Posts in Category: Street Art

Vandalog – A Street Art Blog » Sometimes smaller is beautiful

pureevilgallery

Pure Evil Gallery: Ethos and Principles

• We are opposed to seeing artists as a commodity

• No conceptual artists or poseurs

• No curators allowed in the building they will be shot on sight

• Principles before Profit

• Wear your Politics proudly

• We are an Alternative Ideological Force

• The Gallery should be a Mecca for Independent artists

• We need to have the feeling of exhilaration from meeting an artist and seeing their work..

Read more at: pureevilgallery.

Roa’s Big Bird on Hanbury Street, Brick Lane, London

Homelessness And Poverty Behind Street Art In London

Street Art and Reality on Hanbury Street London

The main difference between Graffiti and Street Art is that while the former often rebels, degrades, and lashes out against it’s environment the latter almost always merges, comments and even contributes to it. The following video by Shafiur Rahman is one of the better examples of this. This video documents the making of a piece done by Joseph Loughborough and Ben Slow on Hanbury Street in London. The piece called “Ma o Shishu” was found in a book about photography. Ironically the video also uncovers a hidden story of squatters living behind this work of art. This is why street art is my favorite genre of art. It isn’t about hanging art on walls as an excuse for exclusive audiences to drink wine and socialize, the purpose of art is to comment on the world we live in, and to beautify it. As the artist stated “Their piece changed the street. Everyone who passed – young and old, local or tourist – responded very warmly to it.”

via Street Art and Reality on Hanbury Street London – thenewpop.

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YouTube – notblu’s Channel

Enter Username

via YouTube – notblu’s Channel.

Raven

Some remarkable feats of problem-solving have been observed in the species, leading to the belief that it is highly intelligent. Over the centuries, it has been the subject of mythology, folklore, art, and literature. In many indigenous cultures, including those of Scandinavia, ancient Ireland and WalesBhutan, the northwest coast of North America, and Siberia and northeast Asia, the Common Raven has been revered as a spiritual figure or god.

The Common Raven evolved in the Old World and crossed the Bering land bridge into North America. The brains of Common Ravens count among the largest of any bird species. Specifically, their hyperpallium is large (see avian pallium). For a bird, they display ability in problem solving, as well as other cognitive processes such as imitation and insight.

Juvenile Common Ravens are among the most playful of bird species. They have been observed to slide down snowbanks, apparently purely for fun. They even engage in games with other species, such as playing catch-me-if-you-can with wolves and dogs. Common Ravens are known for spectacular aerobatic displays, such as flying in loops or interlocking talons with each other in flight.

They are also one of only a few species who make their own toys. They have been observed breaking off twigs to play with socially.

Across its range in the northern hemisphere, and throughout human history, the Common Raven has been a powerful symbol and a popular subject of mythology and folklore.

In many post-conversion Western traditions, ravens have long been considered to be birds of ill omen, in part because of the negative symbolism of their all-black plumage and eating ofcarrion. In Sweden, ravens are known as the ghosts of murdered people, and in Germany as the souls of the damned. In Danish folklore, valravne that ate a king’s heart gained human knowledge, could perform great malicious acts, could lead people astray, had superhuman powers, and were “terrible animals”.

As in traditional mythology and folklore, the Common Raven features frequently in more modern writings such as the works of William Shakespeare, and, perhaps most famously, in the poem “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe. Ravens have appeared in the works of Charles Dickens, and J. R. R. Tolkien.

It continues to be used as a symbol in areas where it once had mythological status: as the National Bird of Bhutan, Official Bird of the Yukon territory, and on the Coat of Arms of the Isle of Man (once a Viking colony)..

Many indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest Coast of North America and northeast Asia revered it as a god. In Tlingit and Haida cultures, Raven was both a Trickster and Creator god. Related beliefs are widespread among the peoples of Siberia and northeast Asia. The Kamchatka peninsula, for example, was supposed to have been created by the raven god Kutkh. There are several references to Common Ravens in the Old Testament of theBible and it is an aspect of Mahakala in Bhutanese mythology.

The Norsemen believed that ravens Hugin and Munin sat on the god Odin‘s shoulders and saw and heard all, and a Raven banner standard was carried by such Viking figures as the Norse Jarls of Orkney, King Canute the Great of England, Norway and Denmark, and Harald Hardrada. In the British Isles, ravens also were symbolic to the Celts. In Irish mythology, the goddess Morrígan alighted on the hero Cú Chulainn‘s shoulder in the form of a raven after his death.

Wikepedia

Art and Science of Billboard Improvement

A Comprehensive Guide to the alteration of outdoor advertising by the billboard liberation front

Callie Curry aka Swoon

Swoon – All my aspiring art students watch it all but pay particular attention from 11:00 minutes on

Swoon is a Brooklyn-based artist whose life-sized woodblock and cut-paper portraits hang on walls in various states of decay in cities around the world. She has designed and built several large-scale installations, most notably the Swimming Cities of Switchback Sea at Deitch Projects in 2008. Her pieces have been collected by The Museum of Modern Art, Brooklyn Museum of Art, & the Tate Modern. Major pieces have appeared at PS1, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, and Black Rat Press. Swoon is also an instigator and a collaborator. She founded the Toyshop collective and the Miss Rockaway Armada, and is a member of Just Seeds and the Transformazium. Since 2006 she has organized four large-scale raft projects and floated down the Mississippi and Hudson rivers with them. Most recently, she and her collaborators designed a flotilla of sea-going rafts that invaded the 2009 Venice Biennale. Her artistic process is predicated on the belief that art is an immersive, provocative, and transformative experience for its participants. Although her aesthetics can be seen as an outgrowth of street art, her engagement with ethical living and making art share a close kinship with the idealism of off-grid, barter-based cultures and economies based on sharing. She uses scavenged and local materials and embraces print media as a potent means of action for social change.

Illusions on the cave wall

What is real and what is illusion?

What is perception? Is geometry real?

Unfortunately I never found out the name of the artist His mane is FELICE VARINI and the images have stayed with me.

http://www.qype.fr/uploads/photos/0087/1049/mus_e_arras2_gallery2.jpg Musée des Beaux-Arts d’Arras


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