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The Artist of the Month: Netta

October 2, 2009

While her friends had crushes on teen pop stars, she desperately wanted to be a comic artist for Donald Duck. Later, she changed her mind and imagined herself being a plastic surgeon. Now she is twenty and, luckily, she has turned out to be a terrific street artist. We first met Netta while she was painting a wall in Old Street and we had a chat with her.

netta

What’s the first thing you do when you wake up?

I make lots of grumpy noices, I try to fix my hair –which, at that ungodly hour, looks like a war field– and drink a terrible amount of coffee.

Explain us in a few words who are you and where do you come from.

I am Finnish, but to be honest I have been traveling throughout my life from places to places so I often say I a from “the blue planet”. I moved to London a year ago and now study graphic design at London College of Communication (LCC).

What do you like about being a street artist?

I love being in the street, it’s addictive! I’ve always had the temptation to “mark the existence” with little scribbles in the environment. Whether it was a surreal long stick man in age of four, the statement of it was already then fundamental! Also, working in the street turns the work into a interactive piece and breaks the “distance” between the art work and the viewer. Often people don’t have the chance to see the evolution of the work which is, in my opinion, the most interesting part. It also makes it more approachable for the public and is an opportunity for me to meet lots of crazy and interesting characters!

If you were not an artist, what would you like to be?

I would always choose to do something creative. But I guess I could consider being some kind of a Christopher McCandless, like in the movie Into The Wild.

Where do you get the inspiration from? Any artists you admire?

The environment is a visual puzzle that I play with. I visualize my ideas in motion. Because they are in constant evolution I try to capture as much of it to my most precious thing: the sketchbook. It’s nice to flick trough my old sketches because they are always full of little surprises. Although, sometimes it freaks me out to see sketches that I made when I was six or seven.

Artists that I admire… I could name hundreds!! But there is something that recently inspired me a lot such as works by Animalbandido, Blu, and David Firth‘s stop frame animation. They are just beautiful.

Do you have any topics that are repeated, in general, in your artwork? What’s your message?

I like to keep things a little surreal. It awakens curiosity. My work seems simple to read but the more you try to intepretate it, the less sure people become on how to make sense of it. I use subjects that are quite familiar such as instability, childhood, motherly bits and pieces, anatomy, chop and twist organisms with humor. It can make you smile but also question its “healthiness”. My style is well affected by the fact that I am a little bit a weird mix of cultures.

I don’t often use many colors in one piece because they tend to be full of texture. My work is always in captured as “unnaturally still”.

My message always leaves space for personal interpretation; many find it very dark. I have always drawn or painted when I wanted to cope with something that made me very upset. It is a way of freeing my mind from things that bothered me without hiding them. I’d like people to enjoy it visually but also to think it back. Also, London seems such an hectic environment where it’s easy to forget about yourself or others.

cargowall

What’s the Cargo’s wall you painted about?

In simple terms it illustrates exploitation, the nature of a (wo)man and its relationship to its environment. But I am interested what individual interpretations can it bring.

If you could choose any wall of London to paint, which one would you choose and what would you paint in it?

If I am honest, I always wanted to paint the Gherkin to look like an easter egg. I am not quite sure why, but from the first time I saw it, I decided it was an egg, not a Gherkin.

Also, I’d quite like to paint a massive warehouse wall which I see from Shoreditch High Street into a super version of “nature of a (wo)man” piece. I want to make it look like a man could be part of the graffiti. Cargo’s wall would look like its baby product. I think it could be pretty striking. I am already excited about it but what I need is a good space and more and more designs!

What’s in your opinion the best city to paint graffiti in nowadays?

I suppose Berlin, London and Barcelona are the top ones. Also I’ve recently heard about Brazilian street art culture. I am quite shocked of the decision of who-ever to remove all graffiti from London streets! It is one of the best attractions in the city. It does not qualify as vandalism if art is out in the streets instead of being locked up in gallery spaces!

Explain us how would it be an ideal day for you in London.

I love small simple things. I’d probably get a good group of friends and set a little fire in the river bank, chilling and playing guitar. Or break dance. Or plan a massive art guerilla attack to London streets! That would be mental! I love brainstorming with friends, it’s exciting and pushes my adrenalin really high. I am already excited just with the thought of it!


1,317 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , , , — Mila Dore @ 5:07 pm


Streets of Barcelona

August 14, 2009

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bcn2

As we’re always talking about street art and Barcelona has been for years one of the Meccas of graffiti art, we decided to have a chat with Anthon Maxus Christophersen, one of the driving forces in Barcelona’s street art.

Mila Doré: When did the Barcelona street art scene start and how has its evolution been? It’s said that it’s not what it used to be…

Not sure when it started. I guess Gaudí was the first really known street artist in Barcelona. Transforming boring buildings with playful adventures organic decorations. Transforming the public space into an art gallery. Bringing more joy to the people of the city.

MD: What do you think street art has contributed to the city?

For me, street art is like buying/eating at a local family owned deli, run by people who work there out of passion, and take great pleasure in serving you. A place you leave having received something original made out of passion and respect for the surroundings, compared to a McDonalds franchise… This is what makes me feel at home in Barcelona, when I walk on the small streets, away from the buildings way, often covered by big commercial banners of a Photoshop reality, all put there to make me want to use my money or think in a certain way. That’s when the street art starts to show up. From tags with the simple messages like “La belleza es tu cabeza” (“Beauty is inside your head”) to “Más Amore” (“More Love”) or beautiful abstract or figural art works. All these things turn the streets into a walkthrough gallery but, most important, brings up the inner happiness, knowing that I’m not alone and that there is love, talent and passion out there. It ignites my inner lust for life. I’m loving it.

MD: What is different from Barcelona’s scene, compared to others?

More colours and more love, less spray, more brushes… But due to cheap international flights and internet networks, you tend to see more and more artist appearing in more than one European city. So what really make Barcelona stand out is probably the high standard of the artwork.

MD: Tell me 5 spots in Barcelona where we could go and normally see good street art?

Raval, Barrio Gótico, El Borne, The 3 Chimneys in Poble Sec… and Poble nou; but Barcelona in general.

MD: If you had a sit down with Barcelona’s mayor, what would you tell him?

“Please help all the trafficked African prostitutes that every night after the dark float Rambla Catalunya –It’s sad, obvious and completely wrong–, instead of using resources on secret police looking after street artists. Do something usefully with the taxpayer’s money…”

MD: What do you think about street art going into galleries?

If an artist is able to put the same passion onto a canvas as on the street, and give the public the chance to buy it and put it in their homes for friends and family to enjoy, then I’m all for it. No doubt. That’s the great thing about art: you can’t fake it, it won’t work.

MD: How do you think the digital camera has affected the street art movement, if at all?

The best example is the animated videoclip “Muto” by Blu.

Here the street art becomes alive. As well as the tons of Flickr-type sites where artist and fans share pictures… no doubt that it inspires. So it has affected it in a great way.

MD: Who are your Top 10 Barcelona street artists?

Love and admire them all… each one for their own unique artistic style and personality. So can’t make a Top 10, but instead I’ll mention one, because she is the reason why my eyes got opened to street art and the vast beauty of it, which I’m forever grateful for: Sackristan. Respect, respect, respect.

sk1

sk3

sk2

MD: What is Vaqueros de Barcelona (“Barcelona Cowboys”)?

Vaqueros de Barcelona is the original a title of a short movie that I planned shooting in Barcelona. The short synopsis for it is: “A young man, lost in an empty world, without passion or true values, heads of to Barcelona in search of the true cowboys, in hope that they can guide him and lead the way to a meaningful life.”

Despise a lot of pondering, nothing really happened before Marc Mascort i Boix (former founder of ROJO magazine) came on board. Within a week he managed to arrange a painting party, right in the centre of Barcelona. This event transformed Vaqueros de Barcelona into what it is today: an organisation that curates art shows and arrange events to promote the true artistic cowboys of Barcelona and abroad.

Today our goals are to keep making the painting parties, as well as finding the right format for the movie (planning to launch it in late 2010), so that it shows the beauty and the greatness of these street artists.

MD: Which is the most interesting scene you’ve shoot for the moment in the documentary?

That would be a spontaneous clip: Filming 2 artist painting in day time day… A bus driver stops his bus full of passengers. He opens his window and, in a very friendly and local way, shouts: “¡Hey, tío, qué imponente!” (“Hey, pal, that’s great!”). This is so beautiful because it totally reflects the common men’s view on street art in Barcelona: as something that is valued and appreciated.

MD: Finish this sentence: “The streets of our cities…

… are the place where we meet, say goodbye and fall in love. So let them reflect all of the beauty, longings, mysteries and great to come. That’s inside of us.”

sixeart

zosen

missvan

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If you are in Barcelona and fancy a street art trip, check this map by the guys of Montana Shop & Gallery. With a little bit of luck you’ll be able to see the work of names such as Diva, Boris Hoppek, Sixeart, Miss Van, Btoy, Delphine Delas, Kenor, Olivia, Pez, Rallito X, Ripo, Rotor, Royal, UIU or Zosen.


1,983 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , — Mila Dore @ 11:54 am


Artist of the Month: Eelus

July 9, 2009

Eelus swang by Cargo last month after almost a year of trying get him down here, to create a piece in our yard. As usual with Mr E, he left us with a beautiful yet slightly sinister slice of his artistic world. Mila Doré had a sit down with him to ask him a few questions about his style and his background.finished_small

Mila Doré: You first started making hand drawn posters of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Which one was your favourite and why?

Eelus:
It was all about Master Splinter for me. He was like a rodent Mr Miyagi. There’s just something cool about a rat with ninja skills. I used to have pet rats too, they’re intelligent critters!

MD:
Where else do you find the inspiration? (comics, films, real life…)

E: I’m big into horror and sci-fi, that’s always been my main inspiration. Most images for me are usually have one foot grounded in one of those areas. At the minute I’m reading a lot about natural geometry, Phi, the Golden Section and the basic invisible ordering of the universe. I’m becoming fascinated with the fact that even though the world to us seems chaotic and unstable, there’s a strict design and formula holding everything together. A secret language that governs everything we see or do. The same shapes and numeric equations are used from things as tiny as a virus cell all the way up to the shape and construction of an entire galaxy. For example, the orbit of Venus around the Earth creates an almost perfect pentagram every 8 years, mind blowing!


ravenMD:
Why did you choose stencils and not oil painting or ceramics?

E: I basically became interested in the same way I’m sure many others did, Banksy. I moved to London knowing nothing of stencils and street art and had my eyes opened in a big way. After being just a fan and observer of the scene for a while I decided I’d like to create my own work purely for my own satisfaction and curiosity. I used my background in design and illustration and just started making stencils of characters from my sketchbooks and from photos of friends and from magazines. I just seemed to get it, it felt right to me, something in my head clicked from the very first stencil I did. I really enjoy the process, the stages you have to deal with to produce the final piece. You need to be good at every stage to make a great stencil. You can’t be an amazing illustrator or painter but be shit with a scalpel, it just won’t work. It’s such a basic medium too, I guess I enjoy the challenge or getting what’s in my head out onto a wall or canvas using a limited colour palette and basic materials. Plus I’m very impatient and struggle with concentration problems at times. Something like oils is such a long messy process, I love the immediacy and simplicity of spraying a stencil.


MD:
What do you find exciting about being on the streets?lost
E: I’m excited about people’s reactions to my work. I’m putting it out there to be judged, loved, hated, criticized, buffed. If you pick the right spot your piece could be seen, thought about and even discussed by hundreds of people in 1 day. That’s what excites me.


MD:
How does it differ when you show your work in a gallery?

E: When you place a piece outside, you’re not trying to make money or please a gallery owner or potential buyer. I mean I know you’re not doing that when you paint a canvas too, you should always paint for you and you alone but if you’re painting a wall, you have another special level of freedom. I used to find showing pieces in a gallery really intense. I would get really excited if people liked the work or bought the work, and I’d become really down and withdrawn if bad things were said or if nothing sold. I’m learning to get better with all that now and starting to really enjoy creating art for myself and purely for the sole reason of creating.

skipper
MD:
Who are your references in street art?

E: As I mentioned it was Banksy that first introduced me to street art and him and Eine that gave me my first break allowing me to sell my work through Pictures On Walls. My main ‘street art’ favourites are people like Herakut, C215, Titifreak, Blu, Word To Mother, Lister, David Choe, Mr Jago, Mike Giant, Skinner. I tend to be more influenced by people outside street art though, everyone from Aubrey Beardsley and Henry Fuseli to James Jean, Mike Mignola, Tom Gauld, Ashley Wood, Stanley Kubrik, Arthur C. Clarke, and last but not least H.P Lovecraft.

crisp
MD: Which is the best graffiti you’ve ever seen?

E: this:







MD:
What do you think street art contributes to people in big cities?

E: I think it gives people an everyday opportunity to see art and engage their brains on something they probably wouldn’t have done otherwise. A lot of people never bother going to galleries or museums because they can be put off by the atmosphere or because they have a preconceived idea about what to expect, but with street art, it becomes part of your everyday world whether you like it or not. You could pass a piece on the street on the way to work and that piece could stop you in your tracks, make you take out 1 minute of your busy day to stop and think about it and it could stick in your head for the rest of the day, week, month. It could create discussion between colleagues and friends, make you share ideas and thoughts and just generally get people talking and discussing art where they wouldn’t have otherwise. I got an email once from a woman who had spotted one of my angels that I painted in Dublin. She was walking past there with her son and she said she got the feeling it was there watching over her and her family, giving her hope for the future. I thought that was amazing, it makes it all worthwhile.


MD:
Compared to other cities in the world, what do you think about London’s street art scene?

cheeky_cherubE: I think there’s a lot of great stuff going on but I also think there’s a lot of shit being put out there. I haven’t done anything outside for a while now mainly because I feel like the streets are awash with bad stencils. It’s true that everyone has to start somewhere, you can’t be expected to knock out great pieces from day one, I know I certainly didn’t, but I also didn’t go spraying weak work all over the shop. I won’t put anything outside now unless the location has been carefully considered, planned and thought out and the piece is good enough to be put out there, to make a positive difference to that space and environment.


MD:
If you could paint any wall in London which one would it be and what would you paint there?

E: I guess it wouldn’t all be about the biggest most high profile wall. Like I said it would have to be a wall that would interact successfully with the piece, become a collaboration between myself and the street. Sometimes the best wall spaces are the ones hidden away that only a small handful of people will ever see.


MD:
What’s the best one you’ve already painted?

E: I think the 2 most successful pieces for me have to be the Main large wall I painted at the Cans Festival in London last year and the Lost Angel in Dublin. They came out exactly as I wanted them, I had a great time painting them, met some great people on both occasions during the process and I’ve had a really positive response from the people who saw them.


MD:
What’s the thinking behind Cargo’s wall?

E: I have to say there’s no real concept behind the piece other than the woman is supposed to represent a kind of witch, living out in the forest. I just wanted to make the most of the opportunity and paint something that was just for the sake of painting. It was interesting for me to work on such a landscape format, most of my stuff seems to be portrait for some reason. It was also nice to relax and have fun with it knowing there were no print or canvas sales coming off the back of it.

eeluscargocomp

MD: Could you tell us your favourite place in London to get inspired?
E: London has inspiration everywhere. I live on the South East coast now and make the trip to London around once a week to catch up with stuff. On that day I have an almost inspiration overload. I do a tour of the galleries and see what other people are doing, I walk the streets and take photos, I nip into books shops on the way and stock up on magazines then I spend time with friends in the pub in the evening. Every part of that day in London for me is inspirational.


MD:
Tell us two or three places to go in London if we want to see good street art.

E: I used to have a studio in Hackney Wick, that places is constantly dripping with fresh paint. Other than that you’d probably wanna do a tour of the east end. Hit Shoreditch, Old Street, Hackney Rd areas, it’s always been the street art heart of London.


MD:
Are you pessimistic or optimistic?

E: Depends what day you catch me on. Some days I can be the Lord of Doom and Gloom but then on others nothing can go wrong. I’m making more of a conscious effort recently to stay positive and optimistic at all times. At the end of the day I’m my own boss, I do what I love doing every single day of my life, I have an amazing supportive family and great friends, a roof over my head, I don’t really have anything to be pessimistic or negative about. The current financial situation in this country is the only worrying thing, a lot of people are obviously feeling the pinch.


gaze_blueMD:
Which is your biggest fear? And your most unachievable dream?

E: My biggest fear is losing my creativity and having to go back to working for someone else. That depresses the hell out of me. My most unachievable dream is to become bitten by a radioactive animal or insect which results in me having bizarre super powers, massive responsibilities and crazy enemies. To direct sci-fi films would also be amazing but I have a suspicion that may never happen.


MD:
If you could go back in time, would you do anything differently?

E: I would use a darker grey on the background for the Cargo wall ;) Apart from that, absolutely nothing. You have to go where the journey takes you, roll with the punches and learn as much as you can from everything you do and everyone you meet.






MD:
If you had to choose: Demon or angel?
E: Demon. Nietzsche said that In Heaven, all the interesting people are missing’.I couldn’t agree more.


MD:
If you were god and suddenly woke up after a long sleep and saw the current chaos, what would be the first thing you’d do?

E: I’m not sure if I believe in ‘God’ but maybe there is some kind of grand Creator, It’s a nice theory. It seems to me that if something has created us, it’s almost like they’ve bought a Kitten, they’ve let the kitten loose in the house then completely forgotten about it. So when he/she comes back and finds the house has been trashed, he can hardly be surprised. In all honesty if I was said Creator, I’d get my majestic caddie to hand me my Godlike putter and I’d tap us into the nearest black hole (obviously in 1 shot) and start again. I guess me trying to be optimistic isn’t going too well just yet.

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For more information on Eelus go to:

http://eelus.com/ or his One Big Freak Show blog

Thanks to Unusualimage for use of his flickr images.


3,688 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , , — Mila Dore @ 2:12 pm


Green Blood

July 7, 2009

Could you imagine what morphology nature would acquire to defend itself from devastating human attacks? French street artist Ludo was at Cargo last month decorating our wall with his answer to the question.

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ludo_working

His ephemeral creation was part of his “Nature’s Revenge” series. With his eye-catching street art he reflects about the relationship between humans, weapons and nature. In his work you can see skull grapes, hand grenade plants, cauliflower bombs, rose thorns, sunflower guns, carnivorous plants, omnipresent security organic cameras that watch us like if we were in the book 1984, and leaves changing from vital green to sad gray, emerging from the concrete, bricks and asphalt. A perfect imaginary to prompt the most spooky green nightmares. Be careful what you think about tonight.

See here some other pictures or check his site / flickr slideshow for the lazy ones.

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rose

carnivorous


912 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , — Mila Dore @ 3:48 pm


Flick through our Wall Art

Eight years is no small thing. Cargo’s yard has had most, if not all, of the cream of the UK’s street art scene and even a few from further abroad grace it’s battered walls. We don’t like to drop name but *cough* Bansky, Shepard Fairey, Herakut, Miss Pink, Nick Walker, D*Face, KLANG!. So we decided we were mature enough to launch our very own Flickr account. We want to share with you all those great pieces of art that have been breathing life into the walls of our yard for so long.

Par example:

unonueve

diez

dos

cuatro

Click here if you fancied more than these yummy appetizers. Here for the slide show.


1,063 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , , , , — Mila Dore @ 2:33 pm


Artist of the Month: The Krah

June 2, 2009

A month back Greek street artist The Krah hit up our 6th wall with a striking, multi-method piece. Wet Paint had a sit down with him to ask him a few questions about his style and his background.

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Wet Paint: Do you remember the first mural/wall you painted? What was it and what prompted you to paint it?

The Krah: Graffiti is like an imprinted instinct, with roots in our tribal ancestors’ territorial marking and freedom of speech. Everyone sees Greece as a paradise holiday destination, with beautiful beaches, nice food and hot weather. As a child brought up in one of the most over crowded built up Mediterranean cities, with high unemployment, corruption, police brutality, knowing that you will be trapped in a 12 month army duty after school, it felt like there was no future.

I started doing tags in the streets of Athens as a kid, pure vandalism – it was so much fun. Then I felt the need to use spray paint and to get more creative so I did my first paintings of characters back in 1997 on one of the walls at my school. But that just wasn’t enough I soon got addicted and started painting the streets in central Athens, met other graff writers and then fell in love with painting subway trains. As I got older my passion to create opened lots of doors, I got to travel, meet people and through experimenting with different ways of making art I developed the style I have now.

WP: Graffiti or ‘tagging’ has recently been becoming more prevalent in your home city of Athens. Has this been a long time coming or a gradual build up of tagging? Why is it “all over the city” (or is that media misrepresenting it?)

TK: In Greece like in most Mediterranean countries because of the hot weather, people tend to spend most of their time out doors, in parks or meandering around in the city. Graffiti is not only a way of marking your journeys but it’s a way of changing your surroundings. The graffiti boom didn’t happen in the 80s like in the States or Western Europe, it started later on in the early 90s. Before that you would see lots of political and football slogans but because of our passionate and fiery nature it just got out of control, the youth took over the streets. Now days Greece exports the Sabotage spray paint, feta and olives.

WP: What would you say separates Greek street art from the scene in the UK? How are both scenes different?

TK: I find that we are more influenced by the European and Brazilian scene where as the English have been more influenced by the American style. Seeing the Athenian street-art you see strong references to Greek mythology and a lot of references to the Sea for example mermaids and anchors. You can’t avoid seeing political meanings in the street paintings visualising the current government corruption and the effect it has in the modern Greek society.

Sharp Graphic elements inspired by graphic design, seem to concur the new generation of graffiti in Athens. An interesting element is the new style of roller tagging that has been influenced by the notorious Brazilian pixacao taggers. I showed my Brazilian mate Milo Tchas some photos of them and asked him to compare them. He told me that the Greek style of roller tagging was different because the letters in the Brazilian pixacao are separate to each other and tall but the Greek ones are stack together look more like graphic logos and some have 3d shadows like traditional graffiti.

Check out some Greek graffiti/street art here:

WP: Who are your current favourite artists and why?

TK: Since I stated doing graffiti I always loved the work of Stelios Faitakis other ways known as Bizar. One of the first Greek graffiti artists and one of the most known. His style is influenced by the Orthodox church wall paintings that has a strong visual presence  In the Greek society mixed with themes based on ancient Greek mythology and elements of the far eastern culture, illustrating the struggle of the working class and the fight for freedom against the system depicting scenes of revolutions between angels and riot police.

WP: What role do you think digital photography and the internet have played in the street art boom (if any)?

TK: I remember before the internet and cheap fights we made and watched graffiti videos and graff magazines as it was the only way to find out more of what was going on in the graffiti sub-culture and find inspiration. Now days its easier to travel and you can check on the internet and see the new styles world wide, web-sites like graffiti.org, woostercollective.com and ekosystem.org have been as important to the evolution of graffiti as has the book spray-can art by Martha Cooper.

WP: There is something about Akira in your art, is that a fair comment? Has Japanese anime influenced your art?

TK: Akira is definitely one of the best animated films of all time. In 2002 my mate Eon from my crew (http://www.101crew.co.uk/) gave me a ticket for Tokyo. So, I went with him for a week of non stop graffiti and getting smashed. It was just life changing. They use cartoon mascots instead of logos and the streets of the centre all look like a futuristic Piccadilly circus full of neon signs and digital video adverts on screens, their rich alphabet adds to the visual stimulation… Japanese people of all ages read Manga comics on the tube on their way to work.

I love the Asian Temple roof tops that curl, and the way the Buddhist religion reflects on the population and you can see it in their mannerisms. Everything is different from the food to the smells, I could go on forever. It was a very inspiring trip and has effected they way I think and draw.

WP: You work on a lot of media, which is your favourite to work in and why?

TK: There is nothing like painting in the streets…. Finding spots that fit with the surroundings, so the art-work becomes one with the city. The idea that it belongs to everyone and it won’t last for ever, it is alive and it will deteriorate with the wall or might change by other people scribbling over it or cleaning it off.

WP: Have you ever been in trouble with the law?

TK: Lots of times….

WP: Who or what do you find influencing the work you create?

TK: Hypnotic rivers of sound, the vibrations of bass, spectrums of light, feelings, tastes and aromas of every day experiences.

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The Krah is currently working on a deck series for a British Skateboard Company and has three shows running at the moment in Birmingham, London and Brighton.

He will be appearing in some group shows in Athens, Berlin and New York.

Keep an eye on his travels and his trade-mark pieces appearing all over the world here:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/the-krah/

You can also buy some The Krah limited edition prints from here:

http://thekrah.yokaboo.com/


1,343 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , — Wetpaint @ 5:17 pm


Art: Stencils get big, The Cans Festival.

May 7, 2008

Street Art is famous. Not ‘did you see me jumping around in the background of that live news piece’ famous either, Street Art is proper. Street Art IS the news piece. As I took my 6pm power-nap on Friday night, the Radio 4 news announced that Banksy has unveiled some new art in a disused railway next to Waterloo. Damn, street art on Radio 4? Charlotte Green saying ‘guerrilla street artist’ gives me the ‘orn (actually anything that Charlotte Green says give me the ‘orn)

the queue on Leake St.So my friend and I shouldn’t have been surprised to turn the corner of Leake Street on Bank Holiday Sunday to see the hour and half long queue that sprawled infront of us.

Hell, it should have been obvious that when upon googling the ‘Cans Festival’ name and a sponsored link for the stencil based art exhibition sprung up as a highlighted box, that this Banksy-powered 3 day long street art event was going to be rammed for the duration, having has it’s very public arse, PR’d the hell off.

Pope Marilyn by Dolk

All the better for it though, the Cans Fesitval was a really special event, nicely hosted, well run, suitable grungey and run down with walls, cars, hoardings, and boards full of the best stencil art in the world. Everyone who cuts outs and sprays for a living was there, there was a blackboard with the newly arrived artists’ names scrawled on it. Hush and Eelus was on there when I walked past.

One complaint my friend had was that the £3 programme being sold in the queue had nothing about the artists who were painting that weekend. Only some cobbled together texts from some old anarchists and the same old pseudo-intelligent, apocalyptic one liners about freedom found in any Socialists fanzine. Aimed at

the normal street art exhibition goers, the programme should have been more informative to the crowd that turned up, which was a refreshingly broad spectrum:

Banksy\'s comeback to Tower Hamlet\'s Graffiti removal team...

chipped away

Students filling their art foundation portfolio, Londonites filling their bank holiday weekend, parents dragged along by their kids, kids dragged along by their parents, not the typical ubertrendy free booze snagging laggers who normally frequent these street art shindigs. Another top notch achievement by the organisers of this event, properly bringing the attention of the masses to the glut of quality stencil art that is walked by each day on the streets of the UK, via the power of google sponsored links and Radio 4.


Hoodie Stab

The taste tide might be turning on Banksy (on the bus down to Waterloo, there was new stencil on the side of a disused pub in Dalston that has a Rat painting a sold sign with the tag ‘Wanksy’ underneath it). but all kudos must be given for the ‘look at me / don’t look at me / why aren’t you looking at me?’ street artist for putting his full weight behind this event and giving some overdue exposure to some brilliant artists. Banksy pieces were pretty special too, even with his trademark ‘twat-you-over-the-head’ subtly of sentiment, his pieces’ stood out.

Btoy\'s Girl

But the best thing about this show was coming across brilliant pieces from Artists who’s work is normally only seen on the streets of Argentina, Spain, Italy and from all over the world. And putting to use this old train tunnel to showcase such top talent.

Eelus in full effect

Faile


548 views — Filed under: Art — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Wetpaint @ 4:10 pm


  • Wetpaint
    The resident art and graffiti blogger whilst curating the art in Cargo yard and not going out much to perfect the ultimate ironic stencil.

  • Old Stuff

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