All posts tagged: Bed Stuy

Images of the Week 10.14.12

This week we saw pumpkins piled at the corner deli, the Yanks pushing on toward the series, Streisand returning at 70 to sing again in Brooklyn, that Rasta MC goin’ hard over his stack of speakers outside the barbershop on a sunny cool day, Christopher Columbus as a giant  sculpture in somebody’s living room, and we can confirm that underground art parties are now moving to Bed Stuy, bypassing Bushwick.  Stranger things will undoubtedly keep happening because Halloween is on Wednesday this year; pretty much guaranteeing a solid week of sexy horror on the street because people won’t know when to party, and you’re going to see at least 3 mock boxing fights between two guys dressed up as Obama and Romney with gloves because the Presidential election is 11/6. The actual 2nd match-up of the candidates is this Tuesday in Long Island to debate. Are the Yankees playing that night?

So here’s our weekly interview with the street, an eclectic trip that takes us to Brooklyn, Paris, Baltimore, and Russia with Cern, Overunder, Philippe HÉRARD,  Lili Luciole,  Concrete Jungle,  Hot Tea,  Love Child, Dain, Sorta,  and Cynthia von Buhler.  We start of with this faux neighborhood painted by Concrete Jungle on a building in Vladivostok.

Concrete Jungle in Vladivostok, Russia. (photo © Concrete Jungle)

Concrete Jungle in Vladivostok, Russia. Detail. (photo © Concrete Jungle)

Concrete Jungle in Vladivostok, Russia. (photo © Concrete Jungle)

Concrete Jungle in Vladivostok, Russia. (photo © Concrete Jungle)

As the temperature is dropping to the 40s – 50s in October, it’s good there is some Hot Tea to keep the chill off.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hot Tea (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hot Tea (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Love Child (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Dain (photo © Jaime Rojo)

A new portrait of Bob Marley and Haile Selassie via SORTA in Baltimore (photo © SORTA)

WK Interact is scaling a wall, possibly breaking in. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Cynthia von Buhler “Speakeasy Dollhouse” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Cynthia von Buhler “Speakeasy Dollhouse” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Artist Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Cern. Detail of a fast moving truck. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Philippe HÉRARD in Paris. (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Philippe HÉRARD in Paris. (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Philippe HÉRARD in Paris. Detail. (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Philippe HÉRARD in Paris. (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Lili Luciole in Paris. (photo © Sandra Hoj)

Untitled (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Thank you to BSA Collaborator Sandra Hoj for her Parisian Report.

Thank you to Concrete Jungle for exclusive images for BSA of their sick mural in Vladivostok, Russia.

Thank you SORTA for keeping us up on Baltimore developments.

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Troy Lovegates AKA Other and Stinkfish Tonight at Brooklynite

Troy Lovegates AKA Other and Stinkfish Tonight at Brooklynite

OTHER Talks About His Process and His New Show, “Thinkers of This”

Found stories on found objects. The Canadian Street Artist named Troy Lovegates AKA Other is just as surprised as anyone by the faces and forms and shapes and patterns that come spilling out onto his wood panels and canvasses. A collector of images and experiences, he has a penchant for travel, a continuous movement, self propelling his eyes past a static world as a way of animating his own streaming movie without much narrative. His bendable figures, pungent geometric patterns, and somber faced old white men all get tumbled together in a clothes dryer with whatever else has collected in his consciousness, or subconscious. A hard wired natural trust of the intuitive sense leads him to his work, or his work to him, he doesn’t really know.

Troy Lovegates AKA Other. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: You’ve got a lot of stuff that is always spilling out of you in your work. Do these things mill around inside or do you discover them as they are coming out?

Other: I just do patches and chunks. I don’t really know what I’m doing until it is finished. Sometimes I have a basic concept but with this globby gushing stuff, I think it’s just cities and life and travel and all the junk that you go through – all mashed together. I’m a big fan of clutter. Maybe that’s why I travel so much because once you get me stopped, my space gets so full. I like clutter and repetition.

Troy Lovegates AKA Other. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The cities and countries he’s been in over the last couple of years also tumble out while he is showing BSA his new show, a double bill opening tonight at Brooklynite with Colombian Street Artist Stinkfish: he’s been wandering through Germany, Croatia, Romania, France, Spain, Catalonia, Italy, Argentina.  – A lot of it by bicycle, a lot of it on foot.

“I’m a walker and a biker and I’ll go out in the morning and I’ll walk till midnight. And I’m usually searching for something I can paint on – one of my next pieces. This work is “storytelling” and the stories happen while I’m searching. It’s my favorite way to produce art. Like you could maybe even find some paint, and an old part of a church, just an amazing old piece of wood. It’s stories that happen along the way, the work just comes to you,” says Other as he describes the process.

Troy Lovegates AKA Other. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The show hangs together with glee, an unusual arrangement of usual things. Other’s work is a blind awareness, a collecting of the faces and handbags and mop buckets and shapes and patterns that he has ingested. Then like the piles of belongings that clump together in after flood waters descend, Other ignores relative value or hierchy in the delivery of heads and plumbers pipes and patterns and alarm clocks.  On his daylong explorations through cities and towns and roads and streets he keeps his eyes open, looking into faces and into dark shadows and dilapidated buildings.

Brooklyn Street Art: And what about the heads? Who are these people?
Other: I like to collect old magazines. I get these pictures of famous people and then look in the back ground and say “Oh that guy would be great to paint” I was taking a lot of photos.

Brooklyn Street Art: People you meet on the street?
Other: I ask them, “Can I take a photo of you?”

Brooklyn Street Art: Do you ask them anything about themselves?
Other: No. I usually can see a lot.

Stinkfish. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Stinkfish. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Stinkfish in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Troy Lovegates AKA Other in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Troy Lovegates AKA Other in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Troy Lovegates AKA Other in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Troy Lovegates AKA Other in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Troy Lovegates AKA Other in the back yard. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

 

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Read more about the show “Thinkers of This” at Brooklynite Gallery HERE

Read our interview with Troy Lovegates AKA OTHER on Juxtapoz this summer HERE

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A Man’s World: A Carlito Brigante Image Essay on a BedStuy Barbershop

“The Head Hunters” visits for a bit with Brooklyn guys getting a cut.

Getting ready for the buzzers (photo © Carlito Brigante)
Getting ready for the buzzers (photo © Carlito Brigante)

Photographer Carlito Brigante spent an hour shooting pics and talking with the proprietor and customers in a barbershop in Brooklyn recently. With his audio and images he created a brief multi-media photo essay with Charles Le Brigand .

From his short piece on the visit, Carlito says:

“Jason told me that whether in Bed-Stuy, North Florida or Brixton U.K, the ambiance in a barbershop is indistinguishable. A barbershop holds a key role in African-American culture. It is a community gathering place, a discursive space where you receive words on local doings and the latest rumors of the neighborhood. The barbershop is also a neutral place where men interact regardless of class, education, or occupation. Kids, adults, cops, hustlers, nearly everyone takes part in the casual conversations where the barber plays the very active role of moderator.”

Read all about The Head Hunters here:

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M-City Hits Queens – and collaborates with Gaia in Bed Stuy

The country is in the grip of a COLD SNAP!  Forecasters are predicting a wind chill of -50 degrees in the Dakotas tonight.

Good thing M-City has his orange pants!

Those insulated winterized dungarees kept M-City warm in December when he was doing a one-man factory-cityscape with Ad Hoc in Queens, and right now as he finishes a collaboration with Gaia in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn.  Here’s some pictures and comments from both installations and both Street Artists.

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This panorama shot shows the whole installation like it hasn’t been seen before. (courtesy the artist)

Brooklyn Street Art: How did you get involved with this project?
M-City:
I’m on holidays in NYC. I love to travel and paint in different places, so it’s good to be here and leave my work on the streets of NYC. I asked before my trip some friend about how to get some walls to paint. They found me this space via Ad Hoc Gallery. It took me three and a half days to do this wall with snow and really bad weather.

A view of M-City's installation under a bright December sky.

A view of M-City’s installation under a bright December sky.

In this thrilling animation, see the cog-wheel bull spouting steam through his exhaust-pipe horns!

In this thrilling animation, see the cog-wheel bull spouting steam through his exhaust-pipe horns!

Brooklyn Street Art: What is the inspiration behind the piece?
M-City:
It’s a story about the industrial city jungle. There are some factories that  look like an animal. I chose bulls and elephants. They are very strong like engines in factories. In the background it’s a city landscape and leaves. Of course as always in all my works everything is black and white.

Cogs, wheels, factories, stencils and a ladder.

Cogs, wheels, factories, stencils and a ladder.

Brooklyn Street Art: Is it hard to do this work in cold weather conditions?
M-City:
Not really, of course summer is much better to paint. In my country at this time is the same weather. If you use stencils, it’s only one problem … wind. If you use one it’s easy, but I use sometimes 100-200 stencils for one piece. And if the wind is coming you must have a lots hand to catch them all.

A school bus on the sidewalk so the kids can get a closer look at the M-City mural.

A school bus on the sidewalk so the kids can get a closer look at the M-City mural.

Brooklyn Street Art: What is your wish for 2010?
M-City: Nothing special, keep all good waves from 2009, and create more good waves in the new year…

In an echo of New York's industrial past - and 14th Street present - smoke stacks churning out pollution into the air in M-City's mural.

In an echo of New York’s industrial past – and 14th Street present – smoke stacks churning out pollution into the air in M-City’s mural.

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Last night in Brooklyn M-City and Gaia worked together on a collaboration, a city scape of hundreds of buildings with two large screaming starling heads emerging from the clutter – a wall scored by Brooklynite Gallery just for the installation.

During the roughly 6 hours in 25 degree weather, many people walking by stopped to say hello and ask questions about what the art was, how it was created, and if it had anything to do with the Martin Scorcese film that is happening a couple blocks away. Two spritely teen-age girls wanted to know if we were shooting a video, because, if so, they would like to be in it. One woman inquired about how she could get her work up on the wall sometime.  Two school boys asked about 30 questions in quick succession.  The questions kept everyone entertained and distracted from the cold, which caused toes and brains to freeze. Unfortunately, the source of electricity (a beauty shop) had to go home after their last hair-do, and the artists will have to finish the mural soon.

Dramatic action shot of Gaia under the glare of a projector!

Dramatic action shot of Gaia under the glare of a projector! (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

M-City and Gaia work on their collaborative mural before the sun goes down. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

M-City and Gaia work on their collaborative mural before the sun goes down. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: How many stencils did you use this time?
M-City: For this piece I used 3 sizes of buildings. About 50 of the small size, the medium size about 50, and the large size maybe 10 or 12. I don’t know how many stencils I have, I never count.  I probably have about 200 today.

M-City in Bed Stuy on a wall scored by Brooklynite Gallery (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

M-City in Bed Stuy on a wall scored by Brooklynite Gallery (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Are you very cold?
M-City:
No. For me, no. In Poland now it’s winter. It’s more cold than here.  It’s not a perfect time, but it’s okay. This is better for stencils because if it is too hot, the paint is sticky. And it is not windy, so I don’t need 20 hands to keep hold of all my stencils.

M-City rifles through the pile of stencils to create the cacophonic cityscape (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

M-City rifles through the pile of stencils to create the cacophonic cityscape (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Bird is the Word! Gaia labors on one of the feathered friends. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Bird is the Word! Gaia labors on one of the feathered friends. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

While M-City took a break to warm his hands on the projector light-bulb and block Gaia’s view, we asked Gaia a couple of questions:

Brooklyn Street Art: Tell me about this bird you are doing.

Gaia: I made this starling for a show in L.A. that’s opening this Friday. It’s about endangered species. So I decided it would be an interesting perspective to take a species that is, in fact, endangering other species. The starling is an invasive animal that ravages crops and out-competes. So this is a screaming starling head.  I’m going to do two.

As night takes over, the lights of the street (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

As night takes over, the lights of the projector draw more attention to Gaia’s work for passersby (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: When they scream, what does that signify?
Gaia:
It’s more just a frightening gesture.  Especially when I put two of them together it forms a tarantula, kind of scary, kind of tough.  People have told me that my most successful work is stuff that’s not effeminate.  And this spot is interesting to paint because it’s totally dilapidated but with the projector, no matter how textured or dis-assembled the surface is… it works.  It’s a pretty sh*tty looking building so once you cover it over with art work it looks better.

Old Skool Technology for New Skool Street Artist - Gaia's bird on a transparency (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Old Skool Technology for New Skool Street Artist – Gaia’s bird on a transparency (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: Well, there was a local minister that just stopped by who’s building a new church in the neighborhood, and stopped by to say “Thank you” and how happy he was that this art was going up.
Gaia: Yeah that is super dope, that is so awesome.  He seemed like a very nice guy.

To be continued - the beauty shop closed and pulled the plug - so Gaia and M-City will finish the mural soon. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

To be continued – the beauty shop closed and pulled the plug – so Gaia and M-City will finish the mural soon. (photo © Steven P. Harrington)

Brooklyn Street Art: This hot chocolate is not very good – they just dumped that Swiss Miss mix into this cup – it’s supposed to have half this much water.
Gaia:
It’s hot, that’s all that matters. You know it’s probably all at the bottom, you have to swirl it around.  (swings the cup around) Oh, yeah, that totally made a difference.  Actually, not that much of a difference.









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