Showing posts with label graffiti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graffiti. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Girl does it like the Boys

This piece appeared in Kings Cross recently. The work of German street artist Schmultzfink, who began his street career in the summer of 2011. His first character was skribbel the banker.
Like many street artists he aims to challenge our way of thinking and stereotypes. This one is of a girl peeing standing up.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Crimes Against Women

A new reminder that this was the area where the infamous Jack the Ripper murders took place.

Never solved, it still baffles those who investigate the events in Victorian London.

I nearly missed this small work that sits at footpath level and is about 6 inches high.
Crimes against women are making headlines around the world again at present. The ex-head of the IMF and the British Minister of Justice who seems confused as to what rape is.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Ten to Eleven

Was this the same mouse that was seen scurrying between number 10 and 11 Downing St?

Friday, January 28, 2011

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Friday, October 1, 2010

October Theme Day - Graffiti

London has plenty of street art to select for this month's theme. Books, websites, blogs and tours are all dedicated to this form of art.

City Daily photographers around the world will have lots more graffiti to show you.
Click here to view thumbnails for all participants

Make sure you pop by here again tomorrow as I will have a great competition and prize for you.

Monday, July 12, 2010

Jette Clover and the Graffiti of Life

Illustration: Jette Clover. White Wall 1, 2009.

The work of the textile and mixed media artist Jette Clover deals with the graffiti of life. She has chosen to represent the visual language of the human species through the use of the written, rather than that of the spoken language. This is an important point to make, particularly as the written word becomes evermore increasingly vital to the everyday running of our contemporary world. However, although written language itself is relatively new in comparison to the age of the human species as a whole, representational markers of our presence have long been seen as a necessary part of our lives. Whether writing with recognised lettering, pictograms or other symbols, all are representations of both the individual and the culture they inhabited. It is this recognition of the potential of the individual through mark-making in whatever fashion, which seems to be at the heart of these particular pieces of textile work.

Illustration: Jette Clover. White Wall 2, 2009.

The six pieces of work shown in this article were produced by Clover in 2009. It is relatively easy to recognise the influence and inspiration of the partial layering that can be found on a poster plastered wall in any contemporary town or city. These multi-layered poster walls can easily take on the guise of fragmentary messages that are visible through layers of information. Clover has cleverly drawn analogies between this imagery from our contemporary world, and given it meaning and dimension well beyond its immediate remit.

Illustration: Jette Clover. White Wall 3, 2009.

Clover is interested in not only the scattered and disconnected markers left by generations of the human species, but more importantly to all of us on a much more personal level, the wish to leave a presence of ourselves in some form. Graffiti itself can be seen as a wish fulfilment of the human spirit. I was here is perhaps the crudest but most effective form of at least partial celebrity if not full-blown immortality. To be remembered, if only partially, is all that many of us wish, and future generations may well understand us only on a level that can be recognised through Clover's work, a letter here a number there, all the rest has been obliterated.

Illustration: Jette Clover. White Wall 4, 2009.

It is this obliteration that is interesting within this specific set of work by Clover. It is called the White Series, and although, to some extent it is an exercise in the exploration of the lack of colour contrasts and the simplicity that can be found in shades of white, it is also a representation of much more.

We as individual observers have to peer at the visual vocabulary that has been set out for us. Very little is made clear to us and we can only surmise as to the messages that were originally intended. This gives us a very acute awareness as to how future generations observe and portray the past. All that was our lives has been truncated and randomly edited. This is not who we were, but it is who we will eventually become. To see and interpret the human species, and through that the human condition, through a partially whitewashed wall is an extremely clever and sophisticated analogy, and all admiration has go to the artist fir portraying it as such.

Illustration: Jette Clover. Whitewash, 2009.

The visual vocabulary shown in these pieces of work are of such a permanent and instantly recognisable nature. They so clearly represent the human capacity and longing to project meaning with words. More importantly still is the longing to project life and longevity into those words. What appears at first to be nothing more than the transitory nature of poster art becomes a need for both the continued representation and even hope for the perpetuation of countless successive generations.   

Jette Clover has shown her work extensively in both North America and Europe. She has been featured in a number of publications, also on both sides of the Atlantic. She has a comprehensive website where much more of her work can be seen, along with an extensive list of exhibition highlights where her work can be seen through till Summer 2011.

Illustration: Jette Clover. Whitewash 5, 2009.

All images were used with the kind permission of the artist.

Reference links:
Jette Clover website

Saturday, June 12, 2010

White Noise Warning

Bricklane is famous for its graffiti, markets and Indian restaurants and this piece is near the western entrance to the lane. I can't help feeling that it's a modern day version of the severed heads that were placed on London bridge in the middle ages as a warning to all those that entered that should they get up to no good this could be their fate!!

But maybe I've just been reading too many London history books lately.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Afternoon Sir

Capturing a fun moment with new street art around Kings Cross

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Street Cred

Banksy is back in the headlines.

Exit through the cafe Banksy's foray into the mainstream movie world has sparked an interesting debate as critics and the public try and figure out who is having who on here.
Just who is Mr Brainwave?

What is street cred and who has it.

Robbo a local street artist claims Banksy has lost it.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Greenway Art

A treat for you today. Endangered art. You may never see this again. The Greenway, a biking and walking trail that stretches 2.3 km from Victoria Park to the Olympic Village. It is being upgraded and prettied up in time for the games. Not sure how they will disguise the sewer plant adjacent to this piece, maybe a fancy name. Yes ... that would do it!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Big Brava

London's famous black cabs. A repair garage for taxis. Interesting graffiti, especially the writing on the brick wall.