Before graffiti artists start bombing the streets, they typically learn how to write graffiti with pencil and paper. The following steps are intended to be an introduction to writing in graffiti.
Step1 Choose a word to write in graffiti. Many graffiti artists use their name or pseudonym.
Step2 Choose a graffiti style. There are dozens of unique styles for writing in graffiti. You might consider becoming familiar with different styles by taking note of professional pieces of graffiti in your city or online. One of the most popular graffiti styles for beginners is bubble letters.
Step3 Once you have found your graffiti style of choice, keep an example of it on hand for reference. Put your pencil to paper and make light strokes to mimic the style of your example. Erase and rewrite as necessary until you are satisfied with your pencil drawing.
Step4 Add details such as shading or graphics. Use your creativity. Keep it relatively simple until you grow comfortable writing more complex graffiti.
Step5 Use trace paper or a photo copier to make a copy of your completed pencil drawing. This will make it easy to start over in case you make a mistake in the next step.
Step6 Use a marker or pen to darken the pencil marks. Make them permanent. Use colored markers or crayons to fill in your letters and compete your graffiti writing.
Step7 Keep practicing and experimenting with graffiti to develop a unique style you can call your own.
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Tuesday, December 21, 2010
Write In Graffiti
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Excellently Executed - The Secret Drawings of Graffiti Writers
Way before there were all these electronic networks, there was piecebooks. And within the confines of the book's covers, writers explored styles and studied up on the art. With that in mind, Sacha "SHR" Jenkins and David "Chino" Villorente have compiled dazzling pages from the real sketchbooks of graf legends like Zephyr, Lady Pink, Dondi and Sane for Piecebook: The Secret Drawings of Graffiti Writers (Prestel).
"Piecebooks are also used to collect work from other writers we respect/admire," says Villorente. "There are very few items a writer might buy at 14 years old that they'll still be purchasing and passing around at 41." Through close attention to design detail--simulated duct taped spine, illustration proportions and texture over 200-plus pages--the two have triumphed, where most have failed, in capturing graf's authenticity in book format. --Mass Appeal, Issue # 51
Before it hits the wall, graffiti is often painstakingly planned out in a sketchbook or piece book. Well-worn and dog-eared, these books are passed along from artist to artist as a way of sharing ideas and offering instruction. Here hundreds of drawings, most of them never before published, are reproduced on uncoated paper to resemble the pages of an authentic piecebook. Bold and beautiful works from graffiti history s most important sources or seeds Zephyr, Dondi, Daze, CRASH, Lady Pink, T-Kid, CAP and Ghost, among others represent a dizzying array of techniques.
The authors, former graffiti practitioners themselves, offer biographies of the artists and an introductory essay on why piecebooks have become such valuable historical records. Fans of graffiti will find this an irresistible inside look at how their favorite artists perfected their talents.
Friday, December 10, 2010
No Graffiti But You Must To See - My Redeemer Lives
The father, despite his age and a heart disease, says 'YES'.
And they run that marathon, together.
The son asks: 'Dad, can you run another marathon with me?' Again father says 'YES'.
They run another marathon, together.
One day the son asks his father: 'Dad, would please do the Iron Man with me?'
Now just in case you wouldn't know, 'The Iron Man' is the toughest triatlon in existance; 4km swimming, then 180 km by bike, and finaly another 42 km running, in one stroke.
Again father says 'YES'
Maybe this doesn't 'touch' you yet by heart ... until you see this movie (put on sound!):
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Element Stanton Graffiti Complete Skateboard
tips for your drawing graffiti art
Before you start a piece of graffiti art, you should draw a small scale version of the large piece you want to create first, then when you begin your actual piece, its a simple task of just scaling up your graffiti sketch.
If you need ideas for a graffiti font to use, there are plenty of sites online that have examples for you to copy. For the outlines, use a fine marker pen. In order to produce a 3D effect, shade around the letters you've outlined with a different colour. Then use permanent markers to color in your letters.
Once you are ready to paint your sketch on to your larger canvas or wall, you need to draw a reference grid over your small drawing. Sketch a full size replica of the grid on to your wall or canvas that you are using for your scaled up graffiti piece. Use either chalk, charcoal or diluted paint to draw the large grid. To make marking the grid out easier, the simplest thing to do is to use a piece of string.
Use chalk or charcoal to transfer your small drawing on to you larger canvas. Use an aerosol can to paint the background in using diluted paint, keep the layer thin and allow it to dry before you start your colouring. When you've finished the outline and the background, it's time to add the colours and detail. Again use aerosols to add the colours. Start with the lightest colours first and the largest sections, and then move on to the detail and the smaller areas last.
When you've coloured your work in, you can add the fine definition with a brush to enhance the fine lines and borders around your figures and letters. You can preserve it for years to come with a thin layer of varnish.
These are all the steps you need to master if you want to paint impressive graffiti art.
Graffiti Breaks Free From Wall
The dancers, representing paints and colours, move within large, sculpted graffiti-style letters made of wood, steel and upholstery, all created by the British graffiti artist Prime, of Sculptural Graffiti. The dance theatre piece, set to a score by DJ Pogo that combines hip-hop break-beats and scratch patterns, charts the story of an obsessive graffiti writer.
"We're not trying to define whether graffiti art is a crime or not: we know that it is," Jonzi D says. "But it is also an artform. We are having a creative discussion on the vandalism and the criminality and the artistry of the form."
The graffiti artist is played by John Berkavitch, a performance poet and breakdancer who is also a graffiti artist. "Like a puppet master, he shapes the bodies of the dancers with an imaginary graffiti wand into images that come to life," Jonzi D says. "He is exorcising his personal and creative demons in the only way he knows how."
Since graduating from the London Contemporary Dance School in 1993, Jonzi D has dedicated himself to hip-hop theatre, creating Lyrikal Fearta in 1995 and Aeroplane Man in 1999. He was an associate artist at The Place, London, and has performed dance theatre all over the world. He is also the creator and host of Breakin' Convention, the annual hip-hop festival at Sadler's Wells in London.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Graffiti Law Tagged Out
Some stern adults in the city are certain that the only reason any youngster would want to possess such art supplies is to add to New York's graffiti. The law, spearheaded by City Councilman Peter Vallone Jr., went into effect in January and was suspended in early May by a judge pending the outcome of Ecko's lawsuit. The ban still applies to New Yorkers under 18.
For Vallone and other fans of the law, such as Mayor Michael Bloomberg, it's part of their war on the classic image of New York as a gritty, filthy playground for the lawless. The young plaintiffs in the Ecko-funded lawsuit argue that such restrictions on artistic tools, which do not distinguish between legal and illegal uses, are pre-emptive assaults on the right to free speech.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Writing Graffiti Style
The most basic style of graffiti writing is also the simplest and most unornamented. The letters are usually shaped much like you would write them with a pen in a Roman type font where the letters don’t touch each other. This kind of work is commonly seen in long written works or as a signature on a larger piece of graffiti. It is the perfect place to start when learning graffiti writing, though, because anyone can do it.
The next step up in difficulty would be “throw-up” style, which incorporates the outlines of letters into the design.
This kind of tag can be done very quickly with practice because the letters can be squished together such that you can form a whole word with one fluid line. (It is probably best to practice on paper with a pen or pencil before getting out your airbrush gun.) A commonly appearing form of this style is the bubble style (which you’ve probably seen if you’ve ever known a teenaged girl who doodled in her notebooks), where the outlines are large and look like bubbles, much curvier than a standard outline. Sometimes bubble style takes a little longer than other outline forms, and it can be more ornate than other types of outlining.
Once you have mastered these basics, you’re ready to move on to “semi-wild” style. This is where the fun of graffiti writing comes in, where you can really show off your personality in your designs. This is a style where the letters begin to get squished, stretched, tilted or twisted. There is a lot more ornamentation (arrows, bars, starbursts, etc.) surrounding (and as part of) these letters than in the more simple styles. The letters are usually still readable in semi-wild style, even for people who are not well-versed in graffiti writing.
If you want to try semi-wild out for yourself, pick a simple word (like your name). Write out the letters as you normally would (not in cursive, just in block letters or a plain style). Write it again in an outline or bubble style. You may want to try several different kinds of lettering, from big and bubbly to straight and blocky. As you do this, think about how the letters fit together, or how they might be made to fit together. How would it look if you tilted the first letter out and laid it on top of the second letter, then put the third letter a little higher on the page but just touching the second? Then you could place the fourth letter under the third on its side, just sliding into that hole you made.
Maybe you could break up the letters (if you want to see how this could work and aren’t sure you can draw it, take simple outlines of the letters and cut them up, arranging them in different ways running in and out of the other letters. Maybe you could add an arrow to the end of the last letter of your name, or a starburst instead of the dot over one of the letters. You can embellish any way you want, that’s part of the fun.
From “semi-wild” style the classification moves to wild style, which is similar to semi-wild only with even more ornamentation and twisting of the letters. This style of tagging can be hard to read and looks more like a random, wrecked pile of letters than an easily distinguishable word. These pieces skirt the line between words used for the purpose of communication and letters (or the basic building blocks of letters, anyway) used more as art. (Of course art itself is a means of communication, but a different, less direct level.)
Obviously it takes a lot of practice to be able to do graffiti art with any skill, but once you get the basics down there are all sorts of variations and designs you can add to make a simple word into something a lot more beautiful. We already talked about using stars to dot letters. They can also be seen inside circles as a stand-in for an O or as part of the decoration. Hearts can also be used in place of O’s, and crosses in place of T’s. Serifs (or “tails” on the letters) can be exaggerated by being made into arrows, daggers, airplanes or other simple shapes.
You can draw shapes that look like holes or “chips” in the graffiti to make it look like it’s been chipped off or destroyed somehow. You can put different symbols inside the letters, or put the word inside a larger symbol or design. And of course when you outline the letters you can use different colors and patterns to fill in the letters. There is no end to the creativity and interesting forms you can express when working with graffiti writing.
On the streets you will find many different variations on these themes (though we don’t recommend you practice your new skills on public property). Depending on where you live, you are likely to see a dominant style. Whole books have been written about different styles such as the Latino “Old School Cholo” style of upper case, square letters, which has been popular in the Los Angeles area since the 1930s. New York’s style is bubbly like Broadway (said to be result of lax supervision), which Philadelphia’s is scratchy and rushed (because cops cracked down on taggers in the old days).
Whenever you visit a new city you will likely see some different kinds of graffiti. Many cities are less concerned with covering up graffiti these days and instead view it as a kind of public art (and a kind of museum art, in some places). As you practice you will develop your own style, certain embellishments you like and perhaps a whole new way of thinking about those simple letters and words that are all around us. Give graffiti writing a try and see if it doesn’t change the way you think about those who would choose to express themselves this way.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Amazingly Enduring Street Artist
Graffiti Alphabet of the Palm Pilot
If you wish to write alphabetic characters, you must do so on the left section of the graffiti area; numeric characters are entered on the right section. This distinction is noted on your Palm by the icons in the lower corners of the graffiti area. These icons, however, perform a function of their own.
By tapping either of these icons a keyboard will appear on the bottom of the digital viewing area of the Palm. You can then tap on the virtual keys with the stylus like a regular keyboard. So the Palm gives you a choice: you can learn the graffiti strokes or just pull up the keyboard. Ultimately you'll probably want to do most of your data entry from your PC keyboard anyway; though both Palm options have a low learning curve, they are not nearly as fast or perfected as the PC keyboard itself.
Note that there are some unique graffiti strokes that allow you to manipulate text instead of just creating letters and numbers. If you want to erase the last character, you can use a right-to-left stroke in either the alphabetic or the numeric section of the graffiti display (see the bottom-right of the above graphic). You can capitalize any character by first using a bottom-to-top vertical stroke in the alphabetic side of the graffiti display.
These are just a couple of the special characters available in the graffiti display area; many more can be accessed via special keystrokes. Some of the special keystrokes are shown here. A comprehensive list of these secondary characters can be found in the Palm manual and on the special reference sticker that came with your Palm.
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Create The Graffiti Sketches
Photo By keusta.net
A few simple steps and plenty of imagination are all you need to create graffiti sketches. Oh, a pen and paper might help, too.
Step1 Decide where you want this graffiti to be. You don’t have to know the exact location, such as under the bridge next to the tree by the bend in the road, but you should have some idea of the size and shape of your concrete or other canvas. A sketch that covers a large, solid area is going to differ from one that is meant to be put along the border of an overpass.
Step2 Sketch out your canvas. Draw the borders of the area you plan to conquer. A large wall will be represented by a rectangle or square, or you can choose any other shape you want to fill with your work.
Step3 Pick your subject. The world is yours. Keep in mind, however, a generic subject, such as a wrestler or snake, is going to be easier to reproduce than a specific subject, such as Hulk Hogan or a Western Diamondback Rattler with exactly seven teeth, forked tongue and colors exactly matching the species. But then again, you are preparing in advance, so you have time and the tools to pretty much perfect anything you want.
Step4 Keep lines fat and bold for easy viewing. Remember that you are working on a large scale, much larger than the piece of paper in front of you. You may want to practice the outlines with a thick marker that will give you a better idea of the work’s bold outlines necessary.
Step5 Fill the space entirely. Some of the best graffiti work includes shading, designs and shadows in the background. Once you have your main subject down pat, work on creating a background for the subject that can also be perfected.
Step6 Decide on colors. Too many colors will look too busy, so keep it simple but make sure the colors that are side by side are different enough to stand out from each other. For instance, do not place a bluish green directly next to a greenish blue and expect people to tell the difference from a distance. You can practice the colors by shading and adding hues with colored pencils.
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Graffiti Art Takes Wrong Turn
There were rules posted for the artists to follow, one could not paint beyond each flame and they could not dirty the floor or the surroundings. The idea came about when Mark Schachner and son, Jordan, were talking, "We were discussing some great graffiti artists like Jean-Michael Basquiat and Keith Hating, and we were looking at how ugly our fence looked. So I put up the sign and it was like wildfire.
The first night, according to Schachner, seven to nine street artists showed up with about four friends each, ranging in age from teens to early 20s. His motivation was to turn a nasty, ugly fence into a beautiful work of art.
Unfortunately, the idea turned sour. Some street artists went beyond the allowed frame and even painted over some of the nicer pictures. Schnachner says he is committed to talking with these deviant artists in an attempt to change their behavior. If he is unsuccessful, the fence will come down.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Free Graffiti Christmas Font
You can download free fonts, graffiti fonts and Christmas font in America (California, Los Angeles, Texas, Newyork & Washington)
A computer font in America (California, Los Angeles, Texas, Newyork & Washington) is an electronic data file containing a set of glyphs, characters, or symbols such as dingbats. Although the term "font" once referred to interchangeable typefaces using mechanical components such as a type ball element or a daisy wheel, most modern fonts are used in computing. Stroke fonts use a series of specified lines and additional information to define the profile, or size and shape of the line in a specific face and size, which together describe the appearance of the glyph. Graffiti, Christmas fonts can be downloaded online for free.
More Info Click Here : http://america.nestsoft.com/fonts-download.html
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Obama Graffiti - Under Investigation
Swanson believes it's the work of some juveniles who think they're being funny or smart. Homeowner Georgianna Gaskins, a former Canton Township clerk and school board candidate, calls the incident a hate crime.
She says the vandals also stole a political sign for a Republican candidate for Stark County Commissioner. Swanson says such activity is common in the period leading up an election. The matter is under investigation. Deputies have no suspects.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Light Graffiti Ideas
Using LED glowsticks, flashlights, even fireworks, combined with time-lapse photography, light graffiti artists create a unique tagging that wraps around objects dimensionally, allowing them to tag in a way they'd never be able to with spraypaint. Very cool!
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Romanian Graffiti Artists
Schiller who spends his days collaborating with street artists wanted to give these artists the opportunity to interact with New York. "As much as technology and the Web connect everything, you can't replicate the experience of being together."
The opening also merged street and multimedia art with screenings and interactive installations from Simultan, Romania's largest video and media-arts festival. It's still a relatively small festival, but Cristian Neagoe, the young new communications director largely responsible for bringing these artists here, says it's easier to get an authentic experience that way. "Here it's a bit more controlled," he says. "An artist becomes trendy and the media latch on. In Romania they're starting from scratch, nobody watches or gives a damn, and that way, they have the freedom to innovate."
Como hacer graffiti En MSpaint
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Japan Graffiti - Graffiti Book
Japan has always been a breeding ground for innovative approaches to Western traditions, such as cinema and baseball. Another example includes graffiti, which covers the buildings and walls of Japan’s largest cities, as well as the more rural areas. While graffiti in Japan shares many of the same characteristics with examples from other parts of the world, distinct cultural aspects of Japan, from Kanji to popular anime characters, set Japanese graffiti apart.
Tokyo-based photographer Remo Camerota has captured these culturally unique aspects of Japanese graffiti, and in doing so has befriended some of the country’s major graffiti artists. Colorful spreads and intimate interviews provide a detailed examination of Japanese graffiti, a subject that has yet to dominate the graffiti book market.
That is the background description for this book. But the importance of the volume lies in the fully saturated illustrations and design that allows the viewer to appreciate graffiti in a completely new light. The quality of art from these street artists is pristine in execution, highly innovative in design (there is a major influence of one of Japan's own contributions to the art world - anime), and in many ways competes with the huge murals that have long been a part of our universal artistic heritage. Japanese graffiti artists may have 'borrowed' the concept of graffiti art from the USA, but the works represented in his magnificently illustrated volume are uniquely their own. This is a beautiful book that not only dazzles with color and design, but also makes for a terrific nidus for roundtable discussion on the role of graffiti as an art form. This book IS art! Highly recommended for students and art collectors alike. Grady Harp, September 08
Friday, October 22, 2010
Graffiti Gallery Website
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Tips For Your Drawing Graffiti Art
Before you start a piece of graffiti art, you should draw a small scale version of the large piece you want to create first, then when you begin your actual piece, its a simple task of just scaling up your graffiti sketch.
If you need ideas for a graffiti font to use, there are plenty of sites online that have examples for you to copy. For the outlines, use a fine marker pen. In order to produce a 3D effect, shade around the letters you've outlined with a different colour. Then use permanent markers to colour in your letters.
Once you are ready to paint your sketch on to your larger canvas or wall, you need to draw a reference grid over your small drawing. Sketch a full size replica of the grid on to your wall or canvas that you are using for your scaled up graffiti piece. Use either chalk, charcoal or diluted paint to draw the large grid. To make marking the grid out easier, the simplest thing to do is to use a piece of string.
Use chalk or charcoal to transfer your small drawing on to you larger canvas. Use an aerosol can to paint the background in using diluted paint, keep the layer thin and allow it to dry before you start your colouring. When you've finished the outline and the background, it's time to add the colours and detail. Again use aerosols to add the colours. Start with the lightest colours first and the largest sections, and then move on to the detail and the smaller areas last.
When you've coloured your work in, you can add the fine definition with a brush to enhance the fine lines and borders around your figures and letters. You can preserve it for years to come with a thin layer of varnish.
These are all the steps you need to master if you want to paint impressive graffiti art.
Graffiti Studio - Happy Halloween Day
Monday, October 18, 2010
GRAFF BEATS OVER HOT BOMBS !!!
I get this video from youtube. Wow I like a sound music and very beautyful graffiti arts. Show for you.
Graffiti History - Since Caveman Wrote on tha Walls
Sunday, October 17, 2010
The Rise of Graffiti Arts
Like the caveman singing at the sight of the impression of his hand on a rock, these young people feel triumph at the sight of their graffiti. Dondi White makes the same kind of comparison in his first pictures in 1983. Does the impression left by the prehistoric artist not have something prophetic about it? Does it not announce, from a dark grotto, that man will survive? Does it not indicate that history will be reborn in the original form of graffiti, also painted by artists working in the night and expressing, in this way, their aspirations to a new world order?
Over the years (1968-1980) all kinds of styles of imaginative decoration emerged in the field of “tags”. Realism and Romanticism co-existed in the light of the existence of enemies and obstacles such as the police, stool pigeons, various gangs, wolves, dogs, the huge fences and the cleaning installations threatening both the graffiti creator and his work.
So it is not surprising to note that the graffiti-writers move out of the stage of being students, disciples or masters to become a prince or king of subway art and street art. It is also obvious that it is only one more step to become an artist. Art, after all, is above all a pictorial representation of consciousness.
This definition began to appear for the first time at the end of the 1970’s and the start of the 1980’s and it’s just as important in the history of art – which after all aims at humanizing the world – as Marcel Duchamp when he turned a urinal into a work of art, shocking the world.
The New York Graffiti movement was like a bomb thrown into the art world. Few genres have managed to attract so much media attention and the discussions surrounding the movement persisted. Various films, books, newspaper articles and items in the official art reviews have concerned themselves with the debate. In the television film “Wild Style”(1981), graffiti is portrayed as a kind of total art, with train spray can art, break dancing, hip hop- and rap music constituting an invisible whole.
The graffiti movement made it’s appearance in Europe as an artistic movement in 1983 when the Yaki Kornblidt Gallery displayed the first graffiti pictures.
Well known dutch collectors bought a large number of splendid graffiti works by artists like Rammellzee, Blade, Quik, Futura 2000, Bill Blast, Crash, Dondi White, Seen and Zephyr.
It was an exciting time. The enthusiasts fought over the best pictures and all the 1983 and 1984 exhibitions sold out. The prices followed along with the trend.
The museums quickly took an interest in graffiti and Wim Beerens, who was director of Rotterdam Boymans-van Beuningen museum, and Frans Haks, director of the Groningen Museum, bought various works.
In 1983 Wim Beeren organized the first large-scale official exhibition about the New York Graffiti movement for the Boymans museum and it attracted 25.000 visitors, mostly very excited. The catalogues and the admission tickets were sold out at a blink of an eye. The public delighted in the vivid and twinkling colours, the movement, the aesthetics and the rhythm of those very expressive paintings.
The Groninger Museum took over the show and over 40.000 visitors took the show in. The works of Koor, A-One and Toxic were not part of the shows, because those artists were not really known in The Netherlands, but this is now recognized as a mistake.
The enthusiasm spread to Germany when the well-known collector Ludwig purchased some of the artists’ works and graffiti made a tour of German museums.
In 1986 the Groninger Museum organised the first exhibition dedicated to Rammellzee and 3.000 visitors stormed the museum at the opening and some paintings had to be temporarily withdrawn from the exhibition. The four week show attracted 10.000 people.
Saturday, October 16, 2010
Physical Graffiti - A Classic Album Under Review
This program finally lifts the lid on what many believe to be Led Zep's very finest offering. With contributions from; the album's engineer Ron Nevison; former Yardbird Chris Dreja; Swansong recording artist Maggie Bell; author of The Rough Guide to Led Zeppelin Nigel Williamson; Tight But Loose editor Dave Lewis; Classic Rock Magazine's Malcolm Dome; renowned guitar tutor and author Rikky Rooksby and Robert Plant biographer Neil Daniels. This is the complete story behind what what Rolling Stone called "their Tommy Beggar's Banquet and Sgt. Pepper rolled into one".
More Details Click Here
Friday, October 15, 2010
Street Arts with Above !
This Video show you about STREET ARTS LIFE!
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Graffiti on Girls - Body Paint Arts Meet Street Style
Those graffiti artists are naughty boys and if you need any further proof, feast your eyes on these selections. I can only hope that someone will do body art soon in Blek Le Rat or Banksy styles, as that would make this body art pop even more.
See the Gallery
Mexican Gang Graffiti
This abbreviation technique is extremely common in Mexican gangs on the East Coast. Their graffiti seldom uses symbols and needs almost no interpretation. As is plainly stated in the picture above, Vagos are prominent around the area of West 116 Street in New York City. Gangs like the Vagos (aka 'Los Vagos') and other Mexican gangs will frequently insert a reference to 100% which means 100 percent gangster or “I am in to this gang life 100 percent.”
Full Article click here: http://www.policeone.com/gangs/articles/121253-PoliceOne-Exclusive-Understanding-East-Coast-Mexican-gangs-Part-2/
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Painting Without Permission: Hip-Hop Graffiti Subculture (Hardcover)
She continued her relationship with the participants over a five-year period to observe the diversity and transformation of individuals within graffiti culture. The study begins with a literature review from Web resources, books, and subculture magazines on graffiti in order to define "The Structure of Traditional Hip-Hop Graffiti Culture."
This chapter lays the basic foundation familiar to all writers and points to the main issues in order to analyze how individual writers conform to or deviate from the standard subculture. The author addresses the complex issues which are layered behind a residue of illegally painted signatures, characters, and text. There is a need for the voices of young people to be heard, especially those who have found artistic integrity, and awareness of civic and political issues on their own terms.
Youth are in an ongoing struggle to construct personal identities and communities that they want to live in.
Hip-hop graffiti is only one example where they have created a space, within a peer-run environment, to respect and encourage their political powers, ideas, and skills. The book asks whether an understanding of how adolescents learn outside of school can generate alternative sites for curriculum theorizing.
Relationship Between Graffiti and Hip Hop
In America around the late 1960s, graffiti was used as a form of expression by political activists, and also by gangs such as the Savage Skulls, La Familia, and Savage Nomads to mark territory. Towards the end of the 1960s, the signatures—tags—of Philadelphia graffiti writers Top Cat, Cool Earl and Cornbread started to appear.
Around 1970-71, the centre of graffiti innovation moved to New York City where writers following in the wake of TAKI 183 and Tracy 168 would add their street number to their nickname, "bomb" a train with their work, and let the subway take it—and their fame, if it was impressive, or simply pervasive, enough—"all city".
Bubble lettering held sway initially among writers from the Bronx, though the elaborate Brooklyn style Tracy 168 dubbed "wildstyle" would come to define the art.The early trendsetters were joined in the 70s by artists like Dondi, Futura 2000, Daze, Blade, Lee, Zephyr, Rammellzee, Crash, Kel, NOC 167 and Lady Pink.
The relationship between graffiti and hip hop culture arises both from early graffiti artists practicing other aspects of hip hop, and its being practiced in areas where other elements of hip hop were evolving as art forms.
Graffiti is recognized as a visual expression of rap music, just as breakdancing is viewed as a physical expression.
Converse Kids' All Star Hi Pre Graffiti
Graffitti inspired bathroom wall scribbles add whimsical, cheeky detail. Full eyelet lacing and a signature logo patch keep this look classic. Fabric lining and cushioning insole, striped vulcanized rubber midsole. Grippy rubber traction outsole.
Price: $29.99
Friday, October 8, 2010
Can You Show Me Some Graffiti Letters Alphabet?
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George Lucas - Who starred in american graffiti?
Next Lucas made the nostalgia picture American Graffiti, which seemed risky at the time until it grossed a large amount of money, tapping into a yearning for nostalgia that has been mined again and again. With this success Lucas turned his attention to an idea spawned from reading Joseph Campbell’s books on mythology and the role of the hero: Star Wars. It was Star Wars (along with Spielberg’s Jaws) that heralded the rise of the Hollywood blockbuster.
In order to make Star Wars Lucas offered a reduced fee as director in exchange for sequel and merchandising rights. Fox, believing it would make no money, agreed. No such deal as ever taken place since as it turned out to be extremely lucrative for Lucas…. so much so that the future Star Wars films were all financed by Lucas himself. After the recent prequels Lucas’s net worth was around $3 billon.
However, in the late 80s not all was well with Lucas. He produced a big budget fantasy picture called Willow directed by his friend Ron Howard (who starred in American Graffiti). It was a financial failure. A worse failure was his produced adaptation of the cult comic book Howard the Duck, which failed completely both artistically and financially. As these were also produced by Lucas he took the brunt of their financial failure upon himself (Lucas paid $2 million to construct the duck suit alone). This coupled with the construction of his multi-million dollar Skywalker Ranch in the 1980s left him liquidating some of his assets, one of which was a computer animation unit which he sold to Steve Jobs. This became Pixar, whose success should be known to all.
Since then Industrial Light and Magic (formed by Lucas to do the special effects for Star Wars) has become one of the top special effects houses in Hollywood. THX certification, developed by Lucas, became one of the top audio standards in the 1990s with the advent of digital sound in theatres. This along with the financial success of the Star Wars prequels has brought him to his current financial state, which is needless to say, more than secure.
This is about the time Lucas stated in an interview that now that he had made so much money he was going to be able to direct art films again, direct a different low budget movie each year and watch as they tank since he had nothing to lose. Instead, he has announced a Star Wars television series. Despite the lack of financial risk involved his earlier experience in the 1980s seems to have blunted his desire to take chances.
Yet, throughout all of his films Lucas has placed the numbers 1138, sometimes subtly and sometimes in an obvious manner. While a funny in joke it seems a bit sad in retrospect. The personal reminder to be artistically bold means little without action, especially considering the recent statements by Lucas that he wants to move in that direction again.
Best Graffiti Animation
Thursday, October 7, 2010
CERTOL INTERNATIONAL LLC GRA/2G-1 GAL - Graffiti Remover
Graffiti Qualify as Art - Yes or No?
Consisting from simple scratches to elaborate paintings on the wall, this art form is ancient and, like time, has evolved a hundred fold. In earliest times, the cavemen used it on the cave walls to depict their day to day activities, and the ancient Greeks used it in "modern style" to advertise prostitution. In this manner, the Greeks carved a handprint that looks like a heart beside a footprint and a number, indicating that a brothel is near.
The Romans used it to carve love poems, love letters, alphabets, slogans or any other messages that they want to convey to the public in general in a fast way, on their walls and monuments. For them, it was a way of advertising and easy information dissemination. Not only did they do the art form in letters, they also had it in pictures. An example of this would be a second century carving of a crucified donkey that many believe to be a depiction of Jesus Christ.
Despite the many reproofs, famous artists and painters had made use of it for plain amusement or for their profession. At one time, Renaissance artists such as Raphael, Michelangelo, Filippino Lippi, Pinturrichio, and Ghirlandaio went to visit Nero's Domus Aurea ruins and carved, or painted, their names resulting to a new style of decoration of that era. A lot of evidences provide information that the Americans, the French, the Egyptians, the Malays, the Japanese and the Chinese of early times had also made use of it. This just goes to show that no matter how hard some people refute and regard it as junk, this certain art form is part of their culture and history.
In this day and time, graffiti has evolved greatly and has become part and parcel of the hip hop society and culture. With the technology available at hand, instead of carving the messages or images on the walls, the ones who make use of this art form now make use of the most handy aerosol spray cans, making it the most used tool for the modern art form. Because of this, graffiti has become a street art form and along with it emerged new styles. The first one is the basic form called the tag style.
Because of its ease in execution being just a representation of an artist's name, it is most often used to gain recognition and as a signature of a larger piece. Next is where one makes a layer of color then outlines it with another color. This is called the throw-up style. Next style is the blockbuster style, which is made up of block letters making it very easy to read. The last style is called wild style and is made up of blended letters which are highly decorated.
Banksy earned an award for Art's greatest living Briton
There was much movement and hype with the Bristol underground scene. Banksy was influenced and inspired by local artists. In 1992-1994, he was a freehand artist and he worked with other artists and writers like Kato and Tes.
After a few years, he made enormous graffiti on walls beside the work of Inkie, a graffiti legend. Banksy made "Walls on Fire". There was a weekend long event that established his name in the European graffiti scene. The event magnetized several graffiti artists all over UK and Ohio.
In 2000, he discovered that he could make artworks faster when he used stenciling. His stenciling techniques are very distinctive. He expresses his humor by combining funny images of people and animals with striking slogans. These are clearly shown in his work.
The messages and concepts conveyed by his work are usually anti-war and anti-capitalist. Then in 2001, he went to the land down under and collaborated with the artist James DeWeaver.
In 2003, there was a show called "Turf War", Banksy painted on animals. This has raised animal rights activists to action. A woman even chained herself in protest.
Challenges
Banksy is known to make challenges in art.
He subverted Monet's Water Lily Pond, and made it his own by adding litter and a shopping trolley on the painting. Since, he already subverted a great artist's work, he made British spoof notes.
He changed Queen Elizabeth's head with the head of Princess Diana's head. That was not all he changed. He changed "Bank of England" to "Banksy of England", showing that no only can he express himself in drawing, but also in words.
He was later held a vandalizing extravaganza in Los Angeles, his exhibition was called 'Barely Legal'. He made art works depicting Queen Victoria as a lesbian and made skill-screen prints following Andy Warhol's Marilyn Monroe style. He also did his own version of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. His works were a success and sold more than they should.
Sotheby's
In 2007, his works were auction in Sotheby's auction house. A work reached £102,000. His other works also sold for huge sums. As a reaction for his success Banksy posted another artwork in his website. It was a picture of people buying his works from the auction house with a message saying, 'I Can't Believe You Morons Actually Buy This Shit."
Banksy earned an award for Art's greatest living Briton. Since, he does art for art's sake and his a very recluse person; he did not collect his award. His actions and art speak for themselves; it is a reflection of what a magnificent artist is.
Monday, October 4, 2010
Graffiti 2010 Calendar (Paperback)
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