Photos from Venice

It is 2am right now in Venice, so I’ll leave the text describing all of this for another day, but here are my photos from the trip. A few of the photos are of work from Shepard Fairey, 2 are of a random stencil I found, a few are of the band Dark Dark Dark performing, and the rest are of The Swimming Cities of Serenissima.

My Thursday Night

This week there were a number of great art openings in London. My friend and I went to 3 of them.

First was Charming Baker‘s show “The Meaning of Everything” at The Gallery on Redchurch Street. I know they say to save the best for last, but we decided to mix it up and start where I thought we would see the best work. I was right. Charming’s show was extremely cool. For me, his paintings either click and I think they are just fabulous, or they don’t click at all and I think they’re boing. Not much middle ground. Luckily, this show is full of pieces that really click with me. And the prints are extremely well made, which is always nice. I even went back today to check it all out in more detail. My only real criticism would be that the prices seem a bit high, even though the pieces are big. I saw a few works have already sold, so I could be wrong, but I don’t expect the show to sell out. Here are a few of the paintings. Photos are from S-Butterfly, and here is the rest of her set:

Charming Baker Panda Print

Charming Baker Train

Charming Baker Airplane

After the jump, my visits to Stella Dore and The Pure Evil Gallery… Continue reading “My Thursday Night”

Slinkachu @ Andipa

I haven’t been down to see this show in person yet, but it’s definitely on the top of my list. Slinkachu has a solo show at Andipa Modern. Slinkachu does interesting installations of tiny little people on the street and then photographs them. These could easily turn into really tacky and watered down street art, but I think Slinkachu actually does a pretty good job avoiding that. Here’s a few samples from the show. These photos of Slinkachu’s photos are from s.butterfly. The theme of the show is superheroes.

Slinkachu

Slinkachu

Slinkachu

Slinkachu

More photos here

JR’s Self Portrait

JR is awesome. I could go on about why, instead I’m just going to post this self-portrait by JR that will be at Circleculture Gallery from this Friday. Can’t believe I forgot to put this show in my post yesterday. It is going to be crazy-good and I can’t wait to get to Berlin in a few weeks to see all the work in person. More info at Arrested Motion.

Jr Self Portrait

Armsrock in Berlin

So these have been online for about two weeks, but I’ve only just seen them. Armsrock is one of the most promising young street artists I can think of, so I’m always interested in his latest work. Here are some street pieces from Berlin. More on his blog.

Armsrock

Armsrock

And here’s one piece from his show at Intoxicated Demons Gallery in Berlin. More info on Armsrock’s blog.

Armsrock Interogation

Look closely: Unique urban signage

One of the best thrills of street art is walking by a piece a dozen times before realize it is there. Here are a few pieces of unauthorized signage that might just pass at first glance, and then once you get the joke, it’s totally obvious.

Darius and Downey. Photo by Luna Park
Darius and Downey. Photo by Luna Park

This piece by D&D, perhaps the kings of this sort of work, has been up since 2003.

Work and photo by Vinchen.
Work and photo by Vinchen
Photo by Mickie Quick
Photo by Mickie Quick
Work and photo by d.billy
Work and photo by d.billy
Work and photo by d.billy
Work and photo by d.billy

Of course, there are hundreds of these sorts of signs. Leave your favorites in the comments section or shoot me an email. I’d love to do a Part 2 of this post.

Via Wooster Collective and Urban Prankster (Urban Prankster is an amazing source for these sort of things by the way)

Revs is too good

Revs is just awesome. I was searching through flickr for recent pics of street art, and these came up. They just had to be shared. Not enough artists weld their work to things these days.

Revs

Revs

Photos by Hrag Vartanian