NYC

Anonymous Gallery Presents: “Stickers: From Punk Rock to Contemporary Art” Book Launch (New York City, NY)

Anonymous Gallery
brooklyn-street-art-Anonymous-gallery- db-burkeman-monica-LoCascio_stuckupcover

DB Burkeman, Monica LoCascio,
Anonymous Gallery & Rizzoli
invite you to a reception celebrating the release of the book
STICKERS: From Punk Rock to Contemporary Art

The authors and several featured artists will be in attendance.
Books will be available for purchase and signing

with DJ Jasmine Solano, DJ Mondee,
DJ Teddy King, DJ DB (Old Skool Set), Ron Morelli (L.I.E.S.),
Marcos Cabral (Runaway & On the Prowl),
& DJ Brennan Green (China Town)
Hosted by Boundless NY

Thursday, Oct. 7, 9pm

Le Poisson Rouge
158 Bleecker Street
.
New York, NY 10011
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Joshua Liner Gallery Presents: El Mac ‘The Humble and Sublime’ And Damon Soule ‘Tessellating Pigments.’ (New York City, NY)

Joshua Liner Gallery
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We are very pleased to announce our upcoming exhibitions; El Mac ‘The Humble and Sublime’ and Damon Soule ‘Tessellating Pigments.’ This will be Mac’s first solo exhibition with the gallery as well as his first solo exhibit in NYC. This will be Soule’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. The opening reception is Thursday, October 14th from 6 – 9 pm, both artists will be in attendance.

Joshua Liner Gallery
548 W 28th St. 3rd Floor
New York, New York 10001
212-244-7415
joshualinergallery.com

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Stencils Of The Week 10.05.10

Stencil-Top-5

As chosen by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History X

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Evol at Galerie Bodson-Emelinckx. Installation View /Main Room (Photo © Evol)

Grobkonzept. Boardstock 2010. (Photo © Grobkonzept)

Grobkonzept. Boardstock 2010. (Photo © Grobkonzept)

Zibe Tso “Jump in my car” ( Photo © Zibe Tso)

M-City View of the exhibition “Urban Jungle” ( Photo © SHX)

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Chris Stain Outdoor stencil mural Dumbo, NYC (Photo © Lois Stavsky)

BSA……….BSA…………BSA……….BSA…………BSA……….BSA…………BSA……….BSA…………BSA……….BSA…………

Stencil History X

See more EVOL here

For more Grobkonzept go here

For more Zibe Tso

Galerie Itinerrance

M-City

Chris Stain

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Fun Friday 10.01.10

Fun-Friday

“Bring To Light” Saturday in the Street

Brooklyn Street Art will be part of Bring To Light this Saturday Oct 2. Stop to say hello we’ll be at the entrance of the festival on Franklin and Noble streets in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.

Bring to Light is New York City’s first-ever Nuit Blanche festival. A Nuit Blanche is an all night arts festival of installations and performances celebrating the magic and luminance of light.

BRING TO LIGHT NYC will be held in Greenpoint, Brooklyn primarily on Oak Street between Franklin St. and the East River waterfront beginning at sundown this Saturday Oct. 2. The event is free and open to the public. This unique block will play host to local and international artists, performers, galleries, and musicians as they Bring to Light the street itself as well as its unique assets including metal, set design and textile workshops, residential facades, an indoor gymnastics park, and much more.

Jacob Abramson will perform his Digital Graffiti at “Bring To Light”

The experience will be thrilling, original, mesmerizing, ceremonial, contemplative and illuminating. This is a one-night event to remember, but also the start of something intended to grow into an annual, world-class event. Artists will create works that inhabit street corners, galleries, shops, rooftops, vacant lots and buildings. These spaces will act as sites for light, sound and unexpected installations, performances, projections, works of art with natural and artificial LIGHT.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Nuit-Blanche-2010

Please click on the animation here to visit the event’s site for a full list of artists as well as all pertinent information regarding time, location and transportation to the event.

http://bringtolightnyc.org/

WE ALSO ENCOURAGE YOU TO PLEASE CLICK ON THE “HELP FUND THIS EVENT” BANNER ON THEIR SITE. DONATE WHAT YOU CAN TO THE KICK STARTER CAMPAIGN. WE DON’T WANT THESE KIDS TO GO BROKE TO ILLUMINATE US ALL!

BLF in New York

Long before Street Artists like Fauxreel or PosterBoy started messing with them, the BLF (billboardliberation.com) began altering outdoor advertising in 1977. They like to say they are helping improve the billboards. As they say in their press release, “prior campaigns have included work for Exxon, R.J. Reynolds, and Apple Computers.”  Thoughtful, no?

Brooklyn-Street-Art-WEB-Billboard-Liberation-Front

A new short film featuring Specter, Signtologist, the Public Art Campaign and Jayshells


Don John

Friendly Wild Wolves in Copenhagen’s Westend

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Pandemic Gallery Presents: Dan Taylor “Notes From The Inside” (Brooklyn, NY)

Pandemic Gallery

"Deer Jesus" Image Courtesy of the gallery

"Deer Jesus" Image Courtesy of the gallery

Raised by squirrels in a musty old barn located deep in the woods of upstate NY, Dan Taylor’s work is heavily influenced by the anatomical forms of the animal kingdom.  In his drawings, sculptures, and mixed media works, Taylor treats organs and musculoskeletal structures as unique environments, which may be fused with other natural forms, as well as occasional unexpected consumerist elements (for example, mylar balloons, luxury handbags, gold leafing or toy soldiers).  Some day, the artist’s own remains will be stuffed and put on display to scare children.  The artist maintains a website, Mammal Soap.


On Saturday, October 16th, from 7pm to 11pm, Pandemic will host the “Notes from the Inside” opening reception, sponsored by Pabst Blue Ribbon.  “Notes from the Inside” will then run through November 6th.

Established in Williamsburg, Brooklyn in 2009, Pandemic is an artist-run space dedicated to showing work from up-and-coming, unknown, and well-established talent alike.  Embracing (but not confined to) urban street art, Pandemic is attracted to artists who think outside the confines of conventional normalcy — artists whose fresh concepts and unique visions inspire a broad audience. Pandemic is open Tuesday-Friday from 11am to 6pm and Saturday-Sunday from 12pm to 7pm; the gallery is accessible via the L and J subways and the Q59 bus.
For additional information about Pandemic Gallery, Dan Taylor, or this event, or to obtain additional exhibition preview images, please do not hesitate to contact me by e-mail at (973) 220-5032.
Thanks in advance,
Megan Canter
Media and Development Director
Pandemic Gallery

—–

PANDEMIC gallery
37 Broadway between Kent and Wythe
Brooklyn, NY 11211
www.pandemicgallery.com
Gallery hours:
Tues.-Fri. 11-6pm
Sat. & Sun. 12-7pm
closed Monday
or by appointment

L train to Bedford ave, J train to Marcy ave, or Q59 bus to Broadway/Wythe

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Kate Meersschaert: Urban Archeologist with Camera Phone

“Williamsburg is so layered and changing so quickly… I am so lucky to be able to document some of these fleeting visual gems”

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Shooting Fossils with Your Phone

5 years ago, it was unimaginable. 5 years from now, assumed. Photography with your phone is ushering a new era in art, journalism, and information.

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Kate Meersschaert has been capturing the beauty of the urban landscape in the midst of the Williamsburg transition to vertical suburbia, where shallow glass towers rise over blighted lots, Superfund sites, and Street Art.   Since this spring she snaps the layers of posters and detritus, steel beams, gummy sidewalks… posts them on her site, and is making a book with them this fall.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-copyright-Kate Meersschaert-2010-tumblr_l4pl0vjHsq1qbl4h1o1_500

Some of Kate’s images are charged with activity, some overlayed with weathered echo, others may prove to have a timeless quality. Because they are a “snapshot” using this technology in this location, they are so 2010.

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To see Ms. Meersschaert’s project and more of her images click on the link below:

http://www.brooklynorbust.com/

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All images © Kate Meersschaert

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Street Art in NYC: Weathering Storms, Fending Off Predators

In New York City, unlike London, Chicago, and San Francisco, the art on the streets has a longer run. Street Artists love to get up in New York and come from all over the world and the rest of the country for the experience of it. The city has plenty of walls and the artists know that if they are lucky to get up their pieces can stay there for weeks or even years without being disturbed. If the piece survives predators or the capricious moods of New York weather, time will add a natural depth to the art. These pieces don’t simply surrender their character, they aggregate it, eventually attaining an aura of invincibility.

Some stencils acquire an ore patina against the rusted metal that is a wonder to behold, a finish that decorative painters strive for years to achieve. Layers of paint begin to peel and give the art a sense of movement and life. Wheat-pastes that survive summer storms and winter Nor’easters are imbued with a new whimsical life as they curl, buckle, shred: starting their transformation and ultimate disappearance.

Street art is ephemeral but it can also be resilient; a metamorphosis that, when underway, is always fascinating and pleasure to see. We present here pieces that have endured many a storm and lived to tell a story.

Gaia (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gaia. Detail  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

C215 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
C215 (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Faile (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Cake (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Cake (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Elbow Toe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Elbow Toe . Detail.  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Pink Silhouette (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Pink Silhouette (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Con Cojo (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Con Cojo (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Gaia. Detail (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

General Howe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
General Howe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Swoon (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Swoon. Detail  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Elbow Toe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Elbow Toe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Imminent Disaster (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Spazmat (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Spazmat (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Jef Aerosol (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Jef Aerosol (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Faile (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster. Detail (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Imminent Disaster. Detail (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Swoon (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Swoon. Detail  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Redu Presents: “Re:Form School” A Group Show Including Shepard Fairey, Swoon, Chris Johanson, Jo Jackson, Maya Hayuk, Gary Baseman, Friends With You, HunterGatherer, iO Tillett Wright, Andrew Bannecker and More (New York City)

RE:FORM SCHOOL
brooklyn-street-art-redu-reform-school

RE:FORM SCHOOL is a group art exhibition and event series, bringing together hundreds of artists in New York City to send a loud message that the time has come to fix our ailing Public Education System.

Participating artists include: Shepard Fairey, Swoon, Chris Johanson, Jo Jackson, Maya Hayuk, Gary Baseman, Friends With You, HunterGatherer, iO Tillett Wright, Andrew Bannecker and over a hundred more.

The RE:FORM SCHOOL Gallery issues a visual call-to-action, with artists motivating public energy toward true education reform on a local, state and national level. Artists, grass roots activists, performers, celebrity guests, art collectors, musicians, public officials and the general public will display their works or show support at the RE:FORM SCHOOL Gallery in New York City. RE:FORM SCHOOL will be taking over the entirety of the recently closed St. Patrick’s School in SoHo, which is one of the oldest schools in Manhattan.

RE:FORM SCHOOL will be open to the public, Saturday, October 9th, 2010 through Monday, October 11th, 2010 between the hours of 10:00 AM – 6:00 PM and is located at 233 Mott Street, New York City, NY 10012

To learn more about REDU click on the link below:

http://letsredu.com/


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Do Tank: Brooklyn Presents: “Bring To Light” New York City’s First Ever Nuit Blanche Festival (Greenpoint, Brooklyn NYC)

Bring To Light

brooklyn-street-art-do-tank-brooklyn-bring-to-light-web

BRING TO LIGHT
NEW YORK CITY’S FIRST-EVER NUIT BLANCHE
A festival of light and projection art on the industrial waterfront of Greenpoint, Brooklyn
2010 October 2, Saturday
Dusk to Dawn
http://bringtolightnyc.org

DESCRIPTION
On October 2, from sunset to dawn, the streets of Greenpoint, Brooklyn will host Bring to Light, New York City’s first Nuit Blanche, an all-night public art festival begun in 1997 in Paris, Berlin and St. Petersburg that has spread to cities across the world. The New York festival takes place on the postindustrial edges of an area reawakened in recent years by the migration of young culturistas into a mostly Polish neighborhood, and the opening of many new boutiques, bistros, bars and nightclubs. The nearby East River waterfront remains largely industrial, undeveloped, and publicly inaccessible, but for one night, the skywalks, open courtyards, alleys and adjacent streets around the Greenpoint Terminal Market will be lit up with site-specific installations, projections, interactive media, street performances, and a late-night dance party.

Bring to Light features works by over 50 international artists, performers, and musicians spread over four blocks, inhabiting street corners, galleries, shops, rooftops, vacant lots and buildings,
with opening performances on Noble Street, installations and projections inside the American Playground (on Franklin and Noble), and events hosted by neighborhood businesses including furniture company From the Source, Gym Park gymnastics center, Fowler Arts Gallery, Hollywood Stunts, and film production spaces of Seret Studios. These spaces will act as sites for light, sound and unexpected installations, performances, and projections. The event will be broadcast live during a simultaneous Nuit Blanche event in Toronto.

North Brooklyn’s growing food culture will be represented by vendors curated by the Greenpoint Food Market. In conjunction with Bring to Light, all weekend during the day, Greenpoint Open Studios, now in its second year, will offer a chance to visit the converted factories and warehouses, apartments and galleries where local artists produce artwork in all media.

ABOUT THE ORGANIZERS
This event is being organized by DoTank:Brooklyn and produced by Furnace Media in collaboration with community advocates, curators, writers, neighbors and designers. We are thrilled to bring this international tradition of a night-time arts festival to enliven public space around the Greenpoint Waterfront area, just as New Yorkers are rediscovering this historic waterfront and a burgeoning artist community is making its mark,‚Äù  said the organizers.

DoTank is a public vessel for interdisciplinary exploration, engagement and enhancement of our urban environment through means outside of the formal urban planning process. We make rapid and meaningful change by exploring and testing in our laboratory: Brooklyn, NY.

Furnace Media is a New York City based film and design company founded in 2002 as a laboratory for innovative moving image media. Our work blends live-action filmmaking, re-mixed archival footage, and 3D computer graphics for performance venues outside of traditional movie theaters often in partnership with musicians (www.liveprojections.org) or as site-specific architectural installation.

LOCATION DETAILS
Noble Street between Franklin and West Streets, American Playground, and From the Source, 69 West Street, in Greenpoint, Brooklyn
Nearest subway stops: G train to Greenpoint Ave. or L train to Bedford Ave.

To learn more about this event and see the complete list of participating artists go to:

http://bringtolightnyc.org/

http://dotankbrooklyn.tumblr.com/

brooklyn-street-art-do-tank-brooklyn-bring-to-light-web-city_council

brooklyn-street-art-do-tank-brooklyn-bring-to-light-web-conflux

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Images Of The Week 09.19.10

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Our weekly interview with the street, this week featuring Daily Void, El Sol 25, Hebru, Homer, JMR, K-Guy, Loaf, OverUnder, Quel Beast, Radical, Tip Toe, Veng RWK, and Wizzard Sleeve

K-Guy Readies a Sign for the Pope

K-GUY Has A Commentary On The Archaic Beliefs Of The Catholic Church With This Piece Titled "See-No-Hear-No-Speak-No"Timed To Coincede With The Pope's Visit To London.

K-GUY has a commentary on the hypocritical practices of the Catholic Church with this piece enitled “See-No-Hear-No-Speak-No”, timed to coincide with The Pope’s visit to London.

K-Guy Detail

K-Guy close up “See-No-Hear-No-Speak-No”

Daily Void, Wizzard Sleeve (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Daily Void, Wizzard Sleeve (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Homer (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Homer (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25 Gets Sidebusted (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25 Gets Sidebusted (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hebru (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Hebru (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Overunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Radical (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Radical (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Tip Toe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Tip Toe (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Jim Rizzi (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

JMR (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Loaf (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Loaf (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Quel Beast (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Quel Beast (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Radical (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Radical (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Veng RWK (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Veng RWK (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Ovderunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Ovderunder (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

To see more work of the above featured artists click on the artist’s links on the menu on the top, scroll down the list of artists to find the artist’s site you wish to visit.

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Stencils of the Week 09.18.10

Stencil-Top-5

We’re moving the Stencil Top 5 to Saturdays, hooray!

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Stencil-History-x-Sept-2010-Penny

This one of a kind stencil by Penny called “Lexine” is a 7-layer hand cut piece on a steel bolt plate. (photo courtesy Stencil History X)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Stencil-History-x-Sept-2010-copyright-luna-park-kngee

Image of Kngee © Luna Park courtesy of Stencil History X.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Stencil-History-x-Sept-2010-Ender

Very appropriate placement for this Ender piece in France, “Madone (Mariolle) à l’enfant”. (photo courtesy Stencil History X)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Stencil-History-x-Sept-2010-copyright-wojophoto-Fake

This one looks like Banksy and Blek mixed with HotRatBabes.com  (photo © Wojofoto courtesy Stencil History X)

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Stencil-History-x-Sept-2010-Faile-She-Horse

Here is an image of how Specter did his sidebust spot-jock unwanted collaboration with Faile, who told us Thursday night they thought it was funny and well done. See more about Specter’s latest project here on Huffington Post. (image courtesy Stencil History X)

BSA  >>> <   < > <> ><  >< ><BSA  >>> <   < > <> ><  >< ><BSA  >>> <   < > <> ><  >< ><

Stencil History X

For more work by Ender go HERE

Luna Park’s Flickr stream

Penny’s Flickr stream

Wojophoto’s Flickr stream

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No Longer Empty Presents: “Watch This Space” A Group Show Including Logan Hicks, Chris Stain, Imminent Disaster and Jordan Seiler (Dumbo,Brooklyn, NY)

No Longer Empty

Fernando Almanza Image Courtesy of The Gallery

Fernando Almanza Image Courtesy of No Longer Empty

Watch This Space

Opens September 24th, 2010 to October 23rd, 2010
Runs Thursday through Sunday, 12pm to 5pm

As a start to the Dumbo Arts Festival, No Longer Empty will be working with exteriors of buildings as well as mounting an exhibition in a vacant gallery space. United under the title of “Watch This Space”, both the exhibition and the mural works will allude to Dumbo’s industrial past as well as its current process of gentrification as the area remakes its image and purpose.

Working with the scaffolding, which surrounds the buildings in Dumbo, Chris Stain and Logan Hicks’s works will portray hauntingly photo realist images of New York crowds in gritty, urban scenery to elevate a sense of the working class hero.

In the gallery space at 55 Washington Street, NLE will be installing a site-specific exhibition, which unites the outdoors with the inner space again referencing the intensive construction of Dumbo in its march to gentrification. Artists to date include Alexandre Arrechea, Alejandro Almanza Pereda and Cal Lane.

Cal Lane creates “soft” or delicate images through “hard,” industrial tools. For instance, the artist has carved floral lace patterns into gardening shovels and car doors and carved intricate tapestries from oil drums.

The interdisciplinary quality of Alexandre Arrechea’s work reveals a profound interest in the exploration of both public and domestic spaces. He creates wry comments on the rapid expansion/demolition of cities mediating between the two impulses with his own push-pull sense of artistic negotiation.

Alehandro Almanza Pereda transforms the most basic objects from daily life or construction sites into poetic ruminations, which often seem to defy the laws of gravity. At once playful and conceptually strong, the viewer is compelled to see wood chips, crates, cinder blocks or florescent bulbs as aesthetic entities capable of transcendence.

Alexandre Arrechea
Alejandro Almanza Pereda
Michel de Broin
Logan Hicks
Cal Lane
Lincoln Schatz
Helen Dennis
Imminent Disaster
Jordan Seiler

Exhibition at 55 Washington Street, Suite 200

Murals on Plymouth, Main and Washington Streets Dumbo Brooklyn

http://nolongerempty.org/

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