ZIME – SOL CREW interview

Zime started graffiti 25 years ago. His labyrinth style pieces have been a major influence to many writers. He has also been one of the main actor of the sticker craze that popped up in the late 90’s in Europe.
Reasons enough to do an interview with Zime from SOL crew and talk about graffiti, his friends, Eindhoven, Iron Maiden & Philips Videopac.

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Can you present yourself?
My artist name is Zime. Born in the mid 70’s in Eindhoven, a city in the south of the Netherlands, and I still live there.

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My tag in the late 80’s.

How did it all begin? What initially brought you to graffiti?
Before I got into graffiti I was already drawing a lot as a kid. My first graffiti memory I have is from the early/mid 80’s. I was drawing at my grandmother together with my nephew. He’s a few years older and is really into punk music. I remember he grabbed a marker and instead of drawing on the paper he wrote some names in punk style on a wooden box. As I was very young I didn’t really understand what he was writing but I knew I liked it! Every time I was at my grandmother’s I saw his tags on the box and I remember I copied some on paper. In the mid 80’s we had an Anti Vandalism project at our school. They showed photo’s of vandalism and some of them were photos of the first graffiti pieces in Eindhoven. I think this was the first time I saw a piece. It made a lot of impact on me. Amazing stuff done by early Eindhoven writers like Ace, Dusty, Freaky, Josh, Magic Mike (RIP), Skip, Spike, Mad (RIP), York and Yaki. From that point my school friends and I started drawing graffiti letters on paper and we did some pieces with chalk on the playground, but nothing serious. I did my first ‘real tags’ in the streets in 1988. I used the ‘A’ from Iron Maiden’s logo in my first tags. If I look back at my early tags now I can see the punk influence from my nephew. Also funny to see I was already using the symmetry in my letters.

 

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Bombkid, Erosie, Late, Sektie and Zime (all SOL) and Sonik, Eindhoven 2001.

When did you get down with SOL crew? Who are the SOL crew members? (past and present)
I founded the Signs Of Life crew in 1990. First members were: Cray,Mause, Men, Rave and Wease. Sektie joined the crew a few months later and Erosie in 1993 when I saw him painting his first piece at our school. All members (except Men) were at the same high school in Eindhoven. The early members lost interest quite soon and in 1993 it was basically Erosie, Sektie and I. The 3 of us were in the same art class and we did some nice walls together in Eindhoven. Bombkid joined the crew in the mid 90’s and some years later Late. Some other SOL members: Ancle, Ane, Butch, Dres, Real and Sker. We’re mostly known for the Blind wall we painted in the centre of Eindhoven in 2001. This wall got a lot of attention in street art magazines and books. It was painted entirely with latex, paint and rollers. Back then we did sticker clusters with our names and symbols on it and this was the next step: painting our logo’s as a big cluster. From 1998 we started to use symbols. Erosie a Target, Bombkid a Bomb, Late a Clock with 2L8 in it, Sektie a Catgirl and I did the Skull.

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Skull sketch 1989

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Zime skull carpet at the Dutch Design Week, Eindhoven 2004.

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Zime, Skull, Eindhoven 2001

Why a skull as a symbol?
As a kid I was already drawing skulls and in my early graffiti sketches you can see it as well. I was influenced by the art work of Derek Riggs for Iron Maiden (he created Eddie, the band mascot) and also by Vernon Courtland Johnson who designed the skull of Powell Peralta. I was not into skating but some of my school friends were in the late 80’s. We were tagging the ramp and street while they were skating. But why skulls? The death of some close people in my early youth must be the reason I was drawing skulls and why I was fascinated with skulls from some artists at such a young age. I don’t see the skull itself as a negative thing. It’s part of (my) life. In a way the skull represents my labyrinth style. I see my letters as a skeleton, there’s no decoration or flesh on it.
I do also like the idea the skull always remains. Lately I’m making photo’s from my old stuff in my hometown, tags, pieces, stickers etc. This brings back so many good memories. I even found some old tags from the late 80’s; great to see there are still some around. It’s also nice to see an old (paper) sticker in a city where I haven’t been for years. A nice thought, gone but still there after so many years.

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SOL designs from the mid 90’s

Do you remember where your “Labyrinth style” comes from?
An important moment was going to a Graphic School in 1993. I learned to work with the computer and my favourite program was Adobe Illustrator. To learn this program properly we had to copy logo’s, which was quite boring, so I started to design SOL logo’s during class. I made some prints of it and put them up inside school and I did some silk screens on a shirt as well.

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Style transformation: Zime Eindhoven 1994, Zime Berlin 1996 and Zime Eindhoven 1998.

At the same time my pieces became more basic/graphic during the years. Around 1995/96 I started to use less colours, no camouflage, just letters. The letters started to transform more and more. At a certain point my letters were built of only horizontals, verticals and diagonals. The next step was just horizontals and verticals with a thin outline. Then I did a sketch with the outline the same width as my letters and this labyrinth style was born.

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Zime, Eindhoven 1998

When did you paint your first “Labyrinth style” Zime?
In 1998. A black and white spray painted Zime on a terra cotta colour latex painted background. From the first moment I painted this piece it just felt right. The style just suits me. The first labyrinths were painted free hand with spray cans. A little later I started to use latex paint and rollers.

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Influenza and a SOL sticker from 1999 in Eindhoven. Still there in 2013.

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SOL sticker, Berlin 2013.

Did you have an interest in labyrinths before 1998?
Yes, if I think back now I was interested in labyrinths before. I have this memory from the early 80’s. I was drawing as a kid at my grandfather’s and I was creating my own labyrinths on paper. I don’t know why, maybe I was just bored, but I’m happy I have this memory.

Around the same time I got my first home video game system, a Philips Videopac G7000. The covers of these cartridge games have very nice detailed illustrations. When you start the game the nice detailed cowboy on the cover was built of only a few pixels high on your television. But I wasn’t disappointed. I really like these pixel characters. Very powerful! My favourite Philips Videopac game was Munchkin, a game based on 1980 arcade game Pac-Man. Munchkin was available in 1981, one year earlier than Pac-Man on a home computer. This frustrated Atari a lot, so they sued Philips. But Munchkin wasn’t a direct clone. In fact it was much better then Atari’s Pac-Man. The dots you have to eat were moving, the labyrinths were changing and could become invisible but the best thing was you could create your own labyrinths! I was playing this game for hours, everyday. To honour Munchkin I created a SOL sticker with a Muncher (ghost) as a O in 1999.

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First SOL sticker, Eindhoven 1998.

The sticker scene was huge in Eindhoven since the late 90’s. Can you tell us a bit about this era?
Before this time you could see some tags on stickers, I did some as well, but nothing serious. Phet15 did a funny kuNSt logo sticker in the mid 90’s, but this was more a single action. I think you could say the sticker scene in Eindhoven started around 1998. It was Space3, Erosie and I. Soon after my first labyrinth style piece I started to create more labyrinth designs on the computer. I had some some A4 sheets with paperstickers left from a school job and I printed my first stickers. It made more sense for me to do a sticker in the same style as my piece in stead of doing another ‘traditional tag’ in the streets which is not related with my style. The first sticker I designed was ’S skull L’ and I printed them on my inkjet printer at home. When I pasted them on the streets I found out that only the Epson black was water resistant. So that’s the reason I only did black and white stickers.

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SOL sticker, Eindhoven 1999

The black ink faded in the years but it gave the sticker a nice touch. But at that time I didn’t like this fade so I started to put varnish on it. My room looked and smelt like a little sticker factory. There were A4 sheets with stickers everywhere as the varnish had to dry and I was in the middle of this sticker chaos creating and printing more stickers. I remember Erosie and I found a shop which sold boxes with 4000 Avery paper stickers a box for cheap prices. We bought all the boxes they had. A little later I met the 2 lads of Space3. It was the start of a big sticker explosion.

Sticker artists and things I remember from the late 90’s in Eindhoven: the targets of Erosie on his first stickers were done with a nice handmade stamp. The Evoluon/ufo based logo of Space3 was without the big round ears. A graffiti writer named ZXQL pasted little paper stickers with only his mysterious name printed on it… Rest In Peace mate.

The sticker scene was growing fast in Eindhoven after the Millennium. Some names: Betamaxxx, Bomb, Foxy Lady, Late, Schurk, Sektie and a little later Lempke. Also people from other cities came to Eindhoven to paste their stickers, like Influenza from Rotterdam, Toasters from Wolverhampton/London and Wood from Utrecht to name a few. The lamp posts in Eindhoven were pasted top to bottom and Eindhoven was known as ‘Sticker City’.

A very important thing for our (sticker) scene is that we really helped and supported each other. Space3 and I helped some guys to translate their symbols/ideas into a proper vector based logo. Space3 and Erosie did some great wallpaper designs with all the logo’s and as we were with quite a few sticker lads in Eindhoven we started to print our vinyl stickers together in one order at a sticker company in the city so we could get huge discounts. Lempke was always driving, it didn’t matter where in Europe, if someone did have an exhibiton we showed up with all the lads from Eindhoven. Good times!

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Zime, Erosie, Dagu. Early 1999

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Zime, Toaster and Sektie. Area 51 Eindhoven 2012.

Do you enjoy painting with other artists?
Yes, most pieces I did I was with other artists, or better to describe them as friends. Mostly I paint with guys i’ve known for a very long time. It’s so much nicer to be with one or more people at a wall than just standing there on your own. I painted a lot of walls together with Erosie (one of the most talented guys I know) and even more with Sektie. I’ve paint with him since 1990. I really like his letters and characters. We do very different styles but somehow they combine very well.

Around 2006 I slowed down painting walls. Everyone from SOL got into different directions and our lives changed a lot. I lost the pleasure in painting walls. It took so much time and sometimes the wall was destroyed in a few days. I was only interested in pasting stickers. Together with Lempke, Eindhoven’s most fanatical street artist the last years, we pasted thousands of stickers.

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Kurz, CT and Zime, Eindhoven 2008.

I got an email from two young Italian lads in 2008. They were on a tour and wanted to do a wall with me. I checked their names at Ekosystem and I saw some amazing stuff. We did a nice wall in Eindhoven and their drive was unbelievable. It made me enthusiastic to paint again and it was the start of the Eindhoven-Torino connection. Thanks to CT and Kurz for that!

Another big inspiration is Toaster A, from Wolverhampton/London. He’s a really good friend. We’ve been doing stuff together for more than 10 years, at the beginning mostly stickers and posters. But from 2008 we started to do walls on a frequent base. Our graphic styles fit very well and we painted some really nice walls in Berlin, Birmingham , Eindhoven  and London. Always a great time! Their image of the toaster became an icon, they are everywhere.

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Zime and Sektie, Eindhoven 2003.

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Zime and Sexy, Eindhoven 2013.

Which painting do you like most?
Difficult. With SOL crew I would say the Blind wall in the centre of Eindhoven. But personally… very difficult. I think one of my pieces with Sektie. But of course it’s not only the painting itself but also the relationship with the surroundings, the city where it’s painted and the story behind it. For example, painting in Mexico City was a great experience. I’d never seen so many police with huge guns on the streets as in Mexico City; it was unbelievable. Sometimes on every corner of every street, all for the war against drug gangs. It was a surreal setting. Neuzz from Mexico City showed me some nice areas and we painted some nice walls. I saw a lot of bright painted skulls and funny skeleton figures in Mexico City as they always celebrate Día de Muertos (Day of the Dead). So I decided to paint a big yellow skull. Unfortunately the yellow latex paint did not cover very well. It needed so many layers, even when I painted it white first. Luckily my girlfriend helped me to finish my piece in time. Her first and probably last piece :)

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Mr. & Mrs. Zime and Neuzz, Mexico City 2009.

What does inspire you, and who’s work are you into? (Not necessary in the graffiti world.)
So many names… I already named some. To make it easier I will only mention my favourite dutch artists.

My main inspiration since the 80’s is Phet15 from Eindhoven. He had already developed an original geometric style in the late 80’s while most others were still painting a (sort of) New York style. He’s still doing great stuff and is a nice guy as well.

Other graffiti/street artists from Eindhoven; Deshamer (especially his Berlin period together with Ces53 from Rotterdam), Space3 (they are pasting great graphic posters since the mid 90’s, real pioneers) and of course my mates from SOL crew.

Other graffiti/street artists from the rest of the Netherlands: Delta, Graphic Surgery, Shoe and Zedz.

Dutch Art/Graphic Design: Piet Mondriaan and De Stijl movement, Hendrik Wijdeveld and his magazine Wendingen, Hendrik Werkman and his magazine The Next Call, Dick Bruna and his Zwarte Beertjes books, Joost Swarte and his clear line illustrations and Wim Crouwel and his grid-based layouts and typography.

Do you make a difference between street art and graffiti?
SOL crew started as a traditional graffiti crew but from 1998 we were transformed. Our styles changed and we started to use other tools (the computer, stickers, posters, latex paint, rollers, etc.). It was step by step but it was too quick for some. Some writers told us this wasn’t ‘real graffiti’ or wrote some stuff near our paintings. It didn’t bother me. I saw it as a compliment and a sign we were doing the right thing. Anyway we were street artists some years before the term street art was used. There was simply no name for it back in 1998-2002 and to be honest I liked this. Personal I like the name Street… but the label ‘street art’, I don’t know. I don’t have a problem with it, like some other artists have. Maybe the label ‘post graffiti’ is better to use? One of my favourite bands is Joy Division. Their music is labeled as ‘post punk’. You can see graffiti as punk, raw and dirty and ‘post graffiti’ as ‘post punk’, still intense but more refined.

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Zime (SOL crew) and Toaster, Berlin 2012.

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Late, Zime and Erosie, Berlin 2013.

How do you define your work?
My work is a mix of graffiti, graphic design and geometric abstract art. About the graffiti part: I still use my graffiti name. You can see my stickers as tags and my wall paintings as pieces. My paintings are not in a real labyrinth style anymore. A few years ago I started to construct my letters with U shapes. Now my 4 letters are chopped into 8 U shapes which form my name. It’s a bit like the game Tetris. I rotate the U shape in 90° until I get my letters.

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Zime at Punct, The Netherlands 2004.

Do you also do exhibitions?
Yes I did some group shows in Eindhoven, Helsingborg, London, Prague etc. mostly with close friends like Influenza, SOL, Space3 and Toasters. One of the best was Ill communication with SOL in Urbis, Manchester. We painted a very nice wall there, maybe even better then the Blind wall in Eindhoven. This time with fresher colors. Manchester is a great city with lots of nice industrial parts and a great music scene.

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SOL crew: Bombkid, Erosie, Late, Sektie and Zime. Urbis, Manchester 2003.

If I visited Eindhoven, which are the places I shouldn’t miss?
Effenaar, lots of great bands played here, like Sex Pistols, Madness, The Cure and Joy Division.

Philips Stadium, from the beginning (100 years ago) PSV Eindhoven played their football matches at this ground. It’s situated in a nice working class area named Philips Dorp (Philips Village).

Evoluon, a UFO shaped building from Philips. It represents Eindhoven as a young and modern city.

Berenkuil, Hall of Fame since the mid 80’s. The pieces of Freaky by Phet15 and No Star Wars by Josh in Spraycan Art are painted here.

Area 51, an indoor skatepark at a former industrial area of Philips named Strijp-S.

Van Abbemuseum, MU and Dutch Design Week for art and design.

La Folie, the facade and toilets of this pub are covered in stickers. It’s the best pub in Eindhoven. Cheers!

Anything more you want to share?
Recently a true graffiti pioneer from Eindhoven died. He was writing since 1984 and was still active until this year. A very strong lad. Mad respect. At his fotolog page  you can see a lot of his great pieces.
Rest In Peace Med TIV.

Any last words?
Love to P&E

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Zime, Catalonia Spain 2013.


Interview done in summer 2013
Zime on ekosystem photo gallery.

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GODDOG interview

 

Kapla
“Kapla” – Goddog – Avignon – Voie férée


Tes premiers pas dans le graffiti.

J’ai commencé le graffiti dans ma province sur Châlons en champagne exactement. J’avais 16 ans, j’ai commencé par faire du Tag. C’est un truc qui m’a suivi un bout de temps, d’ailleurs j’aime encore beaucoup ça… Après j’ai commencé à bosser un peu la lettre… à tenter de la mettre en volume. Mais ça n’a jamais vraiment été mon fort…Du coup, ça m’a saoulé…après quelques péripéties et embrouilles, j’ai arrêté pendant quelques temps de peindre. Et puis, un beau matin..Ca me démangé du coup, je m’y suis remis bien à fond…et très vite, j’ai souhaité créer un univers avec une identité assez forte qui puisse se reconnaître…sans forcément y mettre des lettres.

Dens + Goddog
Dens + Goddog

Le Meilleur souvenir de toutes ces années ?
C’est pas évident de trouver un super souvenir en particulier…Euuuh, comme ça, je dirais les rencontres que j’ai pu faire à l’étranger grâce à la peinture. En faite, ce qui me plaît, c’est bien sûr de peindre..Mais aussi les interactions sociales qui vont se créer via la peinture…Y a deux ans, je suis parti en Indonésie avec ma copine, et les gens là bas sont très friands de graffiti…Du coup, on a rencontré des supers personnes..Malgré tout, le graffiti reste pour moi, un art qui favorise l’intégration…Et ça, dans n’importe quelle pays. Que ça soit avec les enfants ou les vieillards…Tu attires toujours la curiosité des gens…Et puis, vu qu’a l’autre bout du monde s’est pas toujours évident de se faire comprendre…La peinture me permet d’échanger, de partager, de rire…Enfin voilà..Tout ce qu’il y a de meilleur !!

"Sphinx" - Goddog
“Sphinx” – Goddog

et le pire…?
A l’inverse, mon pire souvenir restera les différentes altercations que j’ai pu avoir avec les flics suite à des peintures réalisées …Même si, heureusement ça n’arrive pas tous les weekend..L’indifférence et l’indélicatesse de ces personnes m’a toujours fasciné.. Un coup, j’ai eu le droit à “T’as que ça a foutre à ton âge et puis c’est quoi, ça représente quoi…ça ressemble à rien ton truc…” En fait, c’était juste pas agréable de devoir se justifier…Alors que tu sais pertinemment que c’est peine perdue de les convaincre..Du coup, maintenant je baisse la tête et m’autoflagelle. (rire)

Grems + Goddog
Grems + Goddog

Un endroit où tu aimerais peindre?
Y-a plusieurs endroits ou j’aimerais peindre…Comme ça, je vais te répondre au Pérou, je suis curieux de rencontrer la scène péruvienne ou sinon au Mexique, ça me brancherait bien aussi !!! Mais la prochaine destination sera sur Séville, j’y pars dans 15 jours…Du coup, on verra bien les connexions que je ferais !!

'la sieste" - Goddog - Labenne
‘la sieste” – Goddog – Labenne

Le ou les artistes avec qui tu aimerais bien faire un mur.
C’est pareil, y a plusieurs artistes avec qui j’aimerais bien peindre…Les deux qui me viennent à l’esprit..Ca serait “Curiot” un mexicain…Je trouve que ce mec défonce, il a une manière d’interpréter ses peintures qui me plaît énormément…Sinon, j’aime beaucoup aussi le travail d’Okuda…C’est super coloré et bien abstract comme j’aime !! Du coup, oui…Ca serait cool de peindre un de ces quatre avec eux !!

Goddog Avignon 2012
Goddog – Avignon – 2012

Avignon ça rime avec quoi ?
Avignon, Ca rime avec petite ville, petit réseau, Bourgeoisie, paillette en intramuros et le néant en extramuros…Ville agréable, mais qui a dû mal à soutenir les initiatives des jeunes…surtout quand ça concerne le graffiti ou l’art urbain contemporain comme dirait les arrivistes !! (rire) Nan, plus sérieusement…c’est une ville qui mériterait vraiment d’être un peu plus active et dynamique car on y est bien sur Avignon…Mais, si tu ne bouges pas un peu à droite à gauche le weekend…Tu tournes quand même vite en rond..Et ça, moi j’aime pas trop.

Un souhait pour les 10 prochaines années.
Dans les 10 prochaines années, je me vois bien continuer de peindre avec les copains…Essayer de développer au mieux mon univers, qu’il soit le plus étrange et poétique possible…continuer à voyager un maximum…Et surtout prendre du plaisir !!!

Goddog on bigbrother facebook, on flickr and on ekosystem.

Goddog - Avignon - 2013
Goddog – Avignon – 2013
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J’irai taguer sur vos tombes – Oré

Pourrais-tu te présenter ?
Oré, 35 ans, normand. Définitivement accro au graffiti, mais aussi aux autres expressions esthétiques dans les rues (affiches, pochoirs, stickers, collages divers et variés).

Quand as-tu commencé à t’intéresser au graffiti ?
En 1989, je trace mes premiers tags au marker dans des cages d’escaliers. Depuis le Graffiti fait partie de mon existence. Pas un jour ne s’écoule sans que je sois traversé par l’envie de peindre tel ou tel endroit de la ville.
Pour ma part, le Graffiti est davantage un mode de vie qu’une simple activité créatrice (« We do Graffiti, we fuck Graffiti, we are Graffiti »).
J’ai découvert le Graffiti en liaison avec la culture Hip-hop. Cependant, ce lien originel n’a plus beaucoup d’importance maintenant pour moi. Mes références proviennent désormais autant du Rock (je suis notamment grand fan de Noir Désir, Manu Chao, The Clash), même si j’adore des gens comme La Rumeur ou Casey.
Mes voyages et mes lectures m’influencent énormément.
Cependant, les racines du Graffiti classique sont toujours en moi, elles forment mon « background » culturel : je n’oublie pas que j’ai peint des lettrages et des tags durant de longues années.

Ce livre, c’est histoire de garder une trace de toutes ces années ?
En effet, après 20 ans de peinture, j’avais envie de faire un bilan.
50% des œuvres présentées dans le livre ont aujourd’hui disparu.
J’ai voulu retracer mon parcours de graffeur et montrer l’évolution de ma peinture.
Je débute ainsi le livre par des photos de mes premiers lettrages, pour finir par une présentation du spectacle « Ecoute Les Murs Parler », en passant par le collage des Quetzalcóatls et les réalisations de fresques.
Enfin, je suis depuis deux ans membre d’une association (La Sauce Aux Arts) où il existe une branche Éditions. Donc il y avait les gens pour m’aider à réaliser ce projet.

Qu’est-ce qui a finalement été le plus compliqué dans la conception de ce livre ?
Créer une ambiance et trouver une rythmique au niveau de la mise en page qui soient cohérentes et agréables tout au long du livre.
Et que l’aspect général de cet objet traduise bien mon état d’esprit de peintre.
La première maquette élaborée au bout des 4 premiers mois de travail avait d’ailleurs déçu les potes de l’association. Ce fut un long et difficile processus pour trouver la bonne manière de présenter mes peintures.

D’où te vient cet intérêt pour le Mexique et les civilisations précolombiennes ?
Les mystérieuses cités d’or ou une séduisante  prof d’Histoire Géo ?

Depuis mon enfance, j’ai toujours ressenti un profond intérêt pour l’Histoire.
J’ai d’ailleurs obtenu une maîtrise d’Histoire il y maintenant quelques années…
J’ai toujours trouvé la muse Clio très séduisante…
Pour ce qui est du Mexique, j’y suis allé pour des séjours plus ou moins long depuis 1996.
En 1996, c’est la possibilité de rencontrer les Indiens zapatistes au Chiapas qui m’a décidé (et l’envie de voyage en terre latine…).
Au fil du temps, et de plusieurs séjours là-bas, j’ai visité les principaux sites archéologiques et musées du Mexique et du Guatemala. Différentes lectures sur les mythologies mayas et aztèques m’ont également apporté certaines références, notamment celle du Serpent à plumes,  le « Quetzalcóatl ». Le dessin animé « Les mystérieuses cités d’or » est d’ailleurs excellent pour les petits, pour acquérir certaines notions sur les civilisations précolombiennes.

A part le Mexique, y’a-t-il d’autres pays ou villes qui t’ont marqué ?
J’aime le voyage. Une de mes expressions  fétiches en anglais est « Travelling, Smoking, Painting ». Beaucoup de lieux et villes sont importants pour moi. La Grèce a une place particulière, comme le Mexique, car l’histoire de ma famille est fortement liée à cette terre méditerranéenne.
Mais, on peut déplorer une espèce de culture urbaine mondiale qui nivelle tout (plutôt vers le bas) et qui tue les différences entre les lieux. Ainsi,  dans mes souvenirs d’adolescent, certains quartiers d’Athènes avaient une réelle saveur presque orientale (comme le marché du boulevard Athinas). Aujourd’hui, c’est grande enseigne (Zara, Séphora, Mac Do et compagnie…) et caméras de surveillance. Et quasiment toute l’Europe, voire le monde entier, s’uniformise ainsi à grand pas.

Pourrais-tu nous citer quelques artistes dont tu apprécies le travail ou qui ont eu une influence sur tes productions (pas forcément seulement dans le graffiti) ?
Je suis admiratif, et je les considère comme des « maîtres » pour moi, de gens  comme Invader, JR, Bansky, Jace. J’aime particulièrement aussi les travaux de L’Atlas, Os Gemeos, André, Zeus.
Je suis un peintre autodidacte, c’est le tag qui m’a amené à ce que je fais aujourd’hui.
Donc je demeure extrêmement influencé par les gens du milieu Graffiti et Art de rue.
Cependant, je me forge petit à petit une culture artistique classique, afin de connaître un peu mieux l’art occidental en général, et nourrir ainsi ma création.

Si je passe par Caen as-tu un ou deux endroits à me recommander ?
Au niveau graffiti, peinture ou en général ?
Les deux…
Au niveau général, rien  de particulier à signaler sur la tranquille capitale de la Basse-Normandie…
Au niveau graffiti, là aussi on pourrait dire qu’il n’y a pas forcément beaucoup à voir.
Il se passe quand même des choses. Des gens comme Sane2, Akor, Blast peignent beaucoup et font avancer le mouvement, chacun à leur manière. Leurs crews  322 et DLT sont les plus actifs dans le coin. Les KSF et ECF, avec Nore, Hope, 1ER, Kaps posent aussi pas mal. Et puis, le pochoiriste Artiste Ouvrier vient de s’installer ici.
Sinon, si il y a un endroit à visiter pour voir du mur peint, proche du centre ville, c’est selon moi sur le Campus Universitaire 1 que ça se passe. Forcément, il y a plusieurs de mes fresques, mais pas mal d’autres gens viennent se  poser là  car on y trouve des murs sympas,  vus par tous les étudiants, et pas de patrouille de police pour te déranger.
Le long du canal, le mur d’enceinte de Renaults Trucks (RVI) était  beaucoup peint, mais je ne sais pas si c’est encore le cas. Enfin, sur la commune d’Hérouville, Sane2 met en place pas mal de projets divers. Le site de la SMN à Colombelles est à voir, car c’est le plus vieux terrain, mais trop de toys de gamins.

Des souhaits, des envies, des projets pour les prochains mois ?
Diffuser bien sûr le bouquin le plus largement possible.
Mais surtout, poursuivre dans la belle dynamique de mes 3 dernières années.
A savoir : des serpents à plumes collés un peu partout en France et ailleurs, de belles commandes de fresques, des dates sur de bons festivals avec les potes slamers, zicos et vidéastes pour notre spectacle « Ecoute Les Murs Parler », et enfin, si ce n’est pas trop demander, encore quelques endroits sympas pour exposer.
Et pour finir, avec une légère ironie : avoir des critiques dithyrambiques, avec  des articles de 5 pages,  dans tous les magazines du petit milieu graffito-streetarto-tendance-fashion…

Le site d’Oré: http://www.artore.org/

Pour commander le livre d’Oré (20€ frais de port compris):  J’irai taguer sur vos tombes.

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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.

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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.

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

backflashes book

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