Ruedione’s Backflashes

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Please introduce yourself. Where are you from? When did you start photography? Did you paint before starting photography?

My name is Ruediger Glatz aka Ruedione and i come from the beautiful city of Heidelberg in Germany.

Like many people I’ve shot photos my whole life.  When i was 7-8 I had as well some darkroom moments with my father, but the real start of my photography was in 2000…soon i became a photonerd.

I started to write around `91 but slowed down around `98….today I piece just once a while, but can’t claim myself being an active writer.
My focus is on my photography

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Backflashes is a big book with large pages and only 1 big photo per page. Was it important that your photos were presented on such a big format?

The book was still a compromise for me….if it was only on me, i would have put just one image per doublepage, but i was as well grateful to the publisher, as doing such an uncommercial book in this period of time, while tons of graff books come on the market and most sell way less, than they used to sell, is a certain risk I appreciate a lot.

indeed…this kind of presentation was important to as I want to see my “babies” getting the right focus.  The composition of an image is very important to me…normally i don’t crop my images. I go even so far, that the images in the book, that go over a doublepage and had get cropped for that, fall in my eyes under grafic design and are no more part of my photos in that book.

I personally don’t crop to push myself becoming better. With crops you can easily optimize your images and you don’t  have to focus much while shooting.

The presentation of my images is quiet an emotional point for me.

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Your photos are all in black & white and some are a bit noisy. They look like film photography. And it works great for night photos. Do you like the current trend of clinical precision that allow digital photos? (and by the way, do you actually use digital cameras?)

When I started this series in 2002 I was strictly shooting film and the T-MAX3200 gave me the needed speed to shoot this series. I like the grainy and raw look of this film and had the feeling, that this format was supporting my look.

In 2005 i switched to digital, as the first camera came on the market, that gave obviously better results than film plus i found a mentor who opened my eyes for a certain general view on photography.

…but i kept the same look for the series.

Today I shoot mostly digital, but use film for some series.  I experiment a lot with all kind of cameras and always try to push limits.

I am very grateful for the possibilities, that the digital photography gave me, the same time you have to be aware of all kind of risks, that come with that medium.

When i shoot a series i always make up my mind first, what kind of style is underlining my message. I do shoot as well “technical perfect and precise” digital images, but for most of my series i use a retro look, as it gives me the emotional intensity, that i always look for in my images.

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Backflashes must be one of the 1st books about graffiti where it is not shown a single graffiti. Is it a way for you to tell that adrenalin, friendship, tension, & night-missions are what really matters in the graffiti?

I see my book being the second book, as Alex Fakso published his HEAVY METAL in 2006.

My aim was to visualize that feeling that kept me going out at night for so many years. Graffiti -and specifically bombing- influenced my life a lot and i wanted to preserve that precious feeling for me and others, that might be interested in grabbing the book in 10-20-30 years and get a backflash.

The way i chose to shoot the series in, has the focus completely on the feeling….the identities of the persons are totally not relevant…it is even important for me, that they are not being recognized, as graffiti is a movement, that creates idols, who might disturb what I was looking for.

In a way i think that the community aspect of graffiti is probably the most important factor to me, that made this movement so special to me, but this is somehow what my next book is about…i am already working on for 7 years. BACKFLASHES is all about the bombing-feeling itself.

…a piece made for night-lovers.

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As a former graffiti writer, is it frustrating sometimes to take some risks with people in front of a train and not painting on it?

It is funny…it seems that this is the question almost everybody asks me. The answer is quite simple. Photography is no different than writing for me. It is about style and achieving aims, therefore I always saw myself as part of the production, but in another way. While i spent formerly 7-8 hours on a mission plus had to chase in the morning trains (what was as well special to me) to get my piece, i join today the production and have mostly 10-20 masterpieces in a very basic format on me. Those I can finish in the perfect moment. You could compare it to a writer, who does his firstlines and fills in the yard, but is able to do his outlines at home.

This was always a wonderful way of working for me.

As well i was never able to satisfy my personal view on quality and style in writing, while i am able to do so in my photography. Of course there still has to be a certain challenge, to be able to evolve, but i love my images and it feel like carrying home babies.

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Which photographers do you admire most? Did some of them influence your own style?

I wouldn’t say that there is a specific photographer, who influenced my style or who i even admire.

When i started in 2000 very soon the images and the approach of MAGNUM photographers like Bresson, Burri and Capa influenced me, but over the years i had the feeling something was missing and it were finally images of the American civil war and other vintage prints, that showed me what i was seeking for.. that influence added darkened edges and a certain retro look to my style. Somehow the opposite of what seems to be perfect to the most is perfect to me … it gives warmth and emotional focus on details to my images and this is what was a bit missing before. I never wanted my photography to be neutral.

Several years ago the concept of “stars” faded for me and today i don’t see any photographer or “star” in general, who I would like to switch life with…i enjoy my life.

ruedione

Is this book the end of a period of you life? Do you still shoot graffiti writers or like Alex Fakso you are now experiencing new photographic themes?

I would say that this book was about a former period of my life, that was even over, when i started shooting…so i called it BACKFLASHES.

Since i started taking photos, the challenge of learning was always a very important matter to me. Therefore i shoot since years as well photos in other directions than graffiti, but i like to separate things. About 4-5 years ago i started to work also as a photographer, but what i shoot job wise has nothing to do with my personal work…but it keeps me learning.

Next to BACKFLASHES i have other long term projects i was working on, and since i finished BACKFLASHES in December 2008, i focus on my series ARTISTS (just a workingtitle), that i started shooting for in 2002-2003.  Here i shoot portraits of around 90-95 protagonists of the graffitimovement. I join them sometimes for a couple days and the focus is on the person and their living environment…this series should be finished by the end of 2010.

…but there are a couple more series. I am addicted to shoot and i enjoy it a lot.

ruedione

And a last one if I visited Heidelberg, which are the places I shouldn’t miss?

It depends on the day, but for sure you shouldn’t miss the ZUCKERLADEN …a crazy candystore with a crazy owner.

I always call Heidelberg “happy land” as everything seems to be alright and good.

backflashessss

http://www.ruedione.com/
http://www.backflashes.com/

backflashes book

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3TTMAN interview

En-la-mente-de-dios

Before Madrid you lived in the north of France, when did you start painting?

3ttman: I’ve been painting and drawing on canvases since I was a kid, it’s only when we decided to create an association to promote the northern culture called Drive59 with Remed that we both started interacting in the streets by pasting some handmade stickers around Lille, Remed was sticking eyes on the billboards and me I created the three headed character called “3TTMAN” whom I was sticking in different situations. That was in 1999 I reckon. By there I met the street and got addicted to it, everyday I’m more conscious that it’s the public who brings your pieces to life and that there is no better place for that than the streets.

There is now a very small community of French people living in Madrid (i’m thinking about you, El Tono or Remed). How did you arrive in Madrid, and why did you stay?

3ttman: I arrived in Madrid 8 years ago because i knew the city from some friends and had a place to crash here, then I met El Tono with whom we entered in the studio NOV9 and Remed came too a year ago…It’s funny because we often have that talk the three of us and we altogether agree that what we like about here the most is the “Spanish’s Street Life”… It seems that most of the social events are happening in the street, I like the relationship it creates between people as it makes it classless, spontaneous and vivid, I find them more relaxed than in other country I have been. To me, the city represents the perfect mix between “socially developed” places (as we understand European ones) and the chaos of what we call third-world countries that allows a place to craziness, “rien à foutre style” y fiesta…mucha fiesta!

3ttman in London with Remed

Did your friends from Madrid influence your work? I’m particularly thinking about the shiny colours you use. And can you go into further detail about some of your influences?

3ttman: I think that the use of shiny colours is not due to any influences it’s more related to my personality and what I want to transmit to the public which is good vibrations, fun and happiness…
And YES, I’m definitely influenced by my mates: on a graphical level, with Remed for example as it’s been many years painting together, I really like El Tono’s approach in the street and the way he creates an interaction between the public and his pieces and I enjoy Nano4814’s imagery too and the capacity of building his own universe. Referring to painting, I’m mostly influenced by classical masters (Picasso, Matisses, Dubuffet, Léger, El Bosco, Miró…), my trips and the cultures that surround me.

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We all know that Barcelona changed a lot last years, is Madrid still a good place for painting in the streets? I heard the city spends a lot of money to clean graffiti.

3ttman: I sometimes clash with the madrilène’s graffiti artists because I usually say that it’s easier to paint here in the street. They have been trying to impose the “Tolerancia Cero” law here too, but every time they clean it’s bombed again and again… Maybe it’s not easier, maybe it’s just the youngsters that are more persistent in what they do!
But as I said before here in Madrid you still have a margin of action to work and express yourself: last week-end I came on an abandoned wall in the centre and painted it white then started with the sprays… police came because a neighbour complained and they just told me that I had to stop. They understood my position and said that if it wasn’t for the complaining they’d had let me do. I came the day after in the morning and finished the painting.
I would never do that in another city because here I know I can at least talk with the cops, explain and justify myself. My experience in France for example is that they put you in jail for the night without even trying to understand your point.
So, yeah it’s getting harder and harder to paint here with the laws and things but still you can find a way.

India-3ttman

You painted in countries like Marroco or India where graffiti doesn’t  really exist. Do you particularly enjoy cities where people & streets are not saturated by graffiti ? Which city or country would like to visit in the near future ? (more…)

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Snake – Back in the days

snake grl
ekosystem n’est peut être pas le site sur lequel on s’attend à lire l’interview de quelqu’un comme Snake, digne représentant d’un graffiti français influencé par le graffiti New-Yorkais originel tant pas le style que dans la démarche.
On connaît tous plus ou moins les 1er pas du graffiti dans les grosses métropoles européennes, les débuts dans les régions sont moins connus. Aussi il m’a semblé qu’il pouvait être intéressant de discuter avec lui de ses débuts il y a maintenant pas loin de 20 ans dans une ville moyenne de province. Je pense que certains de sa génération ont connu des expériences similaires, et les plus jeunes découvriront peut être des choses sur une époque où il était moins aisé de rentrer dans le graffiti que ces dernières années ou le parcours est plus balisé. Enfin de façon plus personnelle j’avais envie de discuter avec lui d’une période où nous étions proches, car il a été un des 1er graffeur que j’ai connu hors de ma propre ville.

Snake : Tout d’abord je ne me sens pas représentant du Graffiti Américain, tant par le style que par ma philosophie.
Certes graphiquement parlant je ne suis pas dans un délire à l’Espagnole, mais je me sens plus près de l’école Européenne notamment Allemande et Hollandaise, que celle des États Unis.

Quand on parle avec les pionniers européens du graffiti le déclic a souvent été un film comme Wild Style ou un bouquin comme Subway Art. Comment as-tu découvert le graffiti ? Y’avait déjà des gens qui taguaient avant toi dans ta ville ?

Snake : Comment ? A vrai dire j’avais vu un Graff au milieu des années 80 de la Force Alpha. Je ne sais plus qui c’était déjà ? Rico je crois …ça m’avait fait flasher ! Les traits, l’éclat de lumière bien placé il y avait déjà une certaine technique et du style.
Après j’étais tombé sur quelques Graffs à droite et à gauche, des mags, des reportages, c’est ça qui m’a poussé à trouver des bombes pour m’essayer. Mais c’était la culture Hip Hop avec la danse qui m’avait séduit, c’était un tout, et le coté Graphique du Graffiti était la discipline dans laquelle je me sentais le plus à l’aise tout simplement.
Perso je ne connaissais personne qui taggait vraiment, à part dans des villes des voisines, puis petits a petits les personnalités se sont rassemblées.

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Tu as de suite fait des grafs ou comme ça se faisait à l’époque tu es resté dans un premier temps un « simple » tagueur ?

Snake : Je ne serais pas original, mais il était naturel et impossible avec le recul, de ne pas passer par le Tag. Rappelle toi ! Il y a 20 ans en province va trouver des magazines, du matériel, ou du Graffiti dans la rue ! Plutôt compliqué…
De plus pas de shop et toute cette économie, forcément tu vas taper tes bombes, t’as pas d’argent, donc tu essayes de faire un stock comme ça, comme beaucoup d’autres a cette époque.
Alors les fresques c’étaient déjà difficile a mettre en place de part ce facteur matériel, alors forcément le tag était plus facile d’accès, et puis on était un peu des chiens fous, il fallait aller chercher des sensations, des limites, des tests humains en quelques sorte.
Ca ma permis d’avoir un rapport brut sans concession avec la bombe ça passe ou ça casse, apprendre a maîtriser le jet dans ces conditions est autre chose que dans un terrain tranquille, Bref le tag était parfait pour tout ces critères !

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Quelles sont selon toi les principales différences entre débuter à cette époque et maintenant ?

Snake : Les différences ? Je te les ai plus ou moins cités.
Toute l’économie qu’il y a autour de cette culture : le street wear pour commencer, ou avant tu faisais des pièces uniques a la main, aujourd’hui ce sont des vrais marques dans le milieux du textile qui gravite autour des cultures urbaines, avec des vrais campagnes publicitaires etc…je connais bien le sujet pour avoir travaillé avec Soone quelques années sur Bullrot Wear.
Après il y a évidemment tous les médias : magazines, vidéos en tout genres sur DVD , maison d’éditions pour ce qui est des bouquins, la bombes en elle même a beaucoup changée, les gammes se sont élargies avec leurs particularités propres à chacune.
Là ou j’ai étais surpris c’est sur les « spectro », de développer des bombes a moitié transparentes, l’équivalence de l’acrylique diluée a l’eau, était pour moi révélateur qu’un palier important avait été franchi dans le matériel aérosol.
Et puis bien sur il y a les Graffiti shops qui regroupent tous ces produits pour tous les jeunes consommateurs de Graffiti.
Forcément ça change la donne de commencer le Graffiti dans ces conditions, c’est presque trop pour débuter. Par exemple je serais curieux de voir des jeunes qui font du Graffiti qui sortent des beaux arts, s’essayer avec du matériel aérosol comme des : Julien décor, Altona, Dupli color, etc…
Tout cela à créé des emplois, du business pour des gens, et tant que cela tombe dans les poches des protagonistes de cet art, tout va bien, mais ce n’est pas toujours le cas, on commence à le voir avec le marché de l’art contemporain, mais ça c’est un autre débat.
Sans faire le vieux nostalgique, avant le fait que c’était difficile d’accès en matos, en inspiration, en support, cela faisait déjà le tri parmi les prétendants au titre de « writers », aujourd’hui mamie nova peut faire soit disant du graff, voilà ce que ça a changé au bout du compte. Une démocratisation qui n’apporte pas que du bon pour l’image du Graffiti.

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Au milieu des années 90 les panels s’enchaînent et ça se termine finalement par 3 mois d’emprisonnement. Quel a était ton état d’esprit après cette expérience, quel impact cela a-t-il eu sur tes activités ?

Snake : Ce que ça a changé ?
Tout simplement que ce qui ne te tue pas te rend plus fort ! Et c’est vraiment ce qui m’est arrivé après une introspection personnelle vis a vis de cette expérience.
C’est dans les moments difficiles, les épreuves, les échecs que tu vois de quoi tu es capable, j’ai vu pour moi ce que j’étais capable de faire dans cette situation et comment il fallait comprendre plutôt que subir.
J’ai réfléchis, analysé, pesé le pour et le contre, et j’ai choisis, et aujourd’hui je suis encore là plus fort qu’avant dans ma peinture. Je pense que je ne me suis pas trompé dans mon choix.

Tu as toujours à la fois fait du « vandale » mais aussi des pièces plus travaillées en terrain sur lesquelles tu passes beaucoup de temps. Généralement tout le monde a une préférence entre l’action et les plans plus posés. Difficile de dire ce que tu préfères.

Snake : A vrai dire je ne préfère rien ! Pourquoi devrais-je choisir ?? Je ne suis jamais, mais alors jamais rentré dans les débats: « qui est vandale ou Artiste ? Vrai ou faux Graffiti ? Trains ou murs ? »
Et je n’estime pas faire du « Vandale ».
Je n’emploie pas ce terme pour définir ma peinture dans la rue que ce soit une pièce ou un simple tag, je pratique de l’illégal, mais ce n’est pas forcément du vandalisme. Pour moi ça n’a rien à voir. Donne moi un cutter et je te produirais du vandalisme dans un wagon par exemple.
Et puis je ne voulais pas perdre de temps dans ces débats qui n’amène a rien, moi je voulais tout ! Je voulais être partout, je voulais me sentir vivre, expérimenter des choses différentes, resté ouvert et rencontrer des gens dans ce milieu, multiplier les actions.
L’action me plaisait énormément et c’est toujours le cas aujourd’hui je te rassure.
Mais j’avais aussi besoin d’un terrain de jeux plus complexe et plus technique ou je pouvais vraiment pousser les choses en terme de créa et de style, les terrains étaient un autre espace de jeux parfait pour assouvir mes besoins d’expressions et de technique. Mais je ne pouvais fonctionner qu’avec toutes ces facettes du Graffiti et pas juste l’une d’entre elles.
Il est vrai que j’ai un faible pour les grosses pièces simples (block letter, whole car) et paradoxalement des choses plus complexes en couleur sur mur.

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Tu n’as jamais cessé de vouloir placer ton nom. Encore aujourd’hui il t’arrive de faire des gros blocs Snake. Pourtant on pourrait penser qu’après toutes ces années cela ne soit plus ta priorité. Qu’est-ce qui te motive encore à placer ton nom de la façon la plus visible ?

A vrai dire je ne sais pas ce qui est ma priorité aujourd’hui.
J’ai des axes différents dans mon évolution artistique.
J’essaye de maintenir un équilibre entre la base de ce que je fais avec un certain sens des traditions, et en même temps, j‘essaye de partir dans des axes plus différents notamment sur toiles, mais c’est un travail long et personnel, un travail d’introspection afin de savoir ce que l’on a envie de proposer.
Faire des allers-retours entre ta base et ton évolution, sont pour moi nécessaire afin de me retrouver et de trouver un équilibre entre ces deux axes. C’est pour ça que je garde ce rapport avec la rue dès que je peux, même si j’ai moins de temps pour ça, je garde le contact comme je peux.
Et puis quel plaisir unique que de faire un chrome, un tag un flop ou un panel juste pour l’acte en lui même. Je peins donc je suis !

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Le graffiti c’est fait de rencontres. Parmi les personnes marquantes dans ton parcours est-ce que tu pourrais nous raconter comment tu as rencontré Aliz/TVA avec qui par la suite tu as beaucoup peint.

Snake : 1996 je rencontre un membre de ma famille que je ne connaissais pas du tout dans le cadre d’un nouvel an.
Lui était de Paris moi du sud-ouest. Il s’est tout simplement avéré sur place que nous pratiquions la même activité sans qu’aucun de nous deux sache ce que l’autre faisait ! Étonnant non le hasard parfois ?? Forcément la connexion était faite, à cela a engendré plusieurs collaborations entre le Nord et le Sud.
Il a pu ainsi profiter de nombreux spots bien de chez nous à une époque où l’ont pouvait vraiment faire mal dans un dépôt !

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Je t’ai entendu récemment dire que tu ne voudrais pas que le graffiti en France devienne comme le Rap français actuel. Qu’est ce que tu voulais dire ?

Snake : Ben c’est très simple quand je vois des clips de rap à la Française, que j’écoute des morceaux à la radio, mon premier réflexe c’est de zapper !
Ça m’attriste quelque part, car j’écoute du son Hip-Hop depuis autant de temps que je peins, et j’aurais vraiment aimé que les choses tournent autrement que dans une pauvre caricature des américains avec moins de budget en plus.
Il y en a quelques uns qui sortent leurs épingles du jeu, mais dans l’ensemble l’image, le son, les textes, les messages, des rappeurs Français sont clichés, stéréotypés, voir tristement crétins. Et je serais navré de voir ma discipline artistique suivre ce chemin! C’est pour ça que je reste prudent dans mes collaborations professionnelles ou autres afin de maîtriser à ton niveau ton mouvement culturel et tes choix artistiques.

dark-Snakor

Sur ekosystem, on essaie de montrer un graffiti qui s’éloigne des lettrages des précurseurs américains. Est-ce que y a des travaux ou des gens que tu apprécies parmi cette scène ?

Snake : Je ne suis pas trop « post art Graffiti » mais il est vrai qu’il y a des démarches intéressantes dans ces partis pris, mais aussi pas mal d’escrocs qui font 2 ou 3 traits avec un vieux collage ou pochoir et après qui se revendiquent artiste de rue.
Je ne suis pas de très près ces artistes, mais j’aime bien le concept vidéo & les peintures de Blu, qui demande pas mal de préparation et de travail. Je suis aussi assez impressionné par les tagueurs de Sao Paulo du Brésil les « pixaçaos » de telles prises de risque pour poser de simples symboles runiques calligraphiques, je crois que c’est là que tout ce définie dans le geste et la base de la culture Graffiti, et il ne faut pas oublier cette dimension brutale et basique qui est la fondation même de ce mouvement graphique urbain.

snake 1996

Comment tu t’imagines dans 10 ans ?

10 ans ? C’est loin et c’est demain à la fois.
Je ne sais pas, et ce n’est pas un grand souci pour moi, car je vis pour ici et maintenant.
Après pour répondre à ta question je ne sais pas, peut être a faire toujours pareil, mais en poussant toujours les choses plus loin, plus grand, plus gros, plus travaillé, plus de message, plus d’engagement, avec plus de réflexion, c’est vers cela que je me dirige dans mon évolution, faire mieux qu’avant !

eko snake 1995

Un dernier mot ?

Snake : Aime la vie, elle te le rendra tôt ou tard…

http://www.snakegraffiti.com
http://myspace.com/snakegraffiti

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Brad Downey – Tour de force

brad downey - artotale

Pour ceux qui comprennent le français et qui ont du mal avec mon anglais approximatif,
je vous recommande la version en français en bas de page.

I’ve been a bit disappointed when discovering new Brad Downey piece on Just daily photo report for ARTotale.
What? Is it really finished? A giant painted Mac Donald’s ad!? No humoristic slogan? No sabotage by rats hanging around? No drips ?

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What is this piece about? Contrary to the people of Lüneburg we know Brad Downey. Is it not a real ad.
Brad, the University or the Festival organisation haven’t been paid by McD.
So is it to bring up the evil power of McD? Does it mean sponsoring a university or a soccer team is the same thing? Is taking money from private companies for education wrong?

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And I finally realised that –ironically- a commercial mural can finally be much more controversial & radical than a wall painted by a graffiti artist who is supposed to be an urban-rebel…!

brad downey - Mc Donald's

I contacted Brad Downey and I asked him a couple of questions:

Do the university and students enjoyed/understood your work?

Brad Downey: I have not heard any response from the university staff. So, I suspect they do not approve. Maybe they feel a bit cheated as I did not tell them what I wanted to paint. I maintained that my work would be created spontaneously.

The university students understood my work very well. I was very worried that the painting would be misunderstood by the students and my fellow artists. The University is undergoing a process of “Rebranding”. To my understanding, Leuphana has recently paid a large sum of money to design a new logo, name, and concept for the whole Universiy. Part of an effort to raise student fees. One student explained to me that it has been referred to internally as an Americanization of the old German school. And many of the students are unhappy about this. Some have made their own films addressing this same issue. Our ARTtotale, street art project, seems to be a part of this re-branding.

Do you think the wall will last long?

B.D.: I hope so. I think it’s a good work.

Have you already received any reaction from Mc Donald yet?

B.D: This work has nothing really to do with McD. I just wanted to insert “random logo with power.” It could have been any well know logo. I feel that many of the so called “street artists” do this anyways. They travel the world painting logos. So, I thought I should show up and just paint any logo.

Anything else?

B.D.: Special thanks to the The Wa (he helped paint the whole thing.)

brad downey

More about Brad Downey on ekosystem : interview [summer 2008]
All the photos by JUST (cc)

et en Français:

(more…)

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Ana Botella crew

1ana detalle arte hurbano

Ana Botella is the wife of the former Spanish President José María Aznar, the one who started the Iraq War alongside Bush and Blair.

Currently she is also in charge of the department of the Environment in the City of Madrid.  And it´s quite ridiculous because her husband is one of the most prominent Spanish neocons arguing publicly that the weather change, and the environmental crisis are not real. He has been organizing master lectures at universities talking about the the weather change conspiracy ,and adding that all this thing is a fake created by a new communism! Ana Botella follows this trend, and at the local level has carried the disdain for environmental practices to her own department at City Hall and has expanded this repressive policies to include social and cultural practices.

She is also a member of the right religious organization called OPUS DEI (The right of the right in the Holy Fucking Catholic Church)

She said that GRAFFITI is not an ART, and that Madrid spends 6 millions per year erasing graffiti, demagogically concluding that “with this money, we could have built 6 hospitals”

I´ll destroy GRAFFITI“, she added.

3ana detalle firma

For all these reasons, and as a reaction to the stupid letter that she sent to every madrilian with her signature arguing among her measures for “integral cleaning of the city”  that all graffiti was going to be removed, we had the idea of doing this open action using her own medicine! In fact, with so many politicians proposing recently to use municipal money to hire forensic graphologist to identify taggers and other street artist, we though it would be a nice touch to use her own signature in this project. And that action became really popular in Spain and also in other countries. For instance The Independent of London talks about us…

ana plano general

http://www.flickr.com/photos/anabotellacrew/

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L’autre ville (the other city)

batiment

Le site de « l’autre ville » présente un projet qui a débuté en 2005 à Toulouse.

Au moment où nous avons découvert le graffiti, la ville est devenue un immense terrain de jeu. Poussés par la recherche de spot, nous nous sommes mis à l’explorer de fond en comble. Le graffiti a éveillé en nous une réelle curiosité de l’espace urbain et en particulier de tous les lieux en marge de la ville, voire secrets. Savoir ce qui se trouve derrière un mur ou une ouverture bouchée de parpaings, soulever une plaque d’égout, arpenter les voies ferrées ou les bordures de périph…Se fondre à la ville. Tout cela est devenu un leitmotiv qui nous pousse à aller toujours plus loin, à dériver vers l’inconnu. Parfois, on ne trouve rien, et on rentre bredouille, le sac de bombes encore plein. Mais cette recherche, qui s’apparente pour nous à de l’archéologie est devenue aussi importante que celle de peindre.

Toujours à la recherche de ces jardins secrets, l’aventure continue au gré de nos déplacements et de nos voyages. Hors de Toulouse, mais toujours dans « l’autre ville ».

N&D

Photos from abandonned placed at http://l-autre-ville.fr/

egout

tables

train

deciimgr

tunnel8

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Momo interview

momo rojo book

If you were French, Momo would be a short name for Maurice or Mohamed. Where does this name come from? Where are you from Momo? What five words best describe you?

I’m sure that MOMO sounds better in French.  Its just a silly nickname.  I’m from San Francisco, all my family is; three generations on both sides, but I live in Brooklyn now.  A friend from high school sitting next to me wants to say: “icon”, “positive”, “loves to laugh”, “stylish”, “obsessive” to describe me, but its with a dry sense of humor (and more than 5 words).

Your work is often a mix of clean and sharp shapes and some more spontaneous/random shapes. Does it reflect something about you; a fight between order & freedom? a split personality : Mondrian vs the Sex pistols?

I think you’re right.  I made loads of drawings while in Paris from medieval tapestries that feature crumbling castles (Armageddon imagery) in 2003.  It was “order and disarray”, and since then its interested me.  Entropy… we’re doomed while we’re uptight, and its a confetti party if you let go.  Or how hard I worked all my youth to draw well and now I do scribbles and blobs(?).  There’s also anger, & seeing order destroyed feels good, for stupid fun, and also smart revelation, ’cause order is superficial.

Momo New Orleans

Your work is often based on pasting many geometric colored papers. Do you know where you will display your work when you are working on it? Does the final work look always exactly like what you planned in your studio, or does it change a bit when you paste your material? It looks exactly how I plan it.  I’ve tried other ways, like carrying cut paper that could fill any space, like 100 cut dots or stripes, then spread them like paint anywhere. But I enjoy having as much as possible thought-out, and really collage is not so flexible.

Who is your art for? When did creating art become something important in your life? My art is for anyone at all (seriously, that’s the best), but not everyone.  I was hooked at age 3.  The weird experience was: I was making kids drawings, like wishing I had access to video games: so one character shoots another and you scribble them out…. then I wished I had a camera, so I made drawings to look like photographs, with foreshortening, cropped elements- and adults freaked out.  I thought that was pretty cool.

Momo

There are trends in graphic design and art: Pixels, Deer antlers, drips, stencils… Fluo colors & rhombi were pretty popular recently. Do you feel close to this 80’s revival?
Yikes, no way, none of it.  Its sexy, but I came to the loud color thing from time I’d spent in the Caribbean.  My inspiration is their self taught wide-open use of color, I’d like to avoid “Pop”, retro or otherwise. (more…)

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Rowdy – Visual interview

01aero-brushSpraycans please, preferably ones with Nozzles on

02colorsI would like some Colour!!
though if it’s a case of Ska V Airbrushing? Then I’ll go Ska.

03drips_or_notThe way I learned to paint was no Drips…So no I don’t want to be a drip.

04-website-paper1Think I’ll have to go tangible old Skool…and opt for the paper.

05gloves_or_not

Did the no gloves thing for many years,  but what’s the point in getting caught red handed. Gloves it is. (more…)

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CRE – Visual interview

01aero-brush1It’s hard to make a choice ! maybe “spraycans” coz’ it’s more fun…

02colors1white and black for graffiti… colors on my canvases…

03krink-pixacao100% drips, but not only with krink…

04drugnow, i’m drinking a fresh beer (Hoegaarden)… ganja is just bullshit !

05_nightclub_fightclubFIGHT CLUB for the social message…
eko, you must stop to go to your favorite night club !!!
We’re going to find the good way to save your soul with the bible…

(more…)

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Chase – Visual interview

Visual interview with CHASE.

01posca-pinceau

I only use spray paint,
don’t really know how to use a brush,
I don’t even own one!

Antwerp_LAProud to be from Belgium, happy to live in LA!

03-nb-ou-couleur

Both.
But mostly colors because they contain so much energy when used together.
I’m looking for color combos that you can almost taste when you see them…

04-pochoir-autoc

I’m influenced by both! Pop + surreal and conceptual.
Good combo if you can wangle it.

wharrol-beatles

Find art in everyday people and things and experience the truth with them.

sendak_bodeBoth super-dope!

07piracyMusic is the message and the message is in the music.

9drug

I used to love the ganja but stopped smoking it 12 years ago, after I had
smoked pretty much everyday for 4-5 years.
I used to smoke a half a joint
before bed and then the other half right when I woke up…
It started to slow me down too much so I quit!
Now I’ll have a drink every once in a
while even though that’s starting to slow my energy down the next day…
it’s all about energy!

jamesbond

Jaws was the man!
My pops had a friend when I was growing up who was a bouncer.
People nick-named him “Jaws” because he still had all his
baby-teeth! Here’s this big tough guy with the smallest little teeth, it
looked real funny!

07legoplaymobil

Loved ’em both! I think I started off with Lego, but then got into Playmobil.

(more…)

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Pener One – Spectrum crew

Visual interview with

Pener one – Spectrum crew

01posca-pinceau

I’ve got no preference in terms of painting tools that I use.
I love paintbrushes as well as markers ;) I like the smell of both ink and paint.

02-amster-barce

…Amsterdam… I’ve been there a couple of times, but never had a
chance to collaborate with SOL CREW EINDHOVEN…. The works of Erosie
and the rest of the guys have really made a huge impression on me.

03-nb-ou-couleur

Definitely black&white…. A sharper contrast… Easier reception…
You cannot cheat, you cannot conceal a thing :)
There is power in simplicity.


04-pochoir-autoc

When it comes to the technique and obtained effect I’d definitely
prefer stencils…I always try to merge my templates with background to
fit them in into the whole composition…A stencil enables the wall
project to go much easier and faster… It gives the final effect… On
top of that I love its phat effect… The runs, inaccuracy… These
things define my work pretty often

05badguyz

Definitely Dexter. I think it won’t finish well though…
I got somewhat lost around the fifth episode…
Anyhow, my wife still watches it :)

06emma

laura palmer laura palmer laura palmer laura palmer laura palmer laura palmer

07piracy

Pirates

08_guitar_electro

‘Both… Preferably mixed.
binarpilot, Atari Teenage Riot, prefuse73, vitalic, Animal Collective,
jan garbarek, primus, meshuggah,…I listen to all kinds of music,
depending on the hour or activities I’m involved in. (more…)

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