Caledonia
Curry, aka Swoon, started her career as a street artist, but leapfrogged to
museums and galleries. Now she has expanded her work to include installation
and performance art, often with an activist bent. In the short video below Caledonia shares
some thoughts on her most recent work and gets personal discussing life and
death and how it has affected her recent pieces. There is also a charming story
about the MOMA reaching out to her that keeps things equally lite and fun this
morning.
Showing posts with label Stencil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stencil. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 31
Well today is the final day of Banksy’s month long street art
show taking place in New York and with it the final piece of Better Out Than In popped up in Queens. The balloon lettered throw up appeared around 6:30
a.m. and of course is already drawing massive crowds. The famed Bristol artist
also gifted a design that’s intended to be printed on a shirt to commemorate
the show, as is always the case with the provided graphic it’s free and up to
you to do the printing. Funnily enough it resembles my own graphic I threw up for an earlier story on the exhibition.
For my money I’ve most certainly enjoyed the circus, some of
the pieces are up there with the artists best works to date, rumor has it the
LA is is up next for the month of December but only time will tell for sure.
Banksy had this to say about his experience of the thirty
plus days spent in the Big Apple…
"Well, this is the last day of the show, and I'd like to say
we're going out on a high note. And, I guess in a way, we are. [Cue "New
York, New York"] This is a sideways take on the ubiquitous spray-painted
bubble lettering that actually floats. It's an homage of sorts to the most
prevalent form of graffiti in the city that invented it for the modern era. Or,
it's another Banksy piece that's full of hot air.
So, what does the artist hope to have achieved with this
so-called residency? "If just one child has been inspired to pick up a can
of paint and make some art--well that would be statistically disappointing
considering how much work I put in."
Banksy asserts that outside is where art should live,
amongst us. And rather than street art being a "fad," maybe it's the
last thousand years of art history that are the blip. When art came inside in
service of the church and institutions. But art's rightful place is on the cave
walls of our communities. Where it can act as a public service, provoke debate,
voice concerns, forge identities.
The world we live in today is run, visually at least, by
traffic signs, billboards, and planning committees. Is that it? Don't we want
to live in a world made of art, not just decorated by it?
Thanks for coming.
[Fireworks]"
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 30
Tomorrow should be the final day of Banksy’s
month long Better Out than In street art exhibition in New York but
we still have today’s to share, it came late in the evening and is a high profile
Yankee’s stadium stencil piece.
In other news yesterday "re-appropriated" canvas has reached a current bid of $310,200.00 which when all said and done will go to the Housing Works organization.
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 29
Only a couple days left of Banksy’s month long Better
Out than In street art exhibition in New York. Today’s piece is called “The
Banality of the Banality of Evil“ and is a high jacked/repurposed oil on
canvas that’s located at the Housing Works thrift store on 157 East 23rd
street. The painting will eventually go on auction with the money raised going back into the organization who's mission is " to end the dual crises of homelessness and AIDS through
relentless advocacy, the provision of lifesaving services, and entrepreneurial
businesses that sustain our efforts."
Monday, October 28, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 28
It’s Monday and with it Banksy is running the final lap of
his Better Out than In street art exhibition in New York. The latest piece popped
up in Coney Island and features a robot character we haven’t seen before, what’s
in store for tomorrow?
Banksy Hits NYC Part's 25, 26, 27
Weekend fun and more from Banksy who on Friday launched his
latest animatronic creation as his month long street art residency here in New York
rapidly approaches the finish line. Check the video below to see the grim
reaper enjoying himself in a bumper car, the piece was set up for public
display behind a cage in the Bowery where is lived for two days. A suitable
soundtrack was provided on site by both an accordion player and a recording of
Blue Oyster Cult’s classic “Don't Fear the Reaper” which traded on and off
throughout the day. Those who made it over to see the piece in person might
have noticed the man hiding inside the door structure controlling the bumper
car via remote control.
Saturday saw a simple tagged message on the back of a truck in Sunset Park that Banksy cheekily proclaimed to be an alternative New York bumper slogan, many would agree.
Sunday ended up being an impromptu piece in Greenpoint
Brooklyn after the planned op-ed column in the New York Times was declined for
publishing by the institution. Of course Banksy provided the unpublished
article to the public regardless which was a comment on ground zero’s everlasting eyesore of a construction
site that you can read below.

Labels:
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Wheat Paste
Friday, October 25, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 24
Banksy returned on Thursday after skipping his one and only
day thus far in the month long street art show on the streets of New York. Apparently
Wednesday was canceled after too much police presence, the NYPD still seems to
be trying to put a stop to the exhibition but that didn’t stop the world’s most
famous man with a can from gracing the Hells Kitchen Hustler club with “Waiting
In Vain.”
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 22
Day 22 of Banksy’s
“Better Out than In” a month long street art residency taking place in New York
and Tuesday brought us a bit of an odd re-working/homage of the great Sphinx
pyramid that rests in Gaza Egypt. It
was only a matter of hours before the owner of the Queens auto-glass shop had
the piece removed from his property and sold to a gallery who made an offer he clearly
could not refuse.
“No Turn Unstoned”
and is roughly a 1/36 scale replica of the Sphinx and is made from smashed
cinderblocks.
UPDATE: 10/23/2013 Banksy just released a statement saying that today's piece is canceled due to police activity. A joke, for real or perhaps The B-man just needed a days rest?
Monday, October 21, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 21
It’s a brand new week as we head towards the last quarter of Banksy’s “Better Out than In” street art residency here in the Big Apple.
Monday brings us a new piece located in the South Bronx and keeps things pretty
lite and fun for a Monday.
Banksy Hits NYC Part’s 19 & 20
Weekend fun from Banksy’s “Better Out than In.” Saturday was
another video, this time Staten Island was the location and a simple juvenile concept
executed cleverly was the result. Some might recall this humorous piece from last year when watching the video.
Sunday’s piece was some straight up stencil fun on the Upper West Side titled “Day At The Fair.” Once again showing he has an eye for using the existing environment to create something new and fun.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part’s 17 & 18
Day seventeen of Banksy’s
“Better Out than In,” street art show taking place in NYC is clever
re-work of the existing environment in Bed Stuy Brooklyn, the piece was defaced
extremely quickly after going up but some of the local community got together
and made some repairs to the work restoring my faith in New Yorker’s.
“Are you the sort of person who enjoys going to art
galleries, but wished they had more gravel in them? "Then this temporary
exhibition space is for you. Housing just two paintings but also featuring a
bench, some carpet and complimentary refreshments. Opens today through Sunday
11am til midnight.”
Today’s piece is located on West 24th street as is the
collaboration NY’s first saw in last week’s issue of the Village Voice. These
pieces are more or less the holy grail for street art enthusiast as two of the
biggest heavy hitters in the game give us not one but two canvases. OsGêmeos compliments Banksy work quite nicely giving his often grey pallet a
little color. While people might have been salivating over the Central Parkstunt, whoever ends up with these pieces is truly a lucky cat.
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Opinion: Banksy, An Englishman In New York
Having lived in London in the middle of the decade, I had
the luck of being at the right place at the right time to experience the birth
and development of graffiti’s golden child, Banksy. Although it was only
roughly thirteen years ago, back then most people didn't really give a fuck
about the Bristol based artist. His pieces were easily available to those who
wanted them and those that did want them tended to be people like myself,
graffiti and street art enthusiasts who already had a history of supporting
such movements whether it was through actual participation or via the wallet. I
did a little of both.
As my time in the U.K. came to an end, Banksy’s star was
beginning to rise. The mysterious artist had become the pride of the common
man, still largely ignored by art institutions and art insiders. A lot of young
Londoners were now both familiar with and enjoyed the many pieces scattered
throughout the country. I got the overwhelming sense that people loved the work
because it took complicated social-political issues and through humor presented
what many of us where already thinking. By this definition Banksy is really one
of the best graphic designers of all time, someone who can take the most
complicated of ideas and present it in a graphic form that is instantly and
easily digestible to all.
Still, even at these admittedly early stages of fame, Banksy
and his work were always met with a sense of excitement by most. The work was
there for all to appreciate, on the walls, curbs, bridges and streets of Britain.
Fast forward to 2006. By this time I have moved to New York
City, still finding myself excited by the graffiti scene and art in general. I
had not given Banksy as much thought; life gets in the way sometimes, but this
soon changed as I started to see his name pop up more and more in mainstream
media. If I had to pinpoint Banksy’s rise in the United States I would say “BarelyLegal,” the now famous L.A. show where
Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie purchased many canvas’s was the true beginning of
America’s interest in the Brit’s work. After all, Brangelina was the hottest
celebrity couple at the time and if they were dropping hundreds of thousands of dollars on works well then it had be cool.
Eventually I got around to checking the listed values of
pieces I had picked up years back and was shocked to see sticker prices that
were 1000% more than what I had paid. I got the usual questions and comments
from friends. “Will you sell them?” “What did you pay for them originally?” “You’re
such a lucky bastard to happen upon this
get rich quick lottery.”
In the years since, I have obtained some more of Banksy’s
work into my personal collection while losing some of those original’s to theft
(sure it sucks but I’m not one to dwell on such things) always keeping an eye
out for new street work with the same sort of enthusiasm I felt back in London
all those years ago. Banksy even visited New York for a unique show in 2008
that got some attention which saw the artist try new and exciting things, but
nothing could prepare me for the shit storm that has become Banksy’s latest
show in New York, a month long street art residency titled, “Better Out Than In.”
If you need it spelled out for you or are just perhaps
unfamiliar with Banksy’s philosophy on his fame and the artwork it’s this:
Graffiti works best out in public on the streets for all to
see and interact with as opposed to a gallery setting where the affluent and
wealthy reap most of the benefits, waxing poetic about works and a scene that
they have little in common with, if anything. Perhaps even more ironic is the
social-political commentary often made in the works seemed to be poking fun at
these very same groups of people!
And so here we are today, just over the halfway point of “Better
Out Than In” and I have gotten a pretty good taste of what to expect and how
New Yorker’s will receive the world’s most famous prankster.
Banksy brings out the very worst in New York City’s unquenchable
yet ultimately shallow thirst for art and creativity. Whether intentional or
not, Banksy’s residency places the magnifying glass on New York City and its residents
and I am saddened at what I see.
Pieces go up and are destroyed or removed for resell
purposes within 24 hours of being shared. In one case a couple of shady
individuals started to charge the public to take photos of a piece keeping it
under wraps unless you could cough up $20+ for the photo-op. Industrial sized
doors have been removed from their hinges in “undesirable” areas, as they are not
just keeping people out of factories and offices, but are also now an entrance(pun
intended) into instant wealth.
Once word spread of Banksy’s Central Park stall where one
could purchase an original canvas for as low as $60, all anyone could seem to
talk about was how they wished they’d been there to cash in. This took me back
to when people expressed the same sentiment with my own purchases. New Yorkers
couldn’t hold down their disdain at the idea that a tourist might be taking what
was rightfully theirs (who else would purchase art at Central Park?) But that’s
really the genius of Banksy. His ability to point that aforementioned
magnifying glass and put a spotlight on what is seemingly New York’s unlimited egotism
and love of money and power. Perhaps you
don't agree and even think this isn't the case, but I would like to think that the
stunt is the very point of the show, even if it is lost on many of the city’s residents
as they gaze in awe for but a moment at the work, feeling some sort of
spiritual awakening that is quickly forgotten once the skepticism and jealousy
return.
What do the next thirteen days or so have in store for us? I
personally can't wait to see, but would be pretty shocked if he ever returns
here for a project of this scale again. After all, unlike Londoners all those
years back who united behind the works and focused on the message before the
monetary value and name associated with them, New Yorkers have started to
resemble the inspiration for those earlier works, specifically the rat-like
characters that were up to no good. And because this is New York, the rats are
bigger, meaner and dirtier than most.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 16
Day sixteen of Banksy’s
“Better Out than In,” street art show taking place in NYC and it
comes in the form of a fiberglass
replica of Ronald McDonald having his shoes shined by a live human. The piece will
travel around New York for the next week, specifically finding its way to the
storefronts of various McDonald’s locations.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 15
Day fifteen (we have hit the halfway point) of Banksy’s
“Better Out than In,” a month long street art show taking place
here in NYC. Today’s piece is located in Tribeca and is a little dark but in a
fun and creative way of course. As always the man uses the existing environment
like no one else!
Banksy Hits NYC Part 14
Day fourteen of Banksy’s
“Better Out than In,” a month long street art show taking place here
in NYC and the b-man has hit up Queens with his latest stencil.
“Some people criticize me for using sources that are a bit
low brow (this quote is from 'Gladiator') but you know what? "I'm just
going to use that hostility to make me stronger, not weaker" as Kelly
Rowland said on the X Factor.”
Monday, October 14, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part’s 12 & 13
Weekend Banksy fun here in NYC for the month long street art
show “Better Out than In.” So far the Sunday editions have been the best for
me and October 13th was no different but first let’s check out
Saturday’s work which made some good use of the existing environment in
Manhattan with “Concrete Confessional.”
Sunday was some next level creativity as Banksy decided to set up a stall outside of Central Park selling some of his most iconic images on canvas’s for $60 a pop. That’s right originals for 60 bucks a pop. What was the catch? No advertising or fanfare was given to the stall or its location and with it hardly any sales. By the days end a little over $450 worth of canvas’s had been sold, perhaps the greatest commentary he could have made on the commercial art movement, Do people only buy the famed artist's pieces because of the value associated with them?
Friday, October 11, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 11
Day eleven of Banksy’s
NYC street art show “Better Out Than In” and we get another installation type piece
this time round. The latest work is titled “Sirens of the Lambs” and is a
mobile slaughterhouse delivery truck touring the meatpacking district and
beyond for the next two weeks, check the video below.
Also worth noting is that someone attached a tracking device
to the garden truck making the rounds at the moment from day five’s piece but
the culprit will be soon find he is
following a car service in Queens cause that shit was discovered and handled
like a pro!

Thursday, October 10, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 10
Day ten of Banksy’s
NYC street art show “Better Out Than In” and we are now a third of the way
through October and the "exhibition.” This one features a cute little critter
causing some mayhem on the streets of the east side of Manhattan, kinda cool to
see Banksy using some covert ops animals like he used to in his early rat days.

Wednesday, October 9, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 9
Day nine of Banksy’s
NYC street art show “Better Out Than In” and this time the Bristol bomber went
all out with a piece that spans multiple canvases, textures and themes. The piece is
located in the lower east side and once again includes some audio but this time it's pretty dark, you
can listen to HERE. Wonder how long the car will remain in place before someone halls it off for resale?

Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Banksy Hits NYC Part 8
Day number eight of Banksy’s
NYC street art show “Better Out Than In” as Greenpoint plays host to the latest
piece from Bristol’s number one prankster. This one is goes with the humor over
the aesthetics and should put a smile on your face.
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