim Prigoff

Apexer Photographed by Jim Prigoff

We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a great photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our sixth entry comes from photographer, author, and lecturer James Prigoff, acclaimed for his extensive documenting of many aerosol art movements since he began shooting them worldwide in the 1960s. Not only do we dig his entry into our 12 Photos of ’12 because of it’s diverse, colorful, and celebratory nature, we’re honored because Jim doesn’t usually do this sort of thing.  “I have never sent a photo to any web site for publication and doubt that I will in the future. However, you fellows are doing such a diligent and excellent job in documenting the many forms of Graff and Street Art, that I decided to forward this very special piece of art,” he writes.

For his nomination, Prigoff chooses this 2012 piece by Apexer in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco.  Some photographers may dive in for a detail shot of this vibrant work, but Jim says, “I believe in photographing the art in context to its location, not just a detail that could be anywhere. “

Our sincere thanks to him and and we wish a very Merry Christmas to those who are celebrating it today.

APEXER (APEX-RICARDO RICHEY) in San Francisco, CA (copyright ©2012  James Prigoff, Sacramento)

“Apex has been painting meticulously drawn, very colorful 3-D Images for a number of years. An early one appeared in my co-authored book ‘Walls of Heritage – Walls of Pride – History of African American murals’. His approach was quite different from the very early work of Daim and Ernie. Each year the work has shown increased sophistication. This image is by far the most unusual of his work thus far. It was exciting to discover it, ” says Prigoff.

 

To see a list of books authored by James Prigoff, click here.

 

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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ECB Photographed by Joel Zimmer

ECB Photographed by Joel Zimmer


We’re counting down the last 12 days of 2012 with Street Art photos chosen by BSA readers. Each one was nominated because it has special meaning to a reader or is simply a great photograph from 2012 that they think is great. Our sincere thanks to everyone who shared their favorite images.

Our fifth entry comes from Joel Zimmer from NYC, who nominates this photo taken in Bushwick, Brooklyn in NYC. Many Street Art photographers these days like to experiment with their craft in addition to simply documenting someone elses, and we’re all in favor. Here Joel experiments and bends the planes of the wall to reach out to the viewer. Joel explains that this is a triple exposure of the ECB mural with an Over Under mural under it. He says he made the image “in camera” using a Yashica-A and Portra 400.

ECB, Overunder. (photo © Joel Zimmer)

Visit Joel Zimmer’s site to see more photos of his work here.

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Check out the BSA Images of 2012 video here.

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