All posts tagged: Jaime Rojo

“Last Exit to Skewville” Emerges on a Brooklyn Wall

Brooklyn Street Artist Skewville, one of this city’s original sons, has been coaxing from his imagination a cityscape of intrigue and sly humor. With a bluntly cockeyed optimism tempered by the reality of kooks and freaks and madmen who run the streets and boardrooms in this city, over the past four days Ad Deville has been climbing and spraying and blocking out the giant chess game that is always at play.

After weeks of talking about where to take this piece called “Last Exit to Skewville”, the dude shows up with a piece of paper folded in half and a loose line sketch of the span of a bridge, chewing on the end of a pen. An amalgam of the bridges spanning the glittering and stormy East River, the pylons are two opposing chess players using the buildings of New York as chess pieces. As perspective is clarified above the river, a clunky cityscape emerges; a color punched rumbling blinking playground that calls you to jump across it’s rooftops and avoid falling.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-1Skewville; Saturday. At the begining there was a big red empty wall, a pen, and a folded piece of paper with the span of a bridge drawn on it. This photo literally captures the instant Ad Deville stepped off the curb to begin marking out the piece. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-2

Skewville. Saturday. The first line gets rolled out. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

With his hands and arms and buckets and and rollers and cans he paces the length, climbing up and down ladders, blocking out the sound of traffic cacophony behind him and stepping aside for rain bouts; hour by hour the shape of the cubist and blocky abstractions that make a vibrant and shadowed city start to pop from this bricked Brooklyn wall.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-3

Skewville. Sunday. The blueprint emerges with Brooklyn’s iconic water towers above. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-4

Skewville. Sunday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

At this rate, Skewvilles’ finer graphic elements will arrive right on time as the week ends. Coming soon – marauding crowds of cleverly dressed, smart and sinuous music and art fans will swarm like honey bees in the streets of Brooklyn’s Northside. With maps and photo snapping cellphones in hand, they’ll see the installations in the streets, the artists in their studios, and Beirut in McCarren Park.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-5

Skewville. Monday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Northside Open Studios, The Crest Fest 2011, and the Northside Music Festival – This is the new Brooklyn, much like the old Brooklyn, where neighbors coalesce and celebrate and intermingle and where Saturday Adam Deville of Skewville will commander a scissor lift lofted high above heads to put the finishing touches on this ode to Brooklyn and New York and (dare we say it) his masterpiece.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-6

Skewville. Monday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-7

Skewville. Monday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-14

Skewville. Tuesday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-8

Skewville. Tuesday is for color (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-15

Skewville. Like any artist who knows that stretching is necessary for growth, Tuesday is the day Skewville extends his vocabulary with new untried color – an unusual addition carefully approached. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-12

Skewville. Blue Tuesday (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-10

Skewville scales bricks in this neighborhood now jolted with scaffolding and high-rising blocks of glass (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-9

Skewville. Uniform waves lapping up the East River can easily be mistaken as the fins of sharks. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-11

“Last Exit to Skewville” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-13

Skewville. Tuesday is for color (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-superior-wall-Northside-open-studios-06-11-web-16

Skewville. The city pops. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

With the generous support from local family owned Crest Hardware Store (home of Crest Fest 2011) and Montana Colors, this project is possible.

Please come to the launch party too – BSA AND CREST FEST host the Northside Open Studios Launch Party Saturday Night

at The END in Greenpoint! Bands, Installations, and a Bikini Reading Series on the Roof.

Date: 18 Jun 2011
Time: 6:00 PM – 11:00 PM
Where: The End, Brooklyn
Event Details:
Co-celebrated with Crest Fest and Brooklyn Street Art, NOS Launch Party brings together an art exhibition of participating artists including a confessional box by Eva Navon, Rooftop Bikini Reading Series by Boomslang, video screening curated by Sasha Summer, and an interactive rocking chair video & sound installation by Sara Sun. Music performances include Snowmine, Balun, Merrikans, Dinowalrus and Walrus Ghost.

MORE INFO AND MAP TO LAUNCH PARTY HERE
All proceeds benefit Northside Open Studios.

More info on “Last Exit to Skewville” HERE

Read more

Coney Island’s New Attractions: Ephameron, Veng, Overunder, ND’A and Radical!

Arts impresario Keith Schweitzer gives famed and storied Coney Island in Brooklyn a boost of carney charm with his newly curated construction wall collection painted by colorful characters Over Under, N’DA, Radical!, Veng, and Ephemeron.

brooklyn-street-art-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-12Overunder’s welcoming sign on Bowery St. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

As Coney Island undergoes a slick redevelopment that some worry will zap it’s old world quixotic quirkiness, this motley crew of Street Artists regale the area with a sense of the fantastical unreality that has always permeated this salaciously savory and seedy amusement park.

brooklyn-street-art-radical-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-10

Radical! (photo © Jaime Rojo)

With thoughts of curvaceous mermaids, scream-inducing rides, fun house mirrors, obnoxious winking barkers, and a hot sweaty kiss behind a tent curtain all swirling through your mind, one can easily appreciate this new free associating imagery that jumps and undulates along  oceanic walls.

brooklyn-street-art-nda-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-11

ND’A (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“Under the Boardwalk” – N’DA makes reference here to lyrics from the song made famous by The Drifters, released in June 1964. Here’s the original for you to listen to as you scroll through the rest of these images from the boardwalk.

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-5

Overunder and Veng of Robots Will Kill painted this 211 foot wall on Stillwell Avenue (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-6

Overunder and Veng of RWK. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-4

Overunder and Veng of RWK ‘s 211 foot wall on Stillwell avenue (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-7

Overunder and Veng of RWK. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-3

Overunder and Veng of RWK.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-8

Overunder and Veng. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-1

Overunder and Veng of RWK . (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-2

Overunder sets the windows and bird-planes free (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-overunder-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-9

Overunder and Veng. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-ephameron-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-13

Ephameron’s wall on Surf Avenue (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-ephameron-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-15

Refreshing drinks and reveries of schools of fish swimming through your memories on Surf Avenue. Ephameron. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-ephameron-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-16

Before a wall of blue, men in blue keep a watchful eye on Surf Avenue. Ephameron. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-ephameron-jaime-rojo-coney-island-06-11-web-14

Ephameron’s wall on Surf Avenue (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Read more

A Visit to La Biennale Di Venezia 2011

ILLUMInazioni – ILLUMInations, la Biennale di Venezia

54th International Art Exhibition

Writer Lea Schleiffenbaum was recently in Venice for the Biennial and she kept an eye out for Street Art for us, but quickly discovered the streets were under water.  With art from 89 countries, however, she found the city to be rich with spectacle and possibility.

by Lea Schleiffenbaum for BSA.

brooklyn-street-art-Lea Schleiffenbaum-venice-beinnale-2011-the Golden-Lion-web

Installing The Golden Lion (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

Everything takes a bit longer in Venice. The small, north-Italian city is car-free, the only modes of transportation are so-called Vaporettos—boat-buses—or water taxis, both hard to find and slow. Walking is usually the fastest solution, as long as one does not get lost in the city’s maze of canals and narrow alleyways. I arrive at three in the afternoon—I am here to attend the opening of ILLUMInazioni – ILLUMInations, the 54th Venice Biennial—by the time I get to the apartment I am staying in, it is five. Getting lost or helping others trying to find their way is almost part of the Biennial experience. The best thing to do is to let go, adjust to Venice time, wander, and allow one self to be surprised. In the end getting lost might not be the worst; from the months of June to November every corner, every piazza, and every palace in Venice might hide another national contribution, a Pavilion, or a small exhibition.

brooklyn-street-art-Lea Schleiffenbaum-venice-beinnale-2011-US Pavilion-Allora-Calzadilla, performance-outside-web

US Pavilion. Allora and Calzadilla performance outside (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

This year’s Biennale is curated by Bice Curinger, director of the Kunsthaus in Zurich and founder of the contemporary art publication Parkett. With ILLUMInazioni – ILLUMInations the Swiss curator set out to explore contemporary art for its inner essence. “Popularization,” she warns, “should not be at the expense of complexity.” Following such rather elitist ambitions in search of value, self-reflectivity, and depth, Curinger turned the 54th Venice Biennial into a serious, well-organized, but rather sober exhibition.  Aiming to connect contemporary art with its pre-modern routs, she decided to include three paintings by old master Tintoretto, the painter of light. The masterpieces are hung in the first room of the Central Pavilion in the Giardini, following Philippe Parreno’s light installation Marque. The exhibition continues with big names, including works by Seth Price, Christopher Wool, Sigmar Polke, and Cindy Sherman. On display are high quality works by high quality artists. Everything fits; nothing is too crazy, nothing very surprising.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-copyright-Lea-Lea-Schleiffenbaum-Central-Pavilion-Giardini-frontal-view

A steady stream of attendees at the Central Pavilion in the Giardini (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

My slight disappointment with the Central Pavilion is softened by a visit to the Arsenale, the second venue curated by Curinger. The pace here is good. Curinger takes her viewers from large-scale installations, to smaller more intimate sculptures, paintings, and photographs. Monica Bonvicini is followed by Klara Liden, Rosmarin Trockel, and Urs Fischer whose candle wax replica of Giambologna’s famous sculpture The Rape of the Sabine Women will slowly burn down as the exhibition continues. Video work interrupts the general flow of the show in regular intervals, giving the viewer a chance to stand still for a moment and watch. Christian Marclay’s wonderful film The Clock stands out especially. Three days later I hear he won the Golden Lion for best artwork—which he fully deserves.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-copyright-christian-Marclay-clock-june2011

Promotional still from “The Clock” by Christian Marclay

By far the most interesting concept Curinger introduced to this year’s Biennale is the so-called Para-Pavilion: Pavilions created by artists for artists. It is great to see artists set their work into a dialogue with other artists and cultures. Young Chinese artist Song Dong for example, collected one hundred old doors in Beijing and reconfigured them in Venice inviting African-French artist Yto Barrada, and British artist Ryan Gander to show their work within them. Eccentric as always, Austrian artist Franz West asked a total of 40 artists to fill his Para-Pavilion – a reproduction of his kitchen in Vienna – among them Mike Kelley, Sarah Lucas, Josh Smith, and Anselm Reyle.

brooklyn-street-art-Lea Schleiffenbaum-venice-beinnale-2011-US- Pavilion-Calzadilla, performance-web

US Pavilion. Allora and Calzadilla performance inside (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

This year’s Golden Lion for best national Pavilion was awarded Germany, for its reconstruction of a stage set by artist and director Christoph Schlingensief. Last year, Christoph succumbed to a long fight against cancer. A Church of Fear vs. the Alien Within was the second part of a trilogy written by Schlingensief following his first round of chemotherapy. Sitting on church benches in a dark candle lit room, visitors become witnesses to an artist trying to deal with life, death, and illness. Video projections of decaying animals, war, and fight sceneries are occasionally accompanied by a Wagner symphony; sometimes the voice of a woman reads aloud from the transcript of the play. It is hard to settle back into Biennial mode after such an intense and engaging installation.

The US is represented by Allora and Calzadilla. Working with former Olympic Athletes that execute choreographed performances on old US airway seats and upside down tanks, the Cuban-American artist duo questions heroic gestures and national self-presentation. Just like the Olympic games, international biennials swing somewhere in between competitive performance and peaceful encounter. Thomas Hirschhorn transformed the Swiss Pavilion into a vibrating Gesamtkunstwerk made of aluminum foil, old magazines, cardboard, and ear sticks. The Crystal of Resistance is a very physical, almost organic installation. Asking what art can do, how it can change the status quo, Hirschhorn engages his viewers in questions of politics, aesthetics, and transience. Hany Armanious’ subtle yet beautiful sculptural installations in the Australian Pavilion present a nice contrast to the many large-scale installations and performance pieces. Armanious casts everyday objects to reconfigure them in poetic assemblages. The French Pavilion stands right in front of the Australian Pavilion, and this year it stars Christian Boltanski, who deals with birthrates, death, and arbitrariness. This year’s choice for the Polish Pavilion has caused quite a bit of turmoil. Rather than choose a local Polish artist, the commissioners invited Israeli artist Yael Bartana to represent the country. Under the title …and Europe will be stunned, the young artist shows a film trilogy that asks Polish-Jews from all over the world to return to their country of origin, which needs them.

brooklyn-street-art-Lea Schleiffenbaum-venice-beinnale-2011-Arsenale- Klara-Liden- Trash-cans-web

Arsenale. Klara Liden Trashcans (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

A total of 89 countries are represented in this year’s Biennial, the most of any Biennial so far. Those who don’t have a pavilion in the Giardini or the Arsenale are scattered across the city in one of Venice’s grand houses or palaces. Political statements are followed by aesthetic expressions, rebellious actions by poetic gestures. Of course, Venice is ridiculous, over the top, an incorporation of art-world glam and spectacle. But in between getting lost, queuing, and meeting old friends and acquaintances, one inevitably ends up discovering some previously unknown artists, and sees new work of already loved ones. In the end the visit is always worth it.

~ Lea Schleiffenbaum

brooklyn-street-art-Lea Schleiffenbaum-venice-beinnale-2011-web

Venice (photo © Lea Schleiffenbaum)

ILLUMInazioni – ILLUMInations, la Biennale di Venezia, 54th International Art Exhibition,

June 4th – November 27th 2011

Read more
Images of the Week 06.12.11

Images of the Week 06.12.11

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010

Our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring 130, BAST, Dark Clouds, David Flores, Enzo & Nio, Mare 139, Skewville, Twenty, and Veng.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-bast-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-10Skewville and Bast did this new Brooklyn boom box for Bushwick Open Studios last week (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-9

And this week Skewville was picked as a clue for the “Great Urban Race” a marathon-cum-treasure-hunt dress up in a costume and jog through New York event. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Last-Exit-to-Brooklyn-BSA-Presents-Graphic-smallerSpeaking of Skewville, if you are in Brooklyn next weekend for Northside Open Studios and the Crest Fest 2011 and the Northside Music Festival be sure to see the brand new giant 100 foot Skewville wall unveiling in Williamsburg and come to the afterparty thrown by NOS, Crest and BSA in Greepoint. We’ll be sending out a big announcement about all the street artists involved this year (including some surprises) – so get on our newsletter and we’ll be sure to send you an invite. Great Street Art in Brooklyn!

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-bast-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-11

Skewville and Bast from a slightly different angle. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-bast-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Looks like Bast tried his hand with the fire extinguisher (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-mare139-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-8

Well known graffiti artist Mare 139 created this sculpture for El Museo’s Bienal: The (S) Files 2011 at El Museo del Barrio. This window installation is right across the street from MOMA (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-mare139-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-7

Mare 139 entry for El Museo’s Bienal: The (S) Files 2011 at El Museo del Barrio. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-dark-clouds-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Dark Clouds (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-carlos-gonzalez-david-flores-la-1-web

David Flores work in progress in Los Angeles. (photo © Carlos Gonzalez)

brooklyn-street-art-carlos-gonzalez-david-flores-la-2-web

David Flores in LA just completed this piece paying homage to a rebel. With good cause. (photo © Carlos Gonzalez)

brooklyn-street-art-130-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

130 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-AM-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-6

AM (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-memo-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

This sticker reminds us of Kara Walker work. We are not sure if the MEMO tag was an original part of the work (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-enzo-nio-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Enzo & Nio continue with their series of Girls and Guns (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknow-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-1

Pardon me, I seem to have something stuck in my eye. Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-2

An unknown artist tried to fend the mini heat wave this week by process of  sublimation (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-4

An angry Mr. Potato head type. Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-20

A teaming mass of people during the one-day sale at Macy’s? Constituents at Representative Anthony Weiner’s office getting ready to give him a piece of their minds about his Sexting? The crowd getting off the roller coaster at Coney Island? This unknown street artist hand draws dozens of faces on steno pads and then wheat paste them together on walls.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-carlos-gonzalez-twenty-la-web

Street Artist 2wenty in Los Angeles at night thanks to Carlos Gonzales. (photo © Carlos Gonzalez)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-14

Hey, why the long face? Veng of RWK continues to work on the Vandevoort Place wall in Bushwick. More photos of the work still in progress below (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-16

Veng RWK (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-17

Veng RWK (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-18

Veng and the amazing technicolor dreamcoat. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-veng-rwk-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-19

Veng RWK (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Untitled. Photo © Jaime Rojo

Read more

Fun Friday 06.10.11

Fun-Friday

Hey, Where is COST At?

Looks like he’s ready to stage a comeback. Ellis G. shares with us the news that these new prints are H.O.T.   Dang. The big question of course is, how much do these cost?

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Cost-June-2011

http://papermonster.net/artist.php?artist=20 link to papermonster site to view prints.

http://blog.papermonster.net/posts/view/159/cost link to papermonster site to view blog post on COST.

Um, We Need a New Dance Craze

First submission “The SWAG Line”, which is very effective when done by two or more persons simultaneously.  The gymnasium action STARTS AT .49 seconds.

French Street Artist LUDO’s sculpture “The Cacktus”

Now, is that nice? Don’t want to read too much into the possible symbolism here, but LUDO may have some anger issues he’s working out in this new sculpture project.

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-cacktus_sculpture

Says the artist: “Back from Zurich and a lot of works on paper, I wanted to spend more time in the studio to focus on a (almost) new technique for my pieces. 3 years after the first little sculpted Gunflower, I am very happy with this new series of sculptures called “The Cacktus.” ~ LUDO

Learn more at the artist’s site http://www.thisisludo.com/

BAST: It’s What’s For Lunch

Trying to figure out what to pack for your picnic in the hazardous waste industrial park today?  Here’s a delicious option  from the blog of BAST. See brand new stuff he posted on his blog yesterday here http://bastny.blogspot.com/

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Bast-June-2011-armani+3

Yard Work Episode: 7

Deep inside suburban New Jersey, Snow and Joe Iurato rock a back yard.

Street Art Shows Its Softer Side in Canarsie, BK

Yo, we know ya’ll are hard beeaatches because you are STREET, right? Don’t front. And yet, Abe Lincoln Jr. shares this project with the BSA fam that makes everybody think you may not be the ostracized marginalized feral cats you pose as – Curated by the Love Movement, a handful of mostly New York Street Artists got together and painted big pieces to be permanently installed in a high school in the Carnarsie section of Brooklyn. Participating artists who gave of their creative juices freely include Leon Reid, Michael Defeo, Skewville, TooFly, Thundercut, Morning Breath, and Abe Lincoln Jr.

JMR Somewhere in Texas, “Here is Now”

It’s Getting Hot Out Here…. I know it was 97 degrees in NYC yesterday and it’s only June. At least here you literally CAN take off ALL of your clothes if you want.

Yes, Texas. Where they fry eggs on the street for breakfast, it’s so hot. That’s where Street Artist JMR has a show called “Here is Now”. Right now we are here, but congrats to Jim.

brooklyn-street-art-WEB-jmr-jim-rizzi-1

JMR (photo © courtesy of the artist)


brooklyn-street-art-jmr-jim-rizzi-detail

JMR detail (photo © courtesy of the artist)

MCL Grand Gallery is located at 100 N. Charles Street, between Main and Church streets in Lewisville, Texas.



Read more

Jetsonorama on the Rez, ROA in Mexico (Video)

On the Navajo Reservation the built environment tends more toward the horizontal than say, Manhattan.  The similarity is that the man made structures for both are constructed on soil first belonging to the proud tribes of people we now call “Native Americans”.

brooklyn-street-art-jetsonorama-navajo-reservation-2 Mary Reese, by Jetsonorama (photo © courtesy of the artist)

Arizona based Street Artist Jetsonorama calls the Navajo Rez home and it is here where he plans most of his installations of wheat-pastes.  The flat lands and sun parched structures, sometimes crumbling back into the dust, provide a suitable open-air gallery for his photos.  The images are not somber, rather they are pulsing with life and possessing some urgency as if to remind you that these places are very alive and life stories are unfolding here.

These recent pieces are at the Cow Springs Trading Post. Judging from the scene, not much trading takes place there nowadays but Jetsonorama enlists its walls one more time to display the inhabitants of the area.

brooklyn-street-art-jetsonorama-navajo-reservation-1

“Deshaun”, Jetsonorama.  (photo © courtesy of the artist). “While installing at cow springs, we met a local youth named Deshaun.  His skateboard broke while he was showing us a trick.  We’re going to get him another one but he doesn’t know that yet.  Thanks for the love Deshaun” Jetsonorama

Brooklyn-Street-Art-740-Jetsonorama-bryson-with-owen

Bryson with his nephew Owen. Jetsonorama (photo © courtesy of the artist)

ROA EN MEXICO : Un Video Nuevo

Belgian Street Artist ROA visited Mexico in January (see “ROA’s Magic Naturalism”) and now we have a video of his large installation in Mexico City. Whether in the detritus of the big metropolis or the bucolic country landscape, his unique and now iconic images of dead and alive animals rendered in perfect monochrome palette are never out of tune with their surroundings. Perhaps one key element in achieving this sense of context is ROA’s insistence on using as subjects the animals native to the land where he is painting.

ROA was invited by the art promoter MAMUTT ARTE in collaboration with the Antique Toy Museum Mexico (MUJAM). In the country for 3 weeks, ROA left  about 15 murals in various locations like Mexico City, Guanajuato and Puebla and also collaborated with Mexican artists Saner & Sego.

Read more

Seeing Baltimore With Martha Cooper

The Photographer Takes You On a Tour Through Sowebo

Walking in the street with Martha Cooper is part anthropology, part history, part celebrity, and always discovery. Known for 40 years of documenting with a clear eye the emergence of graffiti and hip hop culture and for introducing it to a world audience, Ms. Cooper will tell you that her primary interest has always been to simply observe closely and let the images speak for themselves.

brooklyn-street-art-rams-doke-soviet-arek-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-28Mama Kat and White Mike welcome you to B-More. Mural by Rams, Doke, Soviet and Arik (photo © Jaime Rojo)

With a gentle frankness she repels your impulse to canonize her and her work and prefers to talk about the people she meets and her beloved hometown Baltimore, the site of her six-year photography project in the neighborhood of Sowebo. In much the same way her journalistic intuition led her to Brooklyn to meet graffiti king Dondi in the mid seventies, she has slowly earned the trust and friendship of many people in this neighborhood challenged by dire economics and the influence of drugs and guns.

brooklyn-street-art-rams-doke-soviet-arek-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-12

White Mike talks to Martha about the mural and some neighborhood news. Mural by Rams, Doke, Soviet and Arik (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Tailing Martha, and that’s what you do in an effort to keep up with the photographer with yellow shoelaces, you soon hear young voices calling “Picture Lady!”, “It’s Picture Lady!”. Across the street, up the block, on the stoops, clusters of folk cooling themselves turn their collective heads to see Martha with her heaving backpack clipping up the sidewalk toward them. The littlest among them come right up and bob back and forth talking with animation to her and she answers each question and inquiry about her camera and what she’s been up to.

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-3

Man and his best friend in the shade at the Sowebo festival (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Setting the backpack on the pavement under a tree, she unzips compartments and produces printed photos of the neighbors that she made since the last time she came by. With thanks and some storytelling and maybe another pose for the camera, Ms. Cooper smoothly departs up the block, scanning all sides of the street for more photo opportunities. Here we stop for a tour of a garden, there we see an abandoned lot converted to a grassy lawn-chaired community barbeque, and finally we are upon a large graffiti wall installation. “Welcome to Baltimore!” it cries and within moments some passersby greet her to talk about the piece and pose in front of their names on the rollcall – a tribute to some of the folks in the community.

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-8

Napping on a landing at the Sowebo festival (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Your day includes a street fair with crafts and bands and crabcakes and lemonade that Martha thinks is too watery and skateboarders with tattoos and piercings doing a double take and figuring out how to approach this familiar lady with a giant camera and chat for a moment with her. Many times. Graciously. Finally a small crowd gathers as she shoots a new box truck being painted on this leafy street, with youth piled up on stoops and even sitting on the black pavement of the street for a front row seat while a skateboarder does tricks for just the right flick. It’s community. It’s creativity. It’s Cooper.

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-6

A little girl with her puppy pose for Martha (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-4

Three lil’ sweet rascals hop like popcorn when they see the “Picture Lady” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-7

Action figure in a private garden (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-9

Martha and her cousin Sally take us on a hike over the railroad tracks to a skatepark. One of the riders falls, and Sally digs through her purse to find a band-aid, which he’s too cool to accept. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-2

An unusual site that is normal for Sowebo; A stable with this beloved cart pony owned by an “Arab”, the old-custom name for local street vendors who sell produce from horse-drawn carts. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-1

Tagged pigeons at the stables (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gaia-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-20

Street Artist Gaia in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gaia-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-14

Gaia in downtown Baltimore pays tribute to Martha Cooper by interpreting a photo of hers and pasting it on the street. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gaia-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-15

…upon close inspection, Martha approves (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-16

Gaia pays tribute to important people in the history of Baltimore’s downtown  with a retro version of work similar to that of French Street Artist JR. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-18

Gaia in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-19

Gaia in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-17

Unknown artist in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-21

Unknown artist in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-23

Nanook in downtown Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-aiko-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-5

Looks like AIKO was in Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-artist-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-25

As soon as artist Adam Stab got the news that Martha was in town he procured a small truck to paint, and waited until she arrived to begin. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-artist-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-24

A little lift helps the reach. Adam Stab (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-artist-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-26

Adam Stab (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-101-ksw-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-10

101 KSW in Baltimore (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-baltimore-05-11-web-27

The sky going back to NYC (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Read more

Ya’ll Are a Bunch of Fashion Chimps! New Print from Faile

5 PM Today!

Faile, the Brooklyn Based Street Art Collective just released a new print today on Paper Monster titled “Fashion Chimps NYC”.

From Paper Monster’s site: “This brand new print from the guys at Faile was a long time in the making, and it shows.  Based on a piece from their 2010 show at Perry Rubenstein Gallery, this 25 color screenprint is done in their recent “block” style which gives the illusion of its 3D sister from the show.”

brooklyn-street-art-faile-bedtime-stories-jaime-rojo-10-10-web-15

Faile “Fashion Chimps NYC”. Detail of piece in progress (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-faile-paper-monster-print-release

Faile “Fashion Chimps NYC” (photo courtesy of Paper Monster)

Go to Paper Monster to purchase this print by clicking on the link below:

http://papermonster.net/item.php?item=177

From our previous gallery visit with Faile:

The first New York gallery show in three years for Street Art collective Faile opens tomorrow at Rubenstein Gallery; a heavy graphic quilt of past, present, and “jimmer-jam”. With the 12-piece “Bedtime Stories”, Patrick and Patrick debut a densely packed wood painting show of story, texture and humor in a quite intimate setting.

Checking on progress as they finished final pieces last week, Brooklyn Street Art was treated to completed block tapestries and works in progress in their buoyantly buzzing studio. Long days have turned to long nights at the end of this parsing of pieces, and the output exceeds the storage…”

Click below to continue reading:

http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/theblog/?p=15660

Read more

Street Art Update: From Paris With Love

A city steeped in it’s own history and a deep respect for the cultural arts, Paris has also had a romance with New York – style graffiti since the early 1980s and has a thriving Street Art scene of it’s own making today.  In yet another example of institutional recognition of the contribution of graffiti and Street Art, the city hosted an exemplary tribute to graffiti history two years ago with “Graffiti, Born in the Streets,” an exhibition that took over the gallery space of the Fondazione Cartier. The popular show included the building’s façade and the surrounding garden as well as large scale photos of tags and pieces displayed in the Paris Metro on buses, and of course, trains.

Recently photographer Er1cBl41r did a small survey of the Street Art scene in Paris and shares some images here. In this collection we can see that the techniques of stencils (many one-color), wheatpastes, direct painting, illustration, and of course the glued tiles of local street artist Invader are in many locations around the city.

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-17-web

Banom (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-ema-Er1cBl41r-paris-web

Ema (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-2-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-8-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-12-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-fd-cru-Er1cBl41r-paris-web

A classic New York style graff truck from FD Cru (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-Er1cBl41r-paris-web

Ludo (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-invader-Er1cBl41r-paris-1-web

Invader (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-invader-Er1cBl41r-paris-13-web

Invader (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-invader-Er1cBl41r-paris-15-web

Invader meets Bullwinkle (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-14-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-popeye-Er1cBl41r-paris-web

Popeye (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-7-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-16-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-10-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

brooklyn-street-art-unknown-Er1cBl41r-paris-9w-web

Unknown (photo © Er1cBl41r)

Read more

BSA Debut: C215 Tells It Like It Is (Video)

French stencil artist C215 has just released this video, a stylized manifesto of sorts giving his view on his art, his work, and the current state of Street Art.

We are pleased he is participating in “Street Art Saved My Life: 39 New York Stories” this August in LA, and this short but powerful video shows why the stories behind C215’s very personal portraits are some of the most impactful and resilient on the street today.

“I prefer the poetry of small paintings instead of big walls, which are very popular right now in the graffiti scene, but a bit fascistic.”

Read more

Images of the Week 06.05.11

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010

Our weekly interview with the Streets, this week including images from New York, Detroit, and Amsterdam, and work by C215, Dan Sabau, El Sol 25, Gilf!, Goons, Karma, Nice-One, and Specter.

brooklyn-street-art-c215-jaime-rojo-06-11-webC215 (photo © Jaime Rojo) C215 says he has put more than 90 stencils in Williamsburg in the last three years…we just found another.

brooklyn-street-art-gilf-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-3

Street Artist Gilf! has been trying something new by adding to her stencils a bit of  toule, which is a departure from earlier work and a hard word to try and pronounce.

Gilf! (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gilf-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Gilf! (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gilf-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-4

Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-el-sol-25-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

El Sol 25 (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-Dan- Sabau-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-11

Dan Sabau (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-goons-jaime-rojo-06-11-web

Goons meditates and levitates (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-nice-one-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-7

Nice-One continues with his series of fantastic space ships  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-nice-one-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-8

Nice-One has suddenly appeared in many places in BK, including this large wall directly over a long running Lister (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-uknown-jaime-rojo-06-11-web-9

A portrait on a postal mailing sticker in marker, cut out. Unknown (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-specter-detrot-06-11-web-2

Specter on a flash trip to Detroit managed to paint this stark black portrait on a boarded up building (photo © Specter)

brooklyn-street-art-specter-detrot-06-11-web-1

Specter (photo © Specter)

brooklyn-street-art-karma-wei-wei-06-11-2-web

Karma in the Chinatown section of Amsterdam (photo © Courtesy of the artist)

brooklyn-street-art-karma-wei-wei-06-11-web-1

Karma in Amsterdam (photo © Courtesy of the artist)

Read more