Maclaim in London

Case, Akut and Typism just painted this mural in Shoreditch. The text was painted by Typism and reads “Lakes are islands for fishes.” The characters bodies were painted by Akut, and Case did the photo-realistic faces.

Photo by S.Butterfly

Park City paper says vandalism can never be art

Photo by Barnaby

The Park City Record, the local paper in Park City, printed an editorial this week in reaction to Banksy’s recent painting spree there. I think I can see what they were getting at, and they could have made some great points (in fact, they correctly noted that Banksy’s artworks were essentially guerrilla advertising for Exit Through The Gift Shop), but then they didn’t. And by that, I mean they wrote something which was so outdated and wrong-headed that they pretty much made everything else they wrote pointless. They wrote “But let’s be clear. Graffiti is art when it is invited, and it is vandalism when it is not.”

Really? Do people still think like that? Even when Neas was sentenced to prison for his graffiti in 2008, the judge commented that Neas has artist talent.

Here’s what I wrote as a comment on the Park City Record’s website:

You might think graffiti is never art, or that it is generally or always bad art, and although I would disagree with you, we could at least debate the topic rationally, but your position isn’t even logical. If the Mona Lisa had been painted on somebody’s front door without permission, that might annoy the property owner, but that wouldn’t stop the painting from being a great work of art. Art is art no matter where or how it is made. Of course, graffiti that is painted without permission is also vandalism. But why can’t it be both art and vandalism at the same time? You had the chance to make some great points with this article, and then you suggested that something can only be either art or vandalism, not both, and now I can’t take anything in this editorial seriously.

Simply put… how can there still be educated and intelligent people who don’t grasp that something can be both art and vandalism simultaneously?

Via Banksy Prints

Taki 183 canvas sells for 50,000 €

The Taki 183 canvas that I mentioned a few weeks ago sold this week at auction for 50,000 €, which was the high estimate. Go buy a kickass José Parlá or a doze beautiful Ryan McGinley photos or a Banksy or anything else with that money! I know that tastes differ, but for less than 1% of that price, it is possible to get a Taki 183 screenprint that includes a spray painted tag, and that’s what Taki is about anyway…

Thanks to Viktor O for the tip.

Shepard Fairey in Cincinnati

The latest iteration of Shepard Fairey’s Supply and Demand exhibition opened this week at CAC in Cincinnati. I think it’s the same as what’s already been in Boston and Pittsburgh, but of course it also means that Shepard is in Cincinnati to put up some murals. Have a look:

Photo by cjdavis
Photo by Rrrrred
Photo by twentyfive
Photo by twentyfive
Photo by twentyfive

Case’s Never Odd or Even

Case’s first London solo show, Never Odd or Even, opened at Signal Gallery on Thursday (ps, the show is in association with Campbarbossa). Case is one of the pioneers of modern photo-realistic graffiti. I was looking forward to this show, but the end result exceeded my expectations.

A few of the paintings weren’t quite “photo-realistic,” but I think that added to the show and helped to prove that Case’s art is a creative endeavor and not only a technical exercise (unlike some photo-realistic paintings or trompe-l’œil).

This piece was painted on pieces of cardboard, which creates a sort of weird effect when mixed with Case’s photo-realism.

This painting has to be my favorite:

Photos by Ian Cox, more from the show on his flickr.

Banksy rat pub sells for £114,000

Photo by Paul Stevenson

That giant rat? A Banksy painted in 2004 on a pub in Liverpool. Instead of getting buffed or physically removed, the entire pub has just been sold in an auction for £114,000. The Liverpool Echo reports that the piece had serious interest from 4 parties, but eventually sold to some club owners. Let’s just hope they don’t turn it into “Club Banksy” or something like that. On a similar note, the outside of The Foundry has a similar Banksy rat which is going to be preserved and incorporated into the design of new hotel which is about to replace that pub.

New from Cept, and the politics of graffiti removal

Cept has put this piece up recently. It looks great, but that’s not really the whole story. It was painted on top of a classic Cept. Why paint over the old piece? Turns out that the council demanded that the owners of the wall remove the graffiti because there had been complaints about it. Instead of paying the £5000 to clean the wall, they just had Cept paint something new there. Graffoto has the whole story, along with other examples of Hackney council’s inconsistent and often absurd graffiti removal policy.

(more) Kaws in Madrid

Yesterday Kaws posted some pictures on his blog of his artwork being unpacked for his solo show in Madrid. And now Guillotine has some proper photos from the opening as well as pictures of Kaws’ piece at the ARCO Madrid art fair.

Here’s the solo show:

Kaws was signing lots for fans

And I’m serious. That’s pretty much the show. It looks like there were three canvases and a small chum sculpture. But hey, they’re huge and cool if you like Kaws (I love the red one), so maybe that’s okay.

And here’s his piece at ARCO:

The pieces in his solo show are interesting, but to me, this one is just Kaws’ attempt at being Barry McGee: A cluster of canvases that combine simple geometric shapes with trademark characters. Though to be fair, the far right section with half of Spongebob’s face looks awesome.

Lots more pictures on Guillotine (here for the solo show and here for ARCO), which is where these pictures are all from.