Showing posts with label public art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public art. Show all posts

Volvo Street Art Project





Commuters passing through the busy Zurich Bahnhof over the course of a week in February got a special treat. There Volvo set up its latest S60 luxury sedan against a white backdrop as an "art car" project, and invited ten graffiti artists to share their vision. The process was captured by camera at 10-second intervals to make a three-minute time-lapse video.

Blowing up!

From News.com.au

A GRAFFITI artist has captured the world's attention by taking the act of vandalism "to the extreme" in his bid to transform mundane buildings into works of art.
Portuguese artist Alexandre Farto has earned the nickname “Andy Wall-hole” due to the incredible portraits he has chiselled onto buildings around Europe.  Mr Farto, whose work has been featured in an exhibition alongside famous street artist Banksy's, says that he aims to create beautiful images out of destruction and chaos.

He hopes that his “faces in the city” project will inspire people to see beyond what meets their eyes.

The 23-year-old uses a variety of techniques to achieve this but says he never had control over his creations. “It’s never me who determines the final form of a piece,” Mr Farto said.
“I never have and never want to have absolute control over what I’m doing – I like the unexpected and the uncertain.”


He uses various techniques to create his works such as explosives, drills, household bleach, spray paint and stencils.  “The idea is to take the act of vandalism – the act of destroying in order to create – to the extreme, as modus operandi.

"To use processes which, on the surface, are not valued in a more conservative work environment – tools such as etching acid and household bleach, spray paint and Quink – to take these undervalued materials and create some sort of confrontation through stencil, graffiti and visual arts techniques.”


Mr Farto said that his interest in graffiti began back in the late 1990s while growing up in the outskirts of Lisbon. The walls of buildings in his area had been taken over by murals and paintings during the 1974 Revolution.

Mr Farto became popular when his work of a face carved into a wall appeared beside a picture by famous street artist Banksy at the Cans Festival in London, 2008.

Since then he has been given space to show his work by Banksy’s agent Steve Lazarides.
He has been involved in a number of exhibitions including the Fame Festival in Italy.

watch: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=t6FU1Fvn9Nk
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/artist-alexandre-farto-chisels-amazing-portraits-onto-buildings/story-e6frfq80-1226018450469#ixzz1GASUjhAS

Eternal Flame Mural











Eternal Flame

The memorial, on the corner of Main South and Flaxmill Roads, Morphett Vale, provides a reminder of the sacrifice and service of Australia’s service people from the Boer War, in the late 1890s, to our nation’s more recent involvement in the Gulf Wars and peacekeeping forces around the world. The memorial was completed and dedicated in April 2005 to commemorate the 90th anniversary of Australian servicemen’s landing at Gallipoli. The high-tech memorial includes a water feature and a high-tech lighting system to create a subtle ‘eternal flame’ effect.

The death of Style Wars?

Much more than a cinematic time capsule of New York City in the outlaw days of the early 1980s, the 1983 documentary "Style Wars" was a work of art that reflected the vivid nature of its subject: the streetwise graffiti artists who, for a few years, turned the city's subway cars into mobile canvases of spray-painted invention.

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Martha Cooper

Henry Chalfant, the producer of the ground-breaking 1983 documentary 'Style Wars,' is shown in 1982 next to a wall bearing his own work.

Some officials, like then-Mayor Ed Koch, called it vandalism—and to be sure, not all of the city's rogue spray-painters rose to the mantel of fine art. But the art world quickly embraced these "writers," as the artists called themselves, making international gallery stars out of names like Dondi, Crash, Daze, Lady Pink and Mare 139. The work may have been painted over, but the movement's legacy thrived onscreen, as "Style Wars" became an essential part of New York's visual history.

It's ironic, then, that the film is in danger of fading away. The original 16 mm negatives, housed in the archives of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles, are damaged.

"It's time to bring it back to its best possible light," said Henry Chalfant, who co-produced the film with its late director, Tony Silver. As Mr. Chalfant explained recently, chemicals leeching out from the splicing tape have blurred and distorted the film's frames. "You can fix it digitally, apparently. We're hoping some production house might step forward and do it on an in-kind basis and give us help."

Meanwhile, Mr. Chalfant, now 70, has launched a fund-raising campaign to acquire the $200,000 budget that has been estimated to complete the restoration. He'll jumpstart it Thursday as BAMcinĂ©matek hosts two special screenings of the film, with a Q&A session and a reception featuring a reunion of several of the artists featured in "Style Wars"—many of whom were only teenagers when the documentary was shot. Commemorative T-shirts and prints will be sold, and the artist Noc 167 will re-create his original "Style Wars" piece that inspired the film's title, using a 20-foot canvas stretched in front of the Brooklyn Academy of Music's entrance on Lafayette Avenue in downtown Brooklyn.

STYLE2
Henry Chalfant

The graffiti artist Dust, photographed in the Bronx in 1981

"New York was a city on the brink of collapse," said Mare 139, also known as Carlos Rodriguez, who subsequently adapted his graffiti skills to sculpture. "At that moment, this little seed came up. I don't want to quote Claes Oldenberg, but he compared it to a big bouquet from Latin America. We created these colorful narratives of what was happening in the city."

Mr. Koch, an irascible figure in his few brief appearances in the film, still takes issue with that assessment. In a phone interview Tuesday, the former mayor, who now heads the nonprofit government reform organization New York Uprising, said: "Graffiti is graffiti, and it's disgusting and destroys the neighborhood," said. I know that there are some great artists that came out of it, no doubt about it. But at what expense? The expense of destroying—fortunately not permanently—the city of New York."

Mr. Chalfant, who is married to the actress Kathleen Chalfant, wasn't a filmmaker. He was a sculptor and photographer who, by the mid-1970s, had become devoted to taking stills of subway cars adorned in graffiti. He had documented some 850 cars by the time he met Mr. Silver, who thought the rapidly emerging New York hip-hop scene— with its taggers, breakdancers, DJs and MCs—would make for a great movie.

"I was taking the pictures for fun," Mr. Chalfant said. "It never occurred to me to make a film. It was a good collaboration."

Though immersed in the marginalized circle of artists it documents, "Style Wars" captures the beginnings of a subculture that would eventually balloon into a global phenomenon. Looking back, much of what the film depicts seems innocent and full of idealism.

"The atmosphere this culture sprung up in was pretty bleak," Mr. Chalfant said. "At the time, I don't think any of us had any clue about the impact it was going to have on the world. Hip-hop was just coming to people's attention."

As hip-hop has become increasingly commercialized, Mr. Chalfant said his film still resonates with a spirit of social progress. "It all sprang up in the era at the end of the 1960s, so there was an awareness of social injustice," he said. "The kids were inventing something that was stopping the wave of violence that preceded them. Now, of course, kids growing up in the same neighborhoods are targets of marketing strategies to buy the stuff their older brothers and parents invented so it's kind of strange."

Mr. Rodriguez, whose own new exhibit opens Oct. 5 at the Raw Space Gallery in Chelsea, offered an abiding perspective. "It was a catalyst to ask, 'Who are you? And who could you be?'"

From the Vault






Long lost pieces from about from about five years ago....
Jump to the Street Art section to see more!

86 Creative

86 Creative Mural Spotlight

86 Creative Mural Spotlight: Dimesnional Elements





Here's some great examples of combining mural painting with sculptural 'dimensional' elements on a project. This was done at the Largs Bay RSL & Largs North Railway Station a few years ago.

This was an really interesting project to work on where interviews were done with war veterans who were able to offer some real life experiences that they went through, which were then added to the 'story line' of the mural.

The truck on the front is a real 'Blitz' Truck and added a great element to this project, there's also a plane propeller and the 'interpretive signs' were completed by painting real train wheels, which were extremely heavy! Once finished they were placed along the path and surrounded by all new landscaping, lighting and security which completely transformed this lane way and building.


All in all this was an outstanding project and actually won a National Council Award for best practice in Community Art and Crime Prevention through Environmental Design.