Fafi Pop Up Show in Paris

 

From June 14th – June 22, for one week only, Galerie LJ in Paris will be hosting a pop up solo show featuring works by Fafi. Not only as in iconic street artist in her own right, Fafi has patented her art and her name to become an incredibly popular international brand. I haven’t seen new work from her in awhile, so this show is an exciting for treat for fans of her brightly coloured empowered female illustrations. The pop-up is mainly to promote the sale of a 10 separate print releases (at 350 Euros each) and an array of collaborations for cheaper goods like shoes and mugs with companies like Vans and Married to the MOB.

To see the invite and a sneak peak at some new prints check out the event on facebook.

 

Photo courtesy of Galerie LJ

Weekend link-o-rama

Bast

You know what’s weird? Hanging out with all your friends from high school and then actually seeing current high school students from your school. Those kids are so young! While I was freaking out about no longer being a teenager and enjoying the beautiful London weather (I’m serious about this one), here’s what I almost missed this week:

Photo by Luna Park

Morley x Lazarides Print Releases

Finally, the highly anticipated prints by Los Angeles based street artist Morley have been released. Exclusively through The Outsiders, the release consists of four two-colored pieces in editions of 20. Each are priced at a fairly low £75.

Also, on Monday be sure to check out our interview with the artist, himself.

Cost was here (at Papermonster and now in your house)

In just a few hours, Papermonster will be releasing a new series of ink relief prints from graffiti legend Cost: The COST WAS HERE series come from iconic posters that covered the streets of New York City in the 1990’s. There will be three prints in different colorways (orange, silver and white), each editions of 30 and 16.75 x 24.75 inches. I love that Cost picked this particular phrase for the prints. What’s more graffiti than trying to say that you were somewhere? And if Cost doesn’t actually have to be there himself but can rely on others to spread his name for him, all the better.

Check them out:

These go on sale at 10am Eastern on Friday at Papermonster’s webstore, and they will each cost $150.

And if you don’t know Cost’s history or just need a little refresher (or, like me, you weren’t there so you need to hear things secondhand), here’s some words by Ian Bourland on Cost and his writing partner Revs:

COST was there.  It’s difficult to imagine New York City (to say nothing of its global imitators) without street art bedecking every nook and cranny.  The streets of Williamsburg and SoHo are wheatpasted, stenciled, and stickered, old-school throwies and bubble letters cheek-by-jowl with corporate-sponsored attempts to capitalize on the popularity of artists like Banksy and Shepard Fairey.  But a mere twenty years ago, what is now commonplace was virtually unheard of.  During the early years of the Giuliani administration and the twilight of old school train car graffiti, COST and his partner in crime REVS revitalized aerosol art’s core mission even as they opened the door for a generation of street artists to follow.

During the late seventies and early eighties, New York experienced an efflorescence of street art: on the one hand, crews of aerosol writers bombed the city and its subways with increasingly elaborate style and intricacy; on the other, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring served as crucial links between the downtown gallery scene and the streets, writing on walls and subway platforms in bold, easily-recognizable text and linework.

COST was of a generation younger than the likes of Basquiat, Lee, and Seen, but growing up on the streets of the East Village he absorbed their influence, as well as the DIY ethos and graphic influence of the punk rock subculture centered around CBGB.  The hand-painted works he would later wheatpaste around the city featured figures reminiscent of Haring’s “radiant children,” and his own arrow-laden tags. In COST’s terms, he took all the came before, all the was forged in the welter of downtown, and “mixed them in his paintbucket.”

The results were iconic, and give us a window into an often-overlooked history of street art.  In the face of an increasingly ornate and unwieldy style of graffiti and a hostile mayoral regime, COST and REVS aimed to strip graffiti back to its roots: getting over and reclaiming urban space.  He recalls that, “in the early nineties I was frustrated and upset with the direction that graffiti was going once it officially moved above ground after the train era died out…We began to incorporate and emphasize the philosophies of non-perfection to an art form that had steadily moved towards a state of perfection.  The focus became more on involving ourselves within the everyday landscape—we were doing outlaw art, and it was for everyone to see, from a child to your grandmother.”

This outlaw art required a new set of rules, and a new approach to medium.  Spray cans and caps took a less central role, and COST and REVS pioneered now familiar tools such as heavy rollers, stickers, stencils, and wheatpasting prefabricated work to any urban surface that would bear it.  During the first half of the nineties COST and REVS took the drive to “get up” to a new extreme, diffusing their work across the CIty in ways earlier generations could only imagine.

Walking around downtown Manhattan in those days, you could spot a wheatpasted painting in a brick inset on the backstreets of SoHo, rolled tags on fourth floor walkups off Lafayette street, murals around Tompkins Square Park, and their ubiquitous, sans-serif stickers.  Some of these were simple and declarative: “COST Fucked Madonna;” other recalled the interactive and politicized spirit of both Fluxus and the hardcore scene—dial the number on a COST sticker, get the rant of the week about Rudy Giuliani.  In this way, COST served as a crucial bridge figure, a link to graffiti’s golden age and street art’s future.  The mural “Mt. Krushmore,” depicting Andy Warhol and Keith Haring in blown-up photorealism, synthesized the grand scale and aerosol style of the eighties with the graphic sensibilities of the present.  That piece, towering over the East Village, was up for several years.  Nowadays, more familiar names might occupy the walls downtown, but make no mistake: COST was here.

Photos courtesy of Papermonster

Weekend link-o-rama

Neckface and Reader stickers in NYC. Photos by Sabeth718

If you looked at Vandalog this week, you’d think it was a slow week in street art. That’s not so, but I’ve been locked down working on Up Close and Personal (opening pics here). So here’s some of what I missed covering this week:

Photo by Sabeth718

Weekend link-o-rama

TresOhUno

While I should probably be studying for final exams right now, I’m spending just as much time getting ready for Up Close and Personal, which opens next week in NYC. Check out a preview on Brooklyn Street Art. Here’s some stuff I would have liked to have covered this week:

Photo by TresOhUno

Resplendent Semblance Print Release

Tiger Rabbit, 30″ x 36″, five color hand pulled screen print on 90lb Stonehenge with Maxwell Colette and Pawn Works.

People have been asking me to release a print of this image for some time now. I can’t tell you how many times when I’ve come to the table to do an edition with a gallery, this piece has been their outright first suggestion. Well finally, the Tiger Rabbit image is now available through Maxwell Colette and Pawn Works.
please email contact@pawnworkschicago.com or oliver@maxwellcolette.com for details

Blu print release

Later this month will see the release of Blu‘s latest print release for Studiocromie. The piece is based off the artist’s mural in Rennes, France last year. According to Nuart, all of the kinks haven’t been figure out with prices and edition numbers, but the physical size of the print will be a staggering 70 x 90 cm. At least the detail is trying to be preserved. The smaller the size, the crappier it will be.

Photo by Blu

The Reader – read it

A couple of months ago, I posted about The Reader, a book by Reader. Reader is one of my favorite writers, and also one of the most reclusive writers. Not that I would know exactly how reclusive, I’ve never met the guy. But that’s the rumor, and before this, I’d never heard of him doing a book or a zine or print or original artwork for indoors or anything like that. So when The Reader came out, I immediately picked up a copy. While I could tell from some photos online that this would not be your typical graffiti book, I had no idea how far removed it would be from Subway Art and the like. The Reader has just one photo of Reader’s graffiti. Instead, it is full of collages and stickers.

A mix of (I think) his own words and appropriated texts, The Reader sets out a unique worldview. If Reader is a modern hermit, The Reader is his manifesto. While I can’t say I agree with everything in The Reader, I loved reading the book and found it hard to put down. This isn’t an art book, although it is definitely a work of art. The Reader is a crash-course in a certain philosophy.

The Reader is available online for $18. Also, since the book came out, Reader has also released what I think is his first screenprint.

Photos by Operation Madman

Screenprints from Cost available now for just $25

Cost, one of New York’s most legendary writers and (though I’m sure he’d hate the label) an unwitting pioneer of street art along with Revs, has just released his first ever screenprints. They are available now at Brooklynite Gallery. They are based on two of his classic paste-ups from the 1990’s. There are 6 different prints available, all 5.5 x 4 inches.

The two 1-color prints above are editions of 500 and they cost just $25 each. They are available online.

Additionally, there is a 4-pack available for $150 with some brightly colored backgrounds (they’re an edition of 50):

Photos courtesy of Brooklynite Gallery