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Posts Tagged ‘Graffiti’

Guerrilla Moss Graffiti: 8-Step DIY Guide to Green Wall Art

30 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

moss graffit artwork examples

Seed bombs and shotgun shell sprouts are not the only weapons in a guerrilla war for urban gardens and green street art – moss is a great material that can be rapidly adapted and deployed to make statements on city surfaces as well.

moss wall art making

Indeed, using mosses allows artists to go above and beyond the ground, shifting from horizontal to vertical spans for a different look and added visibility. And, as it turns out, creating moss wall art is not as difficult as you might guess – do-it-yourself directions are shown in detail below.

moss art recipe process

First, you have to gather some moss, naturally, which you can then mix with water-retention gardening gel and some buttermilk then blend together for a few minutes to form a gelatinous substance.

moss graffiti guide steps

Shift your creation into a portable container then select and paint it onto a surface of choice – if the area will not be exposed to moisture, you may want to come back by and spray on some water from time to time.

anna garforth grow moss

Remember, too, that there are many ways to take this process further and create additional kinds of green artwork, mossy or otherwise.

moss graffiti removal subtraction

Meanwhile, if you find a surface already mossed over thanks to time and nature, selectively erasing sections of growth can be a fun form of expression as well.

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Paint Me White Again: Tunnel Type Graffiti Taunts Authorities

28 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

paint me white again

Well known for stenciling big block-lettered phrases on walls around his native Newscastle, this piece is unusually blunt (as well as hilarious), amounting to a multi-part conversation between the artist and the city.

street art blank wall

street art painted over

Even better than the original ‘COME ON AND PAINT ME WHITE AGAIN’ dare is the later response after the municipality indeed whitewashed the first work: ‘BOOORING’, using his same signature typography in black paint.

joke around the corner

mobster street art checklist

mobstr newcastle reblog this

While not all of his work is quite so meta-minded as this series, this sequence remains a great illustration of how graffiti is generally temporary as well as contextual, and can have elements of humor and self-reflection beyond simple tagging. Some of his works are best seen in video form rather than via photographs, hence a few fun short films below.

A self-described minimalist, Mobstr explains the origins of his nom de plume, which are none too surprising: “It is a play on the term mobster which is someone who deals in organised crime. Most of my work is illegal however a lot of organisation goes into it. So as a joke I use the idea of it being organised (art) crime.” Also, he had a lobster named mobster.

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Phantom Monuments: Haunting Works of Light Graffiti by Sola

23 Sep

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Sola Light Graffiti 17

Swirls and pillars of light hover in fields or against dark urban backdrops like phantom monuments, captured on camera in a way that just can’t be perceived by the human eye. UK-based artist Sola literally paints with light, his amorphous creations seeming to take on three dimensions for just a split second as if the light itself has gathered up a mass of its own.

Sola Light Graffiti 13

Sola Light Graffiti 3

Sola Light Graffiti 1

Sola Light Graffiti 14

Looking for an outlet for personal expression led Sola to professional photography, documenting the sports, bands and lifestyles that he was into. Eventually, though, he wanted something that would give him more control over the creative process.

Sola Light Graffiti 2

Sola Light Graffiti 4

Sola Light Graffiti 6

Sola Light Graffiti 11

Sola Light Graffiti 15

“Then I found light painting. Quite by accident one night while shooting landscapes of the urban environment and instantly I knew it was what I’d been looking for. I like to keep things real. I shoot with digital cameras, yes, but I employ principles of analogue film technology – in that once I’ve made an image I don’t change it any more than I could in a darkroom and therefore what you see, is what I shoot.”

Sola Light Graffiti 7

Sola Light Graffiti 8

“I believe there’s a real magic to creating something wondrous that’s ‘real.’ Sure, there’s a place for post production in this world but on the whole, you won’t find any here. To the point that even if I am caught in the scene the image is thrown away. I aim to create images that allow the viewer to suspend their reality and simply enjoy the energy and mystery of the image.”

Sola LIght Graffiti 9

Sola Light Graffiti 16

See lots of more Sola’s work, including collaborations with NIKE and other brands, at LightBombing.com.

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Time in Color: Skatepark Graffiti Acts as a Working Sundial

16 Aug

[ By Steph in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

Skatepark Graffiti 1

Skaters at this park in Lugano, Switzerland don’t have to pull out their phones to check the time – they can just glance down at a series of colored lines painted right onto the concrete of the bowl as a modern sundial. A ribbon of rainbow hues curves up and down the undulating surface, the sun and shadows revealing the current hour.

Skatepark Graffiti 2

Skatepark Graffiti 3

A different line of color indicates each hour of the day, marked off as the sun passes overhead. Designed by Moscow group Zuk Club, the vibrant park is like an abstract modern mural customized specifically to the shape of the bowl and the surrounding area.

SKatepark Graffiti 4 Skatepark Graffiti 5

It’s an interesting and visually resting concept, though perhaps no match for the largest and most complex skate parks around the world. Skaters who find ordinary skate parks unimaginative should check out 13 examples of highly skateable architecture, ranging from the specially renovated interior of a hunting lodge to Zaha Hadid’s futuristic science center in Germany.

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Graffiti Puzzles: Urban Art Chipped Off Walls for Reassembly

26 Jun

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

Graffiti Puzzle 1

Pieces of graffiti that have been chipped off a wall are offered up in a box like a conventional puzzle in an exhibition that provokes thought on who street art belongs to, and whether or not it can ever be ‘owned.’ Italian artist Fra.biancoshock removes graffiti from its original context and displays it in fragments, destroying its meaning and the creator’s artistic expression in the process.

Graffiti Puzzle 2

Graffiti Puzzle 3

Is this uncomfortable? Yes. Is it meant to be? Probably, as Fra.biancoshock is well known for clever thought-provoking urban installations, like a giant bandage plastered onto a crack in a stone wall, or flowers and sympathy cards mourning a cut-down tree.

Fra.biancoshock 1

Fra.biancoshock 2

Entitled ‘Ephemeralism,’ the exhibit at Milan’s 77 Art Gallery continues the artist’s theme of producing works of art that only exist “briefly in space but limitlessly in time.” Fra.biancoshock’s installations can seem humorous yet touch on issues like poverty, capitalism and the value of human life.

Fra.biancoshock 3

Fra.biancoshock 4

Fra.biancoshock 6

The gallery works seem to convey the fact that while graffiti can be displayed indoors if it’s painted on canvases or created specifically for a given site, it’s not really meant to be consumed and appreciated within this artificial environment.

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Off the Wall: 14 3D Graffiti Sculptures, Furniture & More

20 Feb

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

3D Graffiti Main

Flat paint on two-dimensional surfaces springs to life in surprising ways in these 14 graffiti-inspired projects ranging from sand sculptures to entire apartment buildings. Street art’s impact on visual culture expands into furniture design, architecture, art installations, 3D printed works and fantastical digital animations that envision graffiti moving through space like living organisms.

The Hive Apartment by ITN Architects

3D graffiti the hive building

Built for an architect and street artist, the facade of this Melbourne house fittingly includes built-in graffiti made from precast, four-meter-tall concrete letters spelling out ‘The Hive.’ The lettering is a load-bearing part of the building, making for a striking transition between the modern house and its old brick tailor shop neighbor.

Large-Scale Graffiti Sculptures by Zeus

3d graffiti zeus

3D graffiti art Zeus 2

London-based graffiti artist Zeus brings his art into three dimensions with a variety of large-scale sculptural works including tags that protrude from walls and cars.

Graffurniture

3d graffiti graffurniture 1

3D graffiti graffurniture 2

3D graffiti graffurniture 3

Street graffiti moves into the living room with coffee tables, side tables and chairs marrying tag style with baroque furniture traditions. Designer Luis Alicandu is a former tagger who has since turned his creative urges into a passion for industrial design.

Digital 3D Graffiti Animations

3D graffiti technica digital

These 3D graffiti creations by ‘Graffiti Technica’ are totally digital, but watch the videos to see incredible animations that bring street art to life in a novel way, cruising through the air like alien organisms.

Graffiti Analysis Series by Evan Roth

3D graffiti analysis

Here’s a totally different way of looking at making graffiti three-dimensional: a sculpture that captures a tagger’s movements as they work. Designer Evan Roth created this piece, CAP, algorithmically by motion-capturing the writing of street artist CAP in the 1983 documentary Style Wars. The piece is made of chrome-dipped ABS thermoplastic.

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Off The Wall 14 3d Graffiti Sculptures Furniture More

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Frame-Busting Art: 2D Graffiti Figures Break Free from Walls

28 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

figure frame breaking

Treating abandoned buildings and urban surfaces more like pages in a book than bricks to tag, this street artist brings an illustrator’s touch and storyteller’s approach to his unique graffiti.

figure suicidal jumper man

figure jumper up close

Though based in the Netherlands, Daan Botlek frequently ranges far from Rotterdam to cities including Berlin and Bangkok, where he draws surreal scenes with imaginary characters.

figure art subway door

Some of these creations seem to be contemplating dangerous acts, while others fight through their artificial environments or even with one another.

figure art wall scene

figure art frame play

figure art frame two

These much-humanized, frame-breaking figures are only one facet of his portfolio, but they uniquely bridge the gap between the artist’s experience with illustration on the one hand and street art on the other.

figure 3d cube art

figure abandoned building graffiti

Aside from on-paper drawings and character creation, his other public art series include a set of white cubes, again reprising this three-dimensional approach to bring objects, in this case, off the page (or wall, as it were).

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Night Graffiti: Shake-Powered LED Spray Paint Can Sleeve

22 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

led spray can light

The nature of graffiti tends to result in nocturnal excursions, but painting completely in the dark can be a be problem and sometimes you just need a little bit of light.

led graffiti can sketches

led can sleeve model

LASH is a light attachment for spray cans designed by Subinay Malhotra of New Delhi, India to provide low-level illumination on demand to artists on the street.

led spray can design

The device slots onto the can and charges via a motion familiar to anyone who has sprayed paint, illicitly or otherwise: the shaking action one has to repeat to keep on painting.

led spray paint functions

The LEDs are intentionally dim and easy to turn both on and off at the push of a button, all so artists can see what they are doing on an as-needed basis but blend back into the shadows with a simple click.

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Blanking Banksy: Artists & City Paint Over Pricey NYC Graffiti

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

banksy play and paint

Banksy is an artist with the rare power to make walls more valuable after he has vandalized them, which some then seek to alter or  destroy and others fight to protect and save. The highly-publicized and daily-updated images of his residency in New York largely tell the first part of the story, but there is another side to the tale as well about the aftermath, and that side has even more surprising and surreal plot twists.

banksy heart art wall

banksy graffiti covered heart

Some graffiti artists feel compelled to cover over his art, out of anger, jealousy or perhaps a mixture of the two. He has been broadly criticized by the tagging community for his lack of respect for rules (or at least conventions), and thus justify defacing his pieces. In many instances, multiple tags have appeared over and around in the days and weeks that follow.

banksy police heart photo

banksy art cancelled police

Meanwhile, NYC official policies regarding vandalism mean that municipal authorities are theoretically bound to paint over his work, even if it might be worth tens of thousands of dollars. Thus, the police hunt him and city workers are tasked to whitewash paintings from sight. Some still snap their own photos before taking on the job, and one has to wonder how they feel about their assignment.

banksy-time-lapse-city

banksy one week later

On the flip side, many other fans, pedestrians and building owners interact with or even fight to defend the pieces at almost any cost for personal or financial reasons. In one instance, some passers by intercepted and stopped someone who sought to add his own interpretation to a newly-posted work. Of course, without added measures, most of these efforts eventually fail.

banksy protected new york

banksy protected gate guard

In another case, a savvy building owner hired around-the-clock security to protect the work found on his walls and even installed a locked gate over it. Sooner or later, though, someone will no doubt find a way to alter or destroy the silhouetted figures. And regardless, they are rendered somewhat crass in their new industrial frame.

banksy colbert blank wall

banksy hanksy colbert art

Steven Colbert jokingly put a frame on the side of his studio, telling Banksy via his television show not to paint inside it and thus make him rich. Unsurprisingly, Banksy obliged and stayed away, but Hanksy took him up on his public and ironic non-offer, adding some fresh work outside of Colbert’s door. In his typical style, Hanksy spoofed the celebrity-in-question’s name with an intentionally poor animal pun.

banksy before vandals

banksy after vandals

Given his high profile, it is no surprise that Banksy’s installations and stencils attracts a wide mix of attention wherever he goes, from the police and other authorities, on the one hand, to local citizens and artists on the other. Still, whether they see him as famous or infamous, it is always fascinating to see just who reacts and how to the mixed reputation of this mysterious street artist.  One has to suspect, though, that he doesn’t really mind the attention either way (images via Banksy, AnimalNewYork, Gothamist and the New York Post).

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Blanking Banksy: Artists & City Paint Over Pricey NYC Graffiti

11 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

banksy play and paint

Banksy is an artist with the rare power to make walls more valuable after he has vandalized them, which some then seek to alter or  destroy and others fight to protect and save. The highly-publicized and daily-updated images of his residency in New York largely tell the first part of the story, but there is another side to the tale as well about the aftermath, and that side has even more surprising and surreal plot twists.

banksy heart art wall

banksy graffiti covered heart

Some graffiti artists feel compelled to cover over his art, out of anger, jealousy or perhaps a mixture of the two. He has been broadly criticized by the tagging community for his lack of respect for rules (or at least conventions), and thus justify defacing his pieces. In many instances, multiple tags have appeared over and around in the days and weeks that follow.

banksy police heart photo

banksy art cancelled police

Meanwhile, NYC official policies regarding vandalism mean that municipal authorities are theoretically bound to paint over his work, even if it might be worth tens of thousands of dollars. Thus, the police hunt him and city workers are tasked to whitewash paintings from sight. Some still snap their own photos before taking on the job, and one has to wonder how they feel about their assignment.

banksy-time-lapse-city

banksy one week later

On the flip side, many other fans, pedestrians and building owners interact with or even fight to defend the pieces at almost any cost for personal or financial reasons. In one instance, some passers by intercepted and stopped someone who sought to add his own interpretation to a newly-posted work. Of course, without added measures, most of these efforts eventually fail.

banksy protected new york

banksy protected gate guard

In another case, a savvy building owner hired around-the-clock security to protect the work found on his walls and even installed a locked gate over it. Sooner or later, though, someone will no doubt find a way to alter or destroy the silhouetted figures. And regardless, they are rendered somewhat crass in their new industrial frame.

banksy colbert blank wall

banksy hanksy colbert art

Steven Colbert jokingly put a frame on the side of his studio, telling Banksy via his television show not to paint inside it and thus make him rich. Unsurprisingly, Banksy obliged and stayed away, but Hanksy took him up on his public and ironic non-offer, adding some fresh work outside of Colbert’s door. In his typical style, Hanksy spoofed the celebrity-in-question’s name with an intentionally poor animal pun.

banksy before vandals

banksy after vandals

Given his high profile, it is no surprise that Banksy’s installations and stencils attracts a wide mix of attention wherever he goes, from the police and other authorities, on the one hand, to local citizens and artists on the other. Still, whether they see him as famous or infamous, it is always fascinating to see just who reacts and how to the mixed reputation of this mysterious street artist.  One has to suspect, though, that he doesn’t really mind the attention either way (images via Banksy, AnimalNewYork, Gothamist and the New York Post).

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