All posts tagged: Jaime Rojo

Images of the Week 11.28.10

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010Our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring; Clown Soldier, K-Guy, Kenny Scharf, Shin Shin, Skewville, TipToe, and Wing

First NYC celebrated downtown artist, Street Artist, and Brooklyn resident Kenny Scharf. We have his first installed roll-down pieces in Chelsea that are part of his city wide project “The Street Gallery” with Anonymous Gallery and we have him in progress doing his large-scale mural on the Houston Street wall.

brooklyn-street-art-kenny-scharf-jaime-rojo-11-10-10-1-webKenny Scharf (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-kenny-scharf-jaime-rojo-11-10-10-5-webKenny Scharf (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-kenny-scharf-jaime-rojo-11-10-10-9-webKenny Scharf (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-kenny-scharf-jaime-rojo-11-10-11-webKenny Scharf at work on the Houston Street mural. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-kenny-scharf-jaime-rojo-11-10-10-8-webKenny Scharf (photo © Jaime Rojo)

British Street Artist K-Guy was recently in NYC for a show at the new Chelsea spot Indica Gallery, which is named after the original Indica Gallery in Mason’s Yard, London.  His new piece for Amnesty International is called “Blood on your Hands”, pointedly incriminating the masters of industry who profit from child labor and other inhumanity.

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K-Guy (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-shin-shin-clown-soldier-wing-jaime-rojo-11-10-webShin Shin, Wing and Clown Soldier (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Next it’s a brand new collaboration between Shin Shin and Wing. Both artists create a fantastic version of the natural world, insinuating themselves into Street Art milieus with still life compositions of  flowers and animals.

brooklyn-street-art-shin-shin-clown-soldier-wing-detail-jaime-rojo-11-10-webShin Shin and Wing detail (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shin Shin and Wing (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Shin Shin and Wing detail (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Tip Toe (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Finally TipToe pulled out a new colorful Minotaur and Brooklyn’s own Skewville got some glittery competition on the old wires.

brooklyn-street-art-skewville-jaime-rojo-11-10-webSkewville and Unknown Artist (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Fun Friday 11.26.10

Fun-Friday-black-fridayFun Friday

SKEWVILLE: “You Are Not in Kansas Anymore”

A quick home made video of Ad Deville suspiciously skirting the upper wall along an entire block in Bushwick during he and Ali Ha’s block party.  Now the news is that they are talking about taking the whole block for a sculpture garden. Hell yeah!  More public space for art? Whaddaya think?

Tara McPherson New Cheap Print “Searching for Penguins”

Check it out here:

tara mcpherson searching for penguins

Banksy!

That’s all you really have to say to get people excited these days. And today in London a new piece by the anonymous Darth Vader in a hoodie debuts at a group show called “Marks & Stencils”. It also features Greg Haberny, a very strong and prolific artist showing in Brooklyn for a few years now.

Marks

“Marks & Stencils” , 1 Berwick Street, London W1. Read more about the mysterious confluence of shows opening tonight at Nuart >>>

And check out this entertaining look at French Street Artist DRAN, who is also in the show. The video features graff and Street Art living in harmony.  Who says it can’t be done?

SACE Tribute on Houston Wall

“The ever-changing graffiti wall on East Houston Street took another turn Tuesday, with taggers covering the massive canvas with a tribute to a late Lower East Side artist.

Witnesses said a graffiti crew arrived at the wall, located at the corner of the Bowery, Tuesday morning and proceeded to cover the previous piece by street artist Barry McGee in large black letters spelling SACE — the tag name of artist Dash Snow, who died of an apparent drug overdose in 2009.”

SACE-WEB-Brooklyn-Street-Art-Copyright-Patrick-Hedlund
PHOTO CREDIT DNAinfo/Patrick Hedlund

GAIA

One of his recent pieces regarding public housing.  Interesting the directions that Street Art goes….

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Happy Thanksgiving From BSA

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-11-10-2A local pigeon takes in the autumn display on the street. Photo © Jaime Rojo

Happy Thanksgiving Everybody! Nothing like a big frozen bird sitting on a mountain of tubers to start off the festivities – and scenes like this are happening all over the place right now. Hey, do you know what sweet potatoes wear to go to sleep?

brooklyn-street-art-jaime-rojo-11-10-1Photo © Jaime Rojo

Their yammies, of course! Yes, that’s the kind of joke your uncle Fred is going to bore everybody with today when he’s getting in the way in the kitchen, dipping his finger into the pumpkin pie. Give him a beer and point him toward the TV.

Have a great day and hope you find something to be thankful for.

xx

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Ludo: Street Art In The Paris Metro

Street Artist Ludo plays with Parisian’s perceptions of commerce, art, and technology.

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-4-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

“The whole inspiration for this series is co-branding – but also nanotechnology: Nature transformed into pills of amphetamine,” says the artist.

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-5-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

Simple elegant silhouettes of acid green and grey glow garishly with fluorescence in a colorless sterile hallway. The repetition of uniform shape, line and hue are interrupted by biomorphic Franken-plants that invite the closer inspection of rushed metro riders.

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-1-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

Like his bus shelter signs above ground, these new pieces appropriate the cool omnipotent detachment of megabrands, making them just that much easier to ignore. The quantity unmeasured is what slips into the subconcious as people trample by. Ludo is refining his own brand of pleasing queasiness.

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-3-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-7-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

brooklyn-street-art-ludo-dyptich-8-10-11-webLudo (photo © Ludo)

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Dan Witz Preps Special Edition With Dripping Blood

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-4Dan Witz preparing special editions with blood while a friend in his painting checks her messages. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“The first thing I did of any note was in ’79.  The book really went through 2009 but it took an extra year to get it out. So it’s actually 31 years. Don’t tell anyone,” Dan Witz warns as he drips blood red paint gingerly across the front of 120 special edition linen bound copies of his new book. While his small muscular dog Sparky maniacally batters a red rubber toy, repeatedly bashing it on the floor, Dan talks about the today’s book signing and the hummingbirds that gave his career wings.

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-1Dan Witz (photo © Jaime Rojo)

One of the early practitioners of Street Art as we now know it, Mr. Witz points to his campaign of detailed small paintings of hummingbirds on the Lower East Side of Manhattan as his official start on the street, but reveals that smaller ad hoc projects preceded the avian arts.

“I did these assemblage things along the street where I would just find trash and line it up in little displays and leave them behind. I never really photographed it or thought of it as art really,” says Dan. What kind of trash was it? “Just little weird pieces of plastic or funny kinds of pieces of metal; Sort of urban flotsam. Like things you pick up and say, ‘What’s this weird shiny thing?’ – that kind of stuff.”

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-3Dan Witz (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The new bound collection by Ginko Press spans the following three decades, where Dan’s punk rebelliousness took a hammer to the intellectual stodginess of his formal art school training before our eyes. Well, maybe not in plain view exactly. Many of his street installations have been hidden just behind your blind spot, wittily, and more recently, uncomfortably.  But it’s all here in this collection, even if he feels that his route has been a bit haphazard.

“Everything I do – It’s fun in the beginning and then I figure it out and I hone it down to how I should do it and I hate it. That’s why my work always keeps changing – what I did three years ago doesn’t look like my work now because I figured it out and I couldn’t do it anymore. Like I could not do hummingbirds now because I’ve figured it out. I know how to paint hummingbirds,” he explains.

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-2 Dan Witz (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Is this periodic switching due to his intellectual curiosity being satisfied?  “I would put it another way. It’s like my attention span is zero and I just get so restless with whatever I do – which is bad for a career because there’s not a thing to identify with me. A lot of people stick with one kind of thing and I don’t know how they do that but I admire that because it’s very consistent and people know what they are getting.”

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-6An original Hummingbird from his “Birds of Manhattan” series. Acrylic on sheetrock. Dan Witz (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Self effacing modesty aside, his mastery of painting and light, combined with an ongoing study of art history and theory, has created a body of work over this time that stands, despite side trips and experimentation.

Brooklyn Street Art: Don’t you think that over a period of time all of your different elements create one story?

Dan Witz: Well that’s what the book is about. If you can stick with it for as long as I have I suppose that’s true.  I think when I was a kid and I was doing the hummingbirds I was sort of rebellious, I think it’s part of my being rebellious is not having a ‘package’, not having a brand that is marketable. And I don’t know what the fuck I’m rebelling against anymore. (laughs) It’s just I got set up that way and I just keep doing it. But I’m not doing it on purpose.  It is really fun for me. It’s fun to start up something new and get all nervous. Solve the problem, meet the challenge. That’s what keeps me from getting stale.

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Dan Witz (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: It sounds like it’s a way to keep yourself entertained too because of your self professed short attention span – so it looks like you’ve designed your life right now to keep yourself interested and engaged and entertained.

Dan Witz: Absolutely, the book is a whole new project and a whole new brain-teaser.

Brooklyn Street Art: Are you having fun?

Dan: Yes! And that’s important.

brooklyn-street-art-dan-witz-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-7Dan Witz in the “wild” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

If you are in New York tonight you can meet Dan in person and ask him to sign one of his special edition books.

To read more about Dan Witz book signing of the special, hand painted edition of his book “In Plain View”  at the Clic Gallery today go here: http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/theblog/?p=15929

To see more of Dan Witz work click here: http://www.danwitz.com/

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Images Of The Week 11.21.10

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Our Weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring; ASVP,  Burning Candy, Cake, Castro, Chris Stain, Clown Soldier, Deekers, DsCreet , Ellis G., Fumero, Futura ,Gaia ,Goya ,Hush , Imminent Disaster ,Infinity ,K-Guy , Kirby ,KRSNA ,OverUnder ,QRST ,Quel Beast ,Samson ,Showpaper ,Skewville , Sten & Lex ,Tek33 ,VUDU ,  and XAM

brooklyn-street-art-faile-bast-WEB-jaime-rojo-11-10-webphoto © Jaime Rojo

The block party in Bushwick provided by Factory Fresh Gallery and the app called All City turned out a number of new Brooklyn Street Art pieces on a block long installation, complete with friends, fans, and a taco stand. Included in the offering was this surprise collab with Faile and Bast, auspiciously appearing the morning of the event like a pre-Christmas gift wrapped in razor wire. The news of the piece travelled fast and while Ad Deville couldn’t find his red carpet, he did post a velvet rope to hold back the crowd. That didn’t stop Futura from climbing on top of his car to get the perfect shot.

brooklyn-street-art-WEB-futura-bast-faile-jaime-rojo-11-10-web1Futura takes a photo of the Bast and Faile collaboration at the Factory Fresh Block Party (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-faile-bast-detail-jaime-rojo-11-10-webBast and Faile detail © Photo © Jaime Rojo

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A box of chocolates from many of the newer Street Art confectioners; ASVP, Cake, Overunder, Quel Beast, Clown Soldier, Fumero, Krsna, QRST  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-cake-qrst-clown-soldier-overunder-fumero-asvp-jaime-rojo-11-10-webDetail Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-chris-stein-jaime-rojo-11-10-web Chris Stain busted out a new piece (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-gaia-samson-castro-jaime-rojo-11-10-web Gaia, Samson, Castro Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-imminent-disaster-goya-ellis-g-jaime-rojo-11-10-webImminent Disaster, Goya, Ellis G Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-kirby-mike-jaime-rojo-11-10-webBurning Candy, Tek33, Dscreet (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-deekers-jaime-rojo-11-10-webDeekers is hanging out on the corner watching the rest of the proceedings (photo © Jaime Rojo)

And here we move to a British invasion of sorts with Geishas and Primates from Hush and K-Guy respectively.  XAM has been installing some pretty cool looking bird houses around town equipped with LED lights on their porches that illuminate when the sun sets. Infinity and VUDU’s pieces for the Showpaper box project adds to the conversation on the street with a beaming signal tower atop the box.

brooklyn-street-art-k-guy-jaime-rojo-11-10-3-webK-Guy’s recent “Primates” piece, including this one that appears to be pretty fresh, have been appearing around Brooklyn suddenly. Apparently its meaning is reference to the growing perception of hypocrisy in the Catholic church, particularly as pertains to pedophilia coverups, its position on contraception, gay rights, among other issues.  brooklyn-street-art-k-guy-jaime-rojo-11-10-12-web

K-Guy (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-hush-jaime-rojo-11-10-9-webHush (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-hush-jaime-rojo-11-10-10-webHush (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-infinity-vudu-jaime-rojo-11-10-webInfinity and Vudu piece for “Community Serviced” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-infinity-vudu-detail-aime-rojo-11-10-webInfinity detail (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-xam-jaime-rojo-11-10-webXAM “CSD Dwelling Unit 1.6” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-xam-jaime-rojo-11-10-close-webClose up of the birdhouse by XAM  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

brooklyn-street-art-samson-sten-lex-jaime-rojo-11-10-webSamson, Sten & Lex (photo © Jaime Rojo)

And finally the 800 pound pink gorilla in the group, Samson from Albany, began his audacious cityscape project directly beside his hero/shero Sten & Lex. The neighbor next door liked it so much Samson will be back to continue the piece – which is part of a much grander scale piece on urban decay, development, and renewal that he hopes to stage in the future.

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Stencil of the Week 11.20.10

Stencil-Top-5

As chosen by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History Xbrooklyn-street-art-c215-stencil-history-x-web

C215 “MIrleft” From the show “Community Service” at Itinerrance. Photo courtesy of Itinerrance

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Andrea Michaelsson – Btoy “This City” Photo © Btoy

brooklyn-street-art-faile-stencil-history-x-webFaile Perry Rubenstein Gallery Photo © Lois Stavsky

brooklyn-street-art-Gaston-Lagaffe-franquin-stencil-history-x-webGaston Lagaffe (Franquin) Hamburg, Germany Photo © Liborius

brooklyn-street-art-finbar-stencil-history-x-webFinbar Nicole W – blue version Photo © Finbar

To see more of C215 work click here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/c215

To see more of Btoy work click here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/btoy

To see more of Finabar work click here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/dragonarmourycreative

To see more stencil visit: http://www.stencilhistoryx.com/

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C215: Show Pics of “Community Service”

Stencil Street Artist Hits Both Floors of Parisian Gallery

brooklyn-street-art-C215 in-action-credit-photo Roswitha-Guillemin-gallerie-Itinerrance-web

Last minute touches at “Community Service”. (photo © Roswitha Guillemin courtesy the gallery)

Last Friday C215 played host at Galerie Itinerrance as he debuted many new pieces across various surfaces using the stencil technique he is known for. His addition of color variations over the last year or so has opened a door into more possibilities for dimension and emotion in his portraits. Fans of the monochromatic style he established his name with were pleased to see the black/grey/white stencils also continue to capture his interest.

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C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

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C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215 Community-Service-vue accrochage-1-courtesy Galerie-Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215 Community-Service-vue accrochage-2-courtesy Galerie-Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215 Community Service-vue- de-vernissage-courtesy Galerie-Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215_Opera_courtesy Galerie-Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215_Renault-en- Amérique-du-Sud_courtesy-Galerie Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

brooklyn-street-art-C215_Prophet_courtesy Galerie-Itinerrance-web

C215 Photo Courtesy Galerie Itinerrance

The show is accompanying the release of a book of the same name “Community Service”, featuring photography by 12 artists behind the camera, an interview with Steven P. Harrington of Brooklyn Street Art (who also wrote the introduction), and a preface by Marc and Sara Schiller with Thierry Froger.  More on the book and show HERE.

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ROA Gifts A New Zoo to The City Of Los Angeles

Belgian-born Street Artist ROA is back in The US, this time on the West Coast. On the occasion of his debut solo show in Los Angeles presented by the indefatigable Andrew Hosner (of ThinkSpace) at the pop-up “New Puppy”, ROA has brought a modest zoo’s worth of wild friends.

Here are exclusive set-up pictures of ROA’s prep for the show.

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ROA Image Courtesy of Think Space Gallery

ROA’s animal kingdom contains singular images, realistically depicted with influence from fairy tales, biology books and urban decay. Using discarded materials (sometimes in new constructions) as his canvas in the white box setting, the surfaces can be rusted sheets of metal, abandoned cabinetry doors, discarded window panes and wooden planks. The materials lend context, dimension and texture while summoning old animal biology plates from veterinarian school books.

When he works on the street ROA paints large, sometimes even monumental portraits of birds of all kinds, rodents, squirrels, hogs, skunks and myriad animals that are often not in the graces of their fellow earth inhabitants: The Humans. All cans, this dude keeps true to his graff roots even as he perfects a style that lands him in the street art catalog.

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ROA Image Courtesy of Think Space Gallery

To the artist, these animals are survivors. “I think it is fascinating that certain animals really did not die out because of humanity but instead they use humanity to survive. I think it is interesting to see birds making nests in old buildings,” says ROA.

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ROA Image Courtesy of Think Space Gallery

As he told us on an interview when he was in Brooklyn for his solo show at Factory Fresh this year in May, difficult surfaces are an inspiration.  “I like when a wall, or an area, or a building tells a little bit of a story. It is sometimes really boring to paint on a wall that is just one color. It is always better to start from something that is interesting,” he explains. He likes to create “lenticulars”, rigid surfaces, geometrically organized, that play with perception and angles to bring a level of wit and discovery. Mostly monochromatic, his palette adds occasional vivid reds and blues to highlight the inner working of subjects.

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ROA Image Courtesy of Think Space Gallery

To experience ROA’s art, first hand, please visit the gallery if you are on the West Coast or go to the gallery site to see his new work. ROA’s show is currently on view at the pop-up shop space “New Puppy Gallery” located just outside downtown Los Angeles at 2808 Elm Street (at Cypress Ave).

http://www.thinkspacegallery.com/

If you are interested on reading more about ROA please click on the links below for our two part interview with him:

ROA Part I: http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/theblog/?p=10286

ROA Part II: http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/theblog/?p=10322

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Broken Crow, “When Trust Is the New Money”

Brooklyn-Street-Art-copyright-broken-crow-Oct2010

A neighborly nod to the Minneapolis Street Art duo Broken Crow for this successful indoor show, “When Trust Is the New Money” at The XY and Z Gallery in South Minneapolis. Now extended to November 30th, this is an opportunity to see a large indoor installation that evokes the mural work they usually do on the street, transforming the interior of the white box and enabling you to buy part of the mural directly off the wall.

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In an ongoing evolution of their stenciling realism style, John and Mike are again meditating on the preposterous value system that allows man to destroy the natural world with impunity, with a dose of gentle humor.  Their archetype animals depict integrity, puzzlement, and whimsy. Like many artists developing a vocabulary, they re-employ their favorites again and again in different configurations and tableaux.

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BSA had the pleasure to meet these gents in Brooklyn last year and they had us at “Hello”. With a sweet disposition and effortless-looking execution, their priority is painting. No drama, no gossip, no classist kid stuff; They won’t blather or diss and what-not, what-have-you, or whats-for-supper. Well, maybe whats-for-supper. Painting is what they like and that’s what keeps them focused. Proud fathers and loving husbands, these guys juggle their time so they can fulfill family obligations and have plenty of time to stop and smell the aerosol along the way.

If you find yourself in The Twin Cities run to catch the show. XY and Z Gallery is located at 3258 Minnehaha Ave South in Minneapolis. Below is a recent interview Broken Crow did –

P.O.S. on Broken Crow

Doomtree Rapper Interviews Two of His Favorite Local Artists

By Stefon Alexander Wednesday, Oct 27 2010

If you’re not familiar with the work of Twin Cities-based art team Broken Crow, it wouldn’t be too difficult to get up to speed. In the last few years they have managed to paint walls on four continents, everything heavily documented. A quick Google search pulls up tons of images and time-lapse video clips of their signature style: massive and intricately detailed stencils covering urban structures, barns in the middle of nowhere, and everything in between.

Click here to continue reading

Images courtesy and copyright of Broken Crow. See Broken Crow’s Flickr page here:

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Images of The Week 11.14.10 : Dude Company Special

Images of The Week 11.14.10 : Dude Company Special

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010brooklyn-street-art-the-dude-company-jaime-rojo-11-10-13-web

Photo © Jaime Rojo

Our weekly interview with the street narrows this week to show you photos of a visit to Brooklyn from French Street Artist “The Dude Company” and a cool shot of Lister at the end.

A glorious autumn day and room to experiment a bit on a rooftop in Brooklyn. BSA invited The Dude Co. to put up an installation on a rooftop in Brooklyn and he happily and giddily obliged.  The space was open to his interpretation and he decided to try out a repetition across the middle expanse as tribute to one of the best American actresses this country has given to the world, Gena Rowlands, who turned 80 this summer.

The repetition of her head in the installation is a nod to her depiction of a person unglued and in turmoil as her life swirls nervously beyond her control; Rolands’ emotional, Academy Award-Nominated performance in the movie “A Woman Under The Influence” in 1974, directed by her husband John Cassavetes?

Providing a bookend effect are his skater boy (created from a photo by Brooklyn artist Carlito Brigante) from earlier this year and an old favorite, his stencil of singer Erikah Badu.

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo


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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

And to end this week’s selection we offer a bonus image of a Lister we found while window shopping in Manhattan. Think there were some masks by the artist inside too.

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Judith Supine: Autumn In New York

Ahhhhhhh, FALL

Brooklyn based Street Artist Judith Supine remained perfectly chilled in A/C comfort during our hot-as-hell summer sojourn in New York City and never hit the streets as far as we can tell.  But the leaves in the park have turned red and yellow and orange and Judith must have been inspired by the colors flying through the gritty air, swirling in with plastic bags and flyers for winter tires. Of course, even those natural shades are too bland and dull for Supine.

The acid hued street surrealist is back and we have solid evidence here.  These collages all fluttered in and smacked up like radioactive leaves against the wall this week. Somehow the  reappearance of their disjointed magic realism is as reassuring as the change of the seasons in dirty old Brooklyn.

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Photo © Jaime Rojo

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Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-judith-supine-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-7

Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-judith-supine-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-8

Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-judith-supine-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-10

Photo © Jaime Rojo

brooklyn-street-art-judith-supine-jaime-rojo-11-10-web-9

Detail Photo © Jaime Rojo

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