Main | April 2008 »

February 22, 2008

Another Mural Program For Aspiring Graffiti Artists

This article from the Times-Herald, in Vallejo, CA goes to prove, once again, that not all graffiti artists are criminals. This art form, whether people like it or not, continues to grow. It's programs like this that are helping to make this urban artform more and more acceptable in the mainstream.

Check it out and feel free to leave comments! Wanna show even more support? Check out "Art is Not a Crime" and "Blank Walls are Criminal" from Bad Monkey Designs - graffiti t-shirts with a message!

Mural program has markings of great success

More than a year ago in this space, we called for official sponsorship of some forms of artistic graffiti after city officials complained that the eradication of less desirable forms was too costly.

Our view was based on the stunning graffiti left behind by some incredibly talented guerilla urban artists on some water tanks that depicted various masterpieces, among other images. While acknowledging that the unsanctioned graffiti was technically vandalism, we wondered if areas of the city could not be beautified in some ways by creating a creative outlet for these and other artists.

In today's Front and Center, staff writer Tony Burchyns tells us about such an effort at Vallejo and Hogan high schools. As part of a federally funded program, students are painting murals after classes not only to add some color to their otherwise drab campuses and but also, hopefully, to discourage the type of gang graffiti that plagues many schools.

This effort, helped by local artist Harold Beaulieu, brings about positive messages of creativity, beauty and fellowship not only to the local high schools, but to the entire community. In an era when art programs are disappearing in cash-strapped school districts, this program gives budding artists, or even those who just want to try painting, a way to work with fellow students on a project. Years from now their work will leave an artsy snapshot for future students of what influenced them.

This fledgling effort has not been without its problems. In an unfortunate snafu, district custodians painted over the initial efforts at Hogan, believing they were fresh examples of illegal vandalism. Officials, meanwhile, say Beaulieu never went through the process to get permission to have the Hogan mural painted. While the students were aghast at the eradication of their work, they were not discouraged and started over without missing a beat.

Gang graffiti, as we noted on Dec. 17, 2006, is rightly viewed as a major contributor to urban decay, declines in property values and losses of businesses and jobs. Efforts to stamp it out, early - and as often as possible - are important.

We believe that Vallejo and Hogan high students agree that gang graffiti on their campuses dampens their school spirit and contributes nothing positive to their educational experience. The Hogan High graffiti message, "Knowledge is Power," however, not only beautifies and excites student senses, but also reinforces from the student perspective the message of education. While there is likely to be some eyebrow-raising artwork that accompanies the message, that, too, is "knowledge."

And that kind of handwriting on the wall is hard to beat - or to paint over.

February 21, 2008

Beyond the Wall

Following is an excerpt from an article by The Michigan Daily's Whitney Pow. It discusses the question of graffiti as a true art form. I found it a fresh take on examining this urban art movement. Instead of just motoring into talk of vandalism we need to look at the commentary, the statement and the drive behind these moving images.

Granted, scralled "tags" can begin to become unsightly to some. But, behind the majority of what you see on a wall or train or bridge abatement, there is truly meaning. Graffiti gives those without a voice, without a platform, an opportunity to comment and express themselves.

Graffiti walks a fine line in underground art

"Let's admire a wall for a moment. It's made of red brick, and it's about 18 feet tall. It runs about a quarter of a city block, around 88 feet. It keeps a building up, and it keeps the rain out.

In short, it's a good wall.

But it's boring and, let's face it, pretty unsightly. According to a graffiti artist, though, it's about 1,584 square feet of unused canvas.

"I just have this desire to put graffiti on banks, and I don't know why," said an LSA sophomore and graffiti artist who agreed to be identified only by her initials, S.H.R, because her work is illegal. "I think it's mostly because they have these big blank walls outside of them. Most of the buildings are pretty ugly as they are, so I wouldn't care about putting paint on them," she said.

And even though the artists view these paintings as art, graffiti carries different connotations and conjures stereotypical images of kids with spray paint covering street signs with drunken, low-brow homages to sweethearts. But, while some graffiti may be treated as such, it's much more than juvenilia. There's a whole culture of craftsmanship beneath layers of aerosol paint, an entire art form that needs to be unearthed with a discerning eye."

To read this article in full please visit the Michigan Daily website.

February 20, 2008

Graffiti Sneakers From Adidas

Just had to throw a post out about this collection of kicks from Adidas. The famous shoe company got some hottest  graff artists like Scien (124Klan), Skore, Siloette, Rime, Smart, Can2 and Atom to create their own designs on some classic Adidas shoes. The shoe line is part of the "End To End" project. I am impressed with the designs from Rime and Atom Can2. The shoes will be sold exclusively at Footlocker. Adidas seems to making all the right moves lately.  I just might have to cop a pair this week.
------------------------------------------------------------

ATOM CAN2

Atom Can2 Sneakers on the Bad Monkey Blog

RIME

Rime graffiti sneakers on the Bad Monkey Blog

Be sure to check back often for more graffiti fashions. Don't forget to stop by Bad Monkey Designs to check out all of our new urban wear too.

February 08, 2008

Obama Has a Posse

Progress

 An endorsement from an artist might seem insignificant in a presidential campaign, but Barack Obama recently scored an unusual ally in Shepard Fairey, a young graff artist whose sticker and poster art have catapulted him to celebrity status in urban art culture.


Earlier this week, Fairey put a limited edition poster for sale on his website bearing Obama's face and the word "Progress." The 350 copies sold out within an hour. The proceeds, Fairey explained, would go to a larger postering campaign.


Fairey rose to fame via his "Obey Giant campaign," a simple, black-and-white sticker that turned the face of Andre the Giant into an Orwellian set of eyes labeled with the word "obey." His followers soon spread the image, pasting it on street signs and walls across the country. Now the sticker is omnipresent in American cities. Fairey says the purpose of the Obey Giant project was to spread "propaganda for which the motive was not obvious" as a thought-provoking experiment.


Be sure to check out Bad Monkey Designs' tribute to the Obey campaign on our website.

February 07, 2008

Graffiti Is a (Fun) Crime

Ok, this picture was just too classic not to post. The sign is absurd, but the graffiti treatment it got has gotta be one of the funniest FU's I've seen in a long while. Who says graffiti is mindless vandalism? Some poor graff fan crawled through the brush just to let the world in on his private joke!

Graffiti Is a Fun Crime 

The other thing that I noticed about this picture is that i t appears to shows an imprisoned artist with what appears to be one of the cell bars driven upwards thru his jaw and out the top of his head. A bit of a severe punishment for graffiti, don’t you think?

Keep up the great work! 

February 06, 2008

Banksy Art Makes Bank

British graffiti artist Banksy not only sells his highly sought-after work to the likes of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, but is earning others bank as well.

A mural, painted by Banksy, in Portobello Road, London, earned the property owner big bucks on Monday, Jan. 15, 2008. An online bidder has paid $410,830 for the wall on the online auction web site e-Bay. Prior to putting the work up for auction, the seller protected the piece with a sheet of plastic.

"I am selling the wall because I can't really justify owning a piece of art worth as much as it is," said Luti Fagbenle, the owner of the property on which the graffiti is sprayed, according to Reuters.

Bad Monkey Designs is a HUGE fan of this legendary graff artist. Let's face it, he's made it. His artwork is controversial, thought provoking and breaks boundaries. This is true graffiti - urban art with a message or commentary on our society. Stay tuned to Bad Monkey for our upcoming tribute to this one-of-a-kind graffiti master!

Banksy Graff! 

February 05, 2008

Naugatuck Graffiti Artists Will Have Legal Place To Paint

Wouldn't it be great if more communities took this approach to local Graffiti Artists? I suppose it would take some of the fun out it. But, it might start putting all of the talented artists out there in a better light. Might also provide someone a great opportunity to finally get discovered....

Instead of painting bridges and overpasses, the borough of Naugatuck has another idea for the creative vandals.Just like in so many other Connecticut communities, graffiti is on display across the borough of Naugatuck.Mayor Mike Bronko said since he's been in office, local businesses have complained their properties are being damaged by spray paint.

Now, borough officials are trying to contain the graffiti to one place by building a special wall.“What we're looking to do is reach out to these artists and offer them someplace to come and do it where it will be legal for them,” Bronko said.Officials hope to put the wall by a skate park in Linden Park. It will be eight feet high and 75 feet wide, giving artists a great canvas to work on.

The project is still in its preliminary stages, but officials estimate the wall could cost anywhere from $5,000 to $10,000.Local businesses will be pitching in to help with the cost and many people are hoping this new graffiti wall will cut down on other spray-painted surfaces.