Paolo Cirio is either a horrible person or a great conceptual artist

214 Lafayette Street, New York

Paolo Cirio is a self-described sculptor of data, or what many others would consider a hacker. On his personal website there is a list of “Key Facts” which are essentially a resume of scams, web disruptions and media subversions that include things like “hacked and stole digital books from Amazon.com and redistributed them for free. The firm had to give embarrassing explanations to the press,” and to greater extremes, “created an online platform to debug the script of Security Theater, the PSYOPS program for antiterrorism measures in international airports.” Paolo is well-spoken about his projects, which is important when you’re trying to pass off the theft of 1 million Facebook profiles as “art”. He seems intelligent, maniacally creative, and has a bizarre, semi-destructive sense of humor. I like him.

Why is he being talked about on a street art blog? His online subversion recently made its way into the real world when he pasted life-size printouts of people caught of Google’s Street View camera in the precise location their images were taken. He has dozens of these “Street Ghosts” in three different cities: New York, London, and Berlin.

Dircksenstraße / Rochstraße, Berlin

“This ready-made artwork simply takes the information amassed by Google as material to be used for art, despite its copyrighted status and private source. As the publicly accessible pictures are of individuals taken without their permission, I reversed the act: I took the pictures of individuals without Google’s permission and posted them on public walls,” says Paolo.

Ebor Street, London
80 East Houston Street, New York
12 Cheshire Street, London

For more photos and information on Street Ghosts go here.

Photos by Paolo Cirio

An update from Rone

Wonderwalls, Wollongong, NSW
Wonderwalls, Wollongong, NSW

Rone has been busy since returning from San Francisco. He’s been painting lots of walls in Australia in various different new styles and has been involved in a number of collaborations. Loving all the new pieces around Melbourne. He is currently in Miami painting some amazing walls. Here’s a few of my favourite pieces. Also check out the great video by Callum Preston.

Continue reading “An update from Rone”

Baltimore Invades Brooklyn: NGC Crew at Tender Trap

Those who read my posts about Baltimore graffiti have already seen the pieces, rollers, and tags of Maryland-based NGC crew. Recently, for the New York Art Book Fair, the group debuted a zine detailing their quests painting throughout the gritty spots throughout the city. Opening today, “Kids Eat for Free” expands the reach of their exploits from East to West coasts.This show as an extension of their earlier zine, both being accompanied by personal work, documentary photography, and inside jokes. Only instead of taking on Baltimore, NGC took on the entire country.

-Rhiannon

020_20

Press release:

On Thursday December 13, 2012 from 6pm – 10pm The Superior Bugout presents the opening night of Kids Eat for Free with artwork from North Carolina’s infamous NGC crew. Artists FISHGLUE, MTN, RODA and Thomas Bachman share their photos, sculptures, and diatribes of tales from their travels and mischief. Much of the work appeared in Miles Michaels’ 1480 Gallery in Detroit, MI earlier this year in August, and has now traveled with additional new work to Brooklyn.

The artists’ work documents the past Summer, traveling across America’s northeast corridor, southern and mid-western states and New York City stealing freight train rides and paint. Along the way they’ve reworked the visual landscapes of the towns they passed through with colorful signage, roller pieces, and urban scrawlings. The show will be on display throughout the new year.

Accompanying the artwork will be an experimental sound set with MIND DETRGNT BKF playing eclectic samples and sounds from his vast collection of tape cassettes.

NGC

Photos courtesy of the artists

Wild Style Wednesday! Featuring Klughaus at Miami Art Basel

1-smart-klug
DCEVE Smart Crew

There’s something a little awkward about “graffiti” on canvas. The work may look great but it still feels like there is a crucial element missing or out of place…

New York City’s Klughaus Gallery wanted to showcase graffiti in Miami this year the way it was intended to be shown: outdoors on the side of trucks. The graffiti artists were forced into a “natural” state of mind since they went at it knowing that their work would be painted over in the next 24 hours and would be on display for less time than it took them to paint. The work was displayed while cruising down the main streets of Wynwood and around a lot of the Art Basel-gallery-action in Miami Beach. Awesome concept.

KAPUT & LARGE VTS
Kaput & Large VTS
OIL (RIP) by JUNE, DZEE character by OBLVN
OIL (RIP) by June, DZEE character by OBLVN
Topher BBT Smart Crew
Toper BBT Smart Crew
Vor138 DBI
Vor138 DBI
Stae2 GFR
Stae2 GFR

Photos by Klughaus Gallery

Miami Madness, part one

Chanoir and El Xupet Negre
Chanoir and El Xupet Negre

Well, the street artists went to Miami, did their thing, and now most everyone is on their way back home. I’m guessing we’ll have a few more posts on Vandalog devoted to the murals left behind in Miami this year, but my friend Olive47 has sent over a few photos to get us started. There’s work by Chanoir, El Xupet Negre, Celso Gonzalez, Olive47, Free Humanity, La Pandilla, Logan Hicks, and one unknown artist (if you know, please leave a comment) 2Square.

Olive47
Olive47
La Pandilla
La Pandilla

Continue reading “Miami Madness, part one”

DALeast’s hauntingly beautiful creatures at Jonathan LeVine

Osteoplasty
Osteoplasty

Working with ink, acrylic and tea on canvas, South Africa-based artist DALeast has created a wondrous menagerie of hauntingly beautiful animals in Powder of Light, his first solo exhibit in NYC. The somewhat curious scientific titles of these pieces on exhibit at Jonathan LeVine add a material dimension to their spiritual essence. Here are a few more favorites:

Ombrophobia
Ombrophobia
Oneirophrenia
Oneirophrenia
Osmology II.
Osmology II.
Opacification
Opacification
Orthotonus
Orthotonus

The exhibit continues through December 29th at 529 W. 20th Street in Manhattan’s Chelsea gallery district.

Photos by Lenny Collado

My favorite shots of 2012

After seeing that Brooklyn Street Art is running a contest for the best street art photos of 2012, I thought to myself that maybe I should enter. Then I remembered that I’m not actually a great photographer. I’m competent and I still post photos to Flickr and Instagram, but there are a lot of people with a lot more talent than me. So instead of submitting to BSA’s contest and surely losing, I decided that I would just highlight a few of my favorite shots here on Vandalog. So, here are my 10 favorite photos that I took in 2012… Continue reading “My favorite shots of 2012”

An update on ABCDEF

Last time we saw ABCDEF he was basically painting a lot of squares and, at the time, I was not sure what “cubism” was, but if I were talking to someone who I was pretty sure also didn’t know what cubism was, I would have called it that. These more recent works look like a gallery show waiting to happen. When is SMOA going to have a deliberately-abstract exhibition?

Photos by ABCDEF