Endless Canvas selects… Ras Terms

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Grow, Ras Terms, Broke and others

Today’s pick from Endless Canvas is Ras Terms. Endless Canvas is one of my favorite art blogs and so last month I asked if they would select a few of the Bay Area artists that they regularly post about to highlight on Vandalog. They sent over a bunch of photos of work by half a dozen artists, and with this post we are half-way through Endless Canvas’ selections. I hope this series bring some attention to the great work that Endless Canvas is doing documenting graffiti and street art in the Bay Area as well as to the amazing artwork itself. Here’s more from today’s artist, Ras Terms:

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Ras Terms and Old Crow
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Broke, Ras Terms and Elite

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Photos by Endless Canvas

HOTTEA hits NYC

HOTTEA in Williamsburg
HOTTEA in Williamsburg

Minneapolis-based yarnbomber HOTTEA was busy in NYC last week. It was great to have him back in town. I only wish that his amazing work on the Williamsburg Bridge had lasted longer. Sadly, I never got to see more than just a few remnants. But there are other works:

On the West 4th Street basketball court
On the West 4th Street basketball court
In Bushwick
In Bushwick

Photos by Dani Mozeson

Endless Canvas selects… GATS

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Endless Canvas is one of my favorite art blogs. It is the best site that I know of documenting street art and graffiti in the Bay Area. Endless Canvas has been kind enough to select a few Bay Area artists to highlight on Vandalog this week and sending over some photos that we can use. Today’s artist is GATS, a writer and street artist that I’m a big fan of. I guess the most comparable artist I can think of on the street both in terms of content of the work and style would have to be Swampy. Here are a few of Endless Canvas’ photos of GATS’ work:

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GATS and IMP

Photos by Endless Canvas

Visiting the Atlanta Prison Farm

Feral Child
Feral Child

Earlier this month, Caroline and I and some friends (guided by Rob Dunalewicz) visited the abandoned Atlanta Prison Farm, a prison that was in active use for a good chunk of the 20th century and it now mostly abandoned, save for the occasional police training exercise. Today, the prison is covered in street art and graffiti. For me, it was interesting to see old work by Never, from before he began to focus on his owl characters that you can see around Brooklyn today. What’s so cool for me about artists working in abandoned spaces is that there seems to be a freedom to a lot of the work that isn’t found in their work when they are working in public spaces or making work for sale. Here’s a sampling of what we saw:

Never
Never

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Nos
Nos

Continue reading “Visiting the Atlanta Prison Farm”

Weekend link-o-rama

Elfo
Elfo

Okay, time for me to relax like Elfo’s character. I’ve got one week before senior year begins… But anyway… art:

Photo by Elfo

L’Imagination Prend Le Pouvoir!

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Editor’s note: I am so glad to publish this essay by the prolific ekg. This piece of writing explores some of ekg’s ideas about street art and graffiti while chronicling his time getting up in Paris earlier this year. ekg’s work may at first appear to be quite simple, but upon closer inspection it’s clear that there’s a lot going on behind his tag. Hopefully this essay provides a bit of insight the mind of ekg. – RJ Rushmore

L’Imagination Prend Le Pouvoir! (Imagination Usurps Power!), or what i was thinking while getting up in Paris for three weeks.

by ekg

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the above Situationist slogan was one of many revolutionary statements painted across the walls of Paris during the 1968 youth rebellion. the idea that imagination is revolutionary was a revelation to me. the inner personal vision becomes political; the political becomes fantastical. this internal reversal stokes passion and inspires external action, resulting in even more commitment to the illegal public mark, the residue and resonance of such revolutionary aesthetic actions. beautifully symmetrical in equivalency and explosive force, external actions that initiate change become a reflection of the internal universal. at this point in the grand evolution of our species, having created an electronic topological reality of coordinates, data, and patterns, Graffiti and Street Art are the uncontrolled voice, the instinctual blurt, the collective convulsive id of the cultural unconscious, a channel for aggressive alternative frequencies, the visually vociferous, ghost images of mutated mass-media, writhing wraiths of the imagination, irruptions into the matrix. in terms of these ideals, Paris is still a city vibrating with aesthetic rebellion and living up to its past as a hot bed of experimentation, philosophy and art, especially, graffiti and street art.

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while in Paris, i was on an all-city broadcast mission: solo guerrilla visual communication and direct neurological connection with the local populace, utilizing the physicality of the materials, tools, methods, and operations of Graffiti and Street Art to transmit illegal aesthetic manifestations. i had also visited a bunch of other cities over this past year, where i would simply walk and tag for eight-to-twelve hours a day until i would leave the city one-to-three weeks later. walking so much, just looking for the next spot, is mesmerizing, as distinguished from meditative, relaxed or unconscious, other descriptions i have read describing the experience of tagging. personally, i become energized and elevated, turned on and tuned in, an activated semiotic transmission tower, relay station, radar, satellite: during the day, one develops a heightened awareness of the empty spaces, the bubbles of silence, between the flow of people and traffic, finding that subtle spot of invisibility within the rhythm designated by the metronome of the traffic and pedestrian light system; whereas at night it is the opposite, turning up the antennae to eleven, hyper-aware of a single particular movement or noise, the glare of headlights, the rhythmic approach of pedestrian shoes, just one noise or movement. Lab Note: a look-out check list for any time of day: 1. pedestrians 2. cars (parked and moving) 3. police 4. surveillance cameras 5. windows (including second floors). as Rusk once said to me: Stay paranoid, stay safe.

Continue reading “L’Imagination Prend Le Pouvoir!”

NYC doors as canvases for unsanctioned artworks

Nether, DarkClouds and more
Nether, DarkClouds & more

Tags, throw-ups, paste-ups, stickers and a range of characters have all made their way to NYC doors, making them some of the most intriguing canvases in town. Here’s a sampling:

Harlequin -- in from Philly
Harlequinade
Cost, Enx and RAE
Cost, Enx and RAE
LMNOP
LMNOP
Cash4, Smells Jellyfish & more
Cash4, Smells Jellyfish & more

Photos by Lenny Collado, Dani Mozeson and Lois Stavsky

You don’t know (but you’ll love) Jonesy

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A note from the editor: This is a guest post by Dave Nolionsinengland of Shoreditch Street Art Tours. Few people know London’s street art and graffiti better than Dave, so I’m glad he’s offered to let us in on Jonesy. – RJ Rushmore

The single artist no one has ever heard of who most thrills guests on the Shoreditch Street Art Tours is Jonesy from East London.

Jonesy is not just about the good idea, it’s the good ideology, for he is committed to raising the alarm over the harm we do to our planet and our children’s future in our extraction of energy.

What really gets chins bouncing off the pavement is Jonesy’s execution, he commonly works in cast bronze with a level of detail, colour and beauty that is awe-inspiring.

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The first Jonesy we see is the 2012 “Grieving Oil”, a stunning two coloured casting of a beaked bird mounted on top of a redundant sign post. However, there is often debate over whether this is a bird as it appears to have a mane and Jonesy sometimes uses mythological creatures to make his point.

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Then come a series of small bronze dishes whose mounting on the walls at around chest height indicates supreme confidence in the strength of his adhesive, more than one visitor would have tried to pry the casting off the wall if there was any suggestion of weakness.

Jonesy’s sculptural enterprises don’t end with the fancy bronze, a few weeks ago off the beaten track on a tour we found a series of silvery figures cast into the ends of a partially demolished wall.

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It looks like he made a mould and slapped some plaster onto the bricks, formed some gargoyle faces with the moulds then painted the end result silver. So long as artists are prepared to do this kind of installation, street art lives!

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Jonesy also places original paintings on very heavy stock paper on the streets, again bleakly depicting the environmental Armageddon awaiting the environment.

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This kind of work done with purpose, beauty and given to the people without seeking the permission of any property owners embodies the glorious spirit of raw and wild street art.

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Photos by Dave Nolionsinengland