Very Nearly Almost issue 9

A few weeks ago I picked up the latest issue of Very Nearly Almost, and about two weeks ago I promised its editor, George, that I would mention it on Vandalog. So, here’s that long overdue mention.

VNA Cover

For those who don’t know, Very Nearly Almost is a London-based street art magazine. I’ve been reading VNA for I guess nearly a year now, and each issue is better than the last.

Issue 9 features all the usual VNA goodness (photos of every good piece of street art and some good graffiti to have popped up in London since the last issue went to print), plus some interviews and artist profiles, photos of other cities, and product reviews.

Sickboy

The interview with Ludo was probably the highlight for me, because I’v never known anything about the guy behind the “Nature’s Revenge” series. There are also interviews with Meggs and Jeff Soto and features on a few other great artists.

Very Nearly Almost

VNA has the love and devotion of a ‘zine behind it, without the low Kinko’s production values.

You can by VNA at some stores (such as Concrete Hermit in London) and online. If you live in London, this is a great documentation of street art from this spring, and if you live elsewhere, well London street art is awesome, and VNA proves it.

Vhils book and print releases

Italy Vhils

And Vhils is back on top in my book. Man has he been busy. First, the work he’s done at Truman Brewery here in London. Then his work at the Fame Festival in Italy (photo above). Now, he’s got a super limited edition book being released and some new hand worked prints at Lazarides. In the gallery, prints are what I think Vhils does best, so a new print from him is always exciting to me. Here’s some info from Lazarides about the prints and his book:

As the hugely successful “Scratching The Surface” exhibition by Vhils (aka Alexandre Farto) draws to a close at our Rathbone Place gallery this Saturday, the action moves to our Greek Street Shop this coming Friday, the 31st of July, with the highly anticipated release of a rather special edition of our favourite Portugeezer’s first book and 3 new hand-finished prints for Lazarides.

Featuring a lazer-cut front cover, the full colour, 80 page, 28 x 22 cm, hard-back book ‘Scratching The Surface’ is also signed by the artist, is strictly limited to only 100 copies worldwide, and costs £45.

Vhils has also been hard at work hand-finishing 3 new prints for us, and we’re pleased to announce that we’ll be making available 10 variants of each edition to be displayed at our Shop on Greek Street from 10 am this Friday. Each print is from an overall varied edition of 30, measures 70 x 49.5 cm, is signed by the artist, and available to purchase at £350. Whilst both the book and prints can be ordered by calling the Shop on 0203 214 0055/0066, those buying in person have the advantage of being able to select their favourite version and take it home right there and then.

Vhils print

Vhils at FAME Fest

Just a quick note to show off one of Vhils’ pieces for FAME Fest. There is something quite ethereal about this work, which was made by scratching the plaster off a wall in the old part of Grottaglie. Great placement for it, too.

alexandre-farto-vhils-muro-01

muro-02

Vhils is also working on some gallery pieces while he’s in town for the exhibition at the festival’s conclusion.

studio

compro2

Elisa x

TIME Magazine’s top street artists

TIME Magazine recently put out this piece about the “Top 10 guerrilla artists.”

Their choices (unranked, I would assume):

1. The Barrel Monster Guy – I for one am amazed how much publicity this guy got. Roadsworth is way cooler.

2. Basquiat – Don’t think anybody is going to argue this one

3. Mark Jenkins – Another choice who makes unexpected sculptural interventions. Way underrated.

4. Blek le Rat – Important, innovative, and cool, but certainly not the best.

5. SendAMessage.nl – These guys will spraypaint your note on the wall in Israel for $40. Wouldn’t really call them artists unless that only pays for materials.

6. Iz The Wiz – A legend. Somebody whose work should be better known. Just not the greatest graffiti writer of all time.

7. Banksy – The list couldn’t be complete without him.

8. Shepard Fairey – See my opinion on Banksy.

9. Simon Rhodia – This guy sounds awesome. He built a bunch of giant sculptures in his back yard, some over 100 feet tall.

10. Graffiti Research Lab – The geek community loves them (and I count myself among the geek community, I do write a blog after all), the press loves them, but GRL doesn’t seem to get the respect they deserve among graffiti and street artist fans.

Barry McGee book release in October

Barry McGee Book

So this is some exciting news: Alleged Press (Aaron Rose’s publishing company), will be publishing the book Barry McGee by Barry McGee this Halloween. The book cover looks pretty minimalist, so I’m not sure what to expect, but I doubt it will be bad.

Via TAC Blog

Correction

It’s been pointed out that there was something very important that I missed in yesterday’s post about Banksy’s auction results.

WallKandy, on WallKandy’s forums in fact, noted this morning that Lyon & Turnbull, the auction house whose representative is quoted in the original Bloomberg article, kind of had it coming and shouldn’t be suprised that their Banksy pieces failed to sell. Those works were pieces taken off the street and authenticated by VERMIN, not Pest Control (the official Banksy authenticators). Sorry to have written that long post yesterday based on that information, though I guess now my critisism of the article is even more valid as Banksy work hasn’t been doing as bad at auction as some Bloomberg readers now think.

Auction demand for Banksy is dropping

UPDATE: Here is an important correction to this article. In short, many of the Banksy works referred to in this article shouldn’t have sold, as they were street works and not properly authenticated. Sorry I didn’t notice that when I first read the article, and thanks to WallKandy for the heads up.

Bloomberg.com reports that “Works by Banksy are disappearing from U.K. auctions as collectors shy away from paintings by graffiti artists in the financial slump.” Okay, so this isn’t actually so suprising, I’m more interested that it is being covered by Bloomberg. Banksy’s work isn’t selling like it used to at auction, despite some amazing work at both Sotheby’s and Christies (aka, two versions of The Flower Chucker being sold within a month).

This is a good article and should be read in full, but here’s a little sample:

Works by Banksy are disappearing from U.K. auctions as collectors shy away from paintings by graffiti artists in the financial slump.British regional auction houses have canceled specialist sales of urban art in London, while some of their bigger rivals’ catalogs have few stenciled works by Banksy, who was born in Bristol, west England, and keeps his identity a secret.

Falling prices and rising failure rates for Banksy works earlier this year have made sellers reluctant to test the market with higher-value paintings. Auction prices for contemporary artists generally have dropped between 30 and 50 percent with the crisis, according to dealers.

“There’s no point flogging a dead horse,” Ben Hanly, contemporary-art specialist at the Edinburgh auctioneers, Lyon & Turnbull, said in an interview. “The core collectors have been decimated. Young City types don’t want to spend 20,000 pounds ($32,690) or 30,000 pounds on trendy art at the moment.”

There were no Banksy paintings to be seen at Sotheby’s, Christie’s International’s and Phillips de Pury’s evening contemporary-art auctions in London in June, or at Bonhams’s Vision 21 sale on July 1. Meanwhile Lyon & Turnbull and Berkshire-based auctioneer Dreweatt Neate both dropped standalone events.

Five Banksy sprayed-stenciled works, ranging in estimate from 7,000 pounds to 18,000 pounds, failed to sell at Lyon & Turnbull’s April 24 contemporary-art auction in London. The company’s October sale will contain a higher proportion of works by established 20th-century British artists, said Hanly.

One important note that the article does go on to make is that street art, including work by Banksy, has been put into contemporary art auctions recently. Gone are the days of the “Urban Art Auction” and while yes, the market has slowed down, the positive to all this is that Banksy’s is in the same auctions as Andy Warhol and Damien Hirst. Perhaps street artists are going to be taken more seriously as a result of this move.

While this article definitely has some insights and is a good overview of what’s been going on with Banksy’s auction results lately, I do take issue with it on one thing.

Is it really fair to say that Banksy (and, by implication, street art as a whole) is in terrible shape right now? EVERYTHING IS FAILING TO SELL AT AUCTION! THERE WAS AN ART MARKET BUBBLE! Nobody can’t honestly say that just street art or Banksy is in trouble.

If we just look at Banksy for a moment, he has never been bigger, at least in the eyes of the public. According to Google Trends, there have been more web searches for the name “Banksy” in recent months than the term “modern art”. Banksy’s recent Bristol show has put his name in every major newspaper in the country, and only 10 days ago Steve Lazarides, Banksy’s former manager, had a major write-up in The Times.

Yes, art is doing poorly right now, but Banksy is by no means the worst off out of the entire art market, and neither is street art in general.

Charming Baker news

The official video for Charming Baker‘s recent show “The Meaning of Everything” has just been released. Normally I’m not one for videos of shows when I could just look at photos that are a higher quality, but kind of like the soundtrack to this video, so I’m posting it.

Charming Baker is one of those few artists who can transition seamlessly from “urban art” to “contemporary art,” in fact, sometimes I don’t quite understand why he is considered an urban artist (then I remember that he has, on occassion, taken guns and shot his paintings). So while his last show was on Redchurch Street and clearly had a bit of an urban art spin to it, this latest project puts Baker up alongside some of the greats in the wider contemporary art scene. The Blank Canvas Project is a charity art project involving artists like Charming Baker, Peter Blake, Gavin Turk, the Chapman Brothers, and Tracy Emin. Each artist creates a tent, and they will be displayed at The Bill Chill Festival to raise money for The Big Issue and Amnesty International.