Monday, May 31, 2010

AYOBA!

Why the bear? For the entertainment of the many kids in that area, especially the Krynauws.
Isn't he gorgeous? Yes, I can sew.

Hillcrest Rd near Westcliff Drive.

And for the little girl who also put up some posters - I hope you found your dog!





"Pole sitter for Heath" as promised : cnr Jan Smuts and Loch Ave.

The seat is a sample of the ones that were eventually used at Soccer City. Thank you Boogertman and Partners and worker bees. Nisha, I still owe you one.
Very corny, I know, but I had to also show my patriotism!

Rock Ridge Rd:




At this crossing, cnr Victoria and Albany Rds, there are at least 5 empty poles.




Installed this weekend: Cnr Empire and Claredon Place, Hillbrow:

"Can that thing really shoot?"

"Of course."

"When is it going to shoot?"

"See, 11 Aug."

"How far can it go?"

"As far as the eye can see."

"NEXT BLAST"


Carse O'Gowrie Rd, by Sunnyside Hotel. This pole is brand new, recently installed, empty. I reckon we have to make use of it seeing that we paid for it:





Cnr Carse O'Gowrie Rd/York St, near Roedean:

"POLONY" - on the corner where the kneeling beggar lives.














:

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Barry Hertzog



Here is the whole thing:

on my soap box


..........and so I went ahead and did one. And I think I'm hooked. I did not have the same experience making the graffiti that the literature ascribe to graffiti artists. The one that you do it for yourself and making a subversive statement. Of course it was/is all there but I definitely experienced feelings of exhibitionism and felt as if was addressing the whole city - of course delusional.

There are strong similarities between writing on a blog and spray painting on a wall - of which the most obvious is that one aims to communicate with the widest audience as possible.

Interesting comments while I was working on the wall:

A guy peeping over the top: "I can smell you but I can't see you".

A beggar guy:" Why are you painting the wall?"

"I want to make it look nice again".

"O, you bought the place."

A blond, 30-something guy with a cool swagger: " I can't believe you are painting the wall white. People have done art here (he was wrong, there were only ads on the wall).
Your types (older, bottle blond, resident association members, secure ???)
are so uncreative and have no idea what art is, and what graffiti is about!!"
I managed to not go into lecture mode with him, and he then swaggered away.

Young guy in his blue church outfit: " I'm a painter man, I can do this job for you. R 120 a day only".

controlling mom mode


If you do not understand what on earth this blog is about, click on Tomasons, the initial posting -its all there.

My IT challenged friends: you have to open an account to be able to make a comment. Click on "Profile", and then open a Google account - it takes a couple of minutes and costs nothing!

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

the streets are saying things

The visuality of our culture, because of mediums such as the internet, has posed some interesting situations regarding illegal, yet controversial expression such as graffiti.

Of course most of the arguments against graffiti have merit, especially regarding senseless "markings" (tagging) on private and public property. Hardly more than relieving yourself against a pole or a wall.

Artists who compose real graffiti - graffiti that actually have something to say - are doing so because they need to express their view or communicate a message they believe would otherwise not be heard. It is therefore a line of communication. If graffiti is regarded as illegal, and is regulated, shouldn't we also regulate the huge advertising boards and their immense visual impact, even visual pollution? I know the answer - they pay to be there.

Graffiti art meets you on the street where you live and move. Depending on its content it is designed to elicit shock, anger, amusement or even introspection. It is by nature illicit and although its styles and techniques can be exported to the gallery, civic murals and even the artist's canvas, its charm remains the guilt by association.

Graffiti is a protest against everything the ad agency (and their advertising boards), stands for; the commodification of public space, standardisation of the built environment and permission based, central control of communication in the form of visual display, which dystopians and town planners agree is the most powerful way to communicate with large groups of people who are busy doing something else - the definition of a modern city.

The political nature of the act itself and the accusation implicit in the act, influence the aesthetic of the resulting image, so that it is often purely ornamental.

The name originates from an Italian term, graffito, which means little writing or little scratching. The term was used to describe the graffiti art that emerged during the Pop Art era in American cities - interestingly enough together with the new consumerism, accompanied advertising and of course billboards of that era.

Graffiti constitutes a major strand of street art, and although graffiti writers as a rule did not really write for the public as an audience (I. Scheepers) , there exists a major strand of modern graffiti artists who attempts to communicate with its local community about issues of concern using a wide range of techniques and different levels of meaning.