The stencil artist Strøk came to France for the first time with a show named Flux (Flow in French).Read more: Strok’s flow
Rockwell Kent Gallery, Plattsburgh, NY
Rockwell Kent has been a big influence on more than a few of us here at Justseeds. He was a prolific draftsman whose illustrations dominated book design and advertising in the first half of the 20th century (see Josh’s posts about this, here). He was also a master printer, a socialist, an explorer, a raconteur, a cad, and (by my aunt’s account) a bit of an egomaniac. In the 1920s, Kent bought land in the Adirondack Mountains in upstate New York and built a farm and a studio there. My family is from this area, and I am from nearby Plattsburgh, where Kent was something of a local celebrity and personality. Consequently, I grew up looking at his art without knowing…
Shahn and Bryson Post Office Murals, The Bronx
Last summer I was in lower Manhattan and had 6 hours to kill before a meeting Washington Heights. l took the opportunity to visit the Ben Shahn and Bernarda Bryson murals painted in 1938 at the Bronx Post Office. As part of the New Deal in the 1930s the Works Project Administration commissioned artists across the country to paint murals in public spaces, especially in post offices. Shahn stated that this particular mural was to show aspects of the rest of the country to New Yorkers. They depict working people, cotton pickers, welders, and weavers, amongst others. The mural is centered around an image of Walt Whitman pointing to one of his own poems on …
French Kiss Je Suis Charlie
We stand behind our Paris Family and all those affected by the recent tragedy. There are not enough words to comment on horrors that have happened, I only leave you with what moves us most and that is artists coming together to cope with these events. Here is summary of the French Kiss reaction and mural painted at the Palais de Tokyo in the past week. We are with you France. GF “Amongst the victims of the terrorist attacks were artists that we grew up with, free spirited hippies whose work has been part of our lives since we were kids. Like all of our friends …
Photo Recap Good Guy Boris “Paradigm Shift”
When you talk about Street art and Graffiti in today’s world will get a range of reactions from disgust to praise. Do to the emerging Street art festivals around the world we are able to have our art accepted into Galleries and institutions as they embrace the new generation of artists. What you dont usually get to see is the truest nature of graffiti and its underworld that still is thriving. It is this duality that Good Guy Boris captures as he not only documents but actively engages, Paradigm Shift is a participatory documentation of this other reality. Boris is…
Interview with OJAE FYC 156
Interview with one of Old New York’s dedicated Graffiti Artist.
The Return of Omni156
Omni a 156 Original member and one of the New Yorkers who kept the crew alive during the 90’s is back in the mix again!Omni Rocking again at Tuff City Bronx
Graff all the way from the Russian Federation of Kaluga, from…
Graff all the way from the Russian Federation of Kaluga, from @denisthekko. (http://globalstreetart.com/denis-thekko)
Ever seen a mouse as big as a house, well now you have courtesy…
Ever seen a mouse as big as a house, well now you have courtesy of @junkart84 all the way from Serbia. (http://globalstreetart.com/junk)
The Inside Story of Keith Haring’s “Crack Is Wack” Mural
This week the Huffington Post published a fascinating article written by Matthew Israel from Artsy, which tells the inside story of Keith Haring's icon “Crack is Wack” mural in New York City. Its a great read with some amazing archival photos. Isreal writes: How Crack is Wack came to be is not well-known. Nor is the fact that the mural is not the original version. Benny was one of the major catalysts for Crack is Wack. Benny was Haring's young, gifted studio assistant in the mid-1980s who became addicted to crack. Haring and the rest of his …
Street Collage from PAPERGLUEnSCOTCH
Working with silkscreen artist 10H23, French street artist Lili Jenks (also known as PAPERGLUEnSCOTCH) is making collages that cross boarders. The team collected strips of paper from billboards in Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Brazil then swapped and reorganized the billboard strips into large collages with screen prints of old photos by 10H23. After making huge photocopies of these pieces, PAPERGLUEnSCOTCH pasted the collages as posters, spreading her work far and wide.