NYC

NEW JAY-Z! Jef Aerosol Gives Props to NYC, BKLN, and JAY-Z with New Iconic Stencil

Street Art Stencil Artist Jef Aerosol unveils a brand-new stencil of Jay-Z for his upcoming Debut Show in New York.

A five layer hand-cut stencil of Jay-Z by international street artist Jef Aerosol will debut next week at the Ad Hoc show.
A five layer hand-cut stencil of Jay-Z by international street artist Jef Aerosol will debut next week at the Ad Hoc show.

Aerosol is well-known for his other rock and roll icons in the 30 years he’s been getting up all over the globe with stencils: Dylan, Jagger, Bowie, Vicious, Morrison, Lennon and Yoko, Hendrix, Cobain,  — and of course there are New Yorkers like Patty Smith and The Ramones.

Now, as he prepares to make his debut solo gallery show in New York in 2010, Aerosol is in an EMPIRE STATE OF MIND and pays tribute with this fresh new portrait of rapper Jay-Z.

Every era has it’s icons, and with a 20-year old son of his own, clearly Aerosol has his eye on one of today’s best known music pillars.  Now with more Number 1 Albums than Elvis Presley, it only makes sense that Brooklyn’s hometown hero has passed into the icon pantheon of Aerosol.

Have you ever seen the steps it takes to make a stencil? Jef Aerosol shows you inside his studio:

To build up the dimension of the image, Aerosol cut 5 different layers of stencils.
To build up the dimension of the image, Aerosol cut 5 different layers of stencils.

The ink glistens on the background silhoette.

The first layer of glistening paint creates the silhouette of the image.

 Each

Each stencil is cut slightly differently to create the whole image.

Slight variations in hue also add the illusion of dimension.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-WEB-JAY-Z-Jeff-Aerosol-All-Shook-Up1

The new Jay-Z by Jef Aerosol.

Here’s the Press Release for the Upcoming Show at Ad Hoc January 29th.

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Images of the Week 01.17.10

Images of the Week 01.17.10

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009

Our weekly interview with the streets

Aakash Nihalani

Aakash Nihalani's new green piece (photo © Jaime Rojo)

JC2
JC2 has taken the image originally wheat-pasted and turned it into a sign post.  Don’t recall seeing something this large bolted before, do you? (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Chris RWK
The Blues Robot Brothers (Chris RWK) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Clown Soldier
Clown Soldier makes his first entry on the New York Top Forty this week at number 32, with “The Gentle Clown from Verona” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

EMA
EMA (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia  and Deeker on top
Gaia and Deeker (or is that GoreB?) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Sam McCurdy
Sam McCurdy (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Trusto Corp
Trusto Corp (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Graffitti Soup
It’s easy as ABC (Graffitti Soup) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

KId Acne
Oh, where where, has my little kid gone?  (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Pet Bird
Pet Bird has found a nice nesting spot inside this dumpster (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Gaia and NohJColey Wreck a Big Wall in Brooklyn

Gaia and NohJColey Wreck a Big Wall in Brooklyn

Culminating weeks of prep, “Mutual Discrepancy” goes up, with both artists feeling good about street art in the new year.

(SEE Nicolas Heller Film of the installation at End of this Posting)

On Friday two young and hungry New York Street Artists combined their artistry, critical intellects, and kinetic energy (and questionable dancing skills) to help define street art for a new generation on the cusp of the 2010’s.

Gaia and NohJColey

Paint, paper, ladders, wheat-paste, razors, brushes, mashups, jazz messengers, rough housing, and bad dancing. OH yeah they rock hard! Gaia and NohJColey (photo © Jaime Rojo)

In an age of shifting definitions in the art world, the Street Art world, and, well, the whole freakin’ modern world, you can take heart to know that the kids still know how to have fun, and some of them are willing to work their butts off in pursuit of a vision.

NohJColey

NohJColey prepping the background before the wheat-pasted pieces (photo © Jaime Rojo)

On a 30 foot by 8 foot luhan-wood billboard in Brooklyn, Gaia and NohJColey brought their A Game to the street and auspiciously stretched the definition of wheat-pasted smart-aleck wall-wrecking.

The wall is curated by Brooklyn Street Art for Espeis Outside Gallery.

Gaia

Gaia picking up the choice first cuts of lamb  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Both New Yorkers, they communicated since Thanksgiving via email while Gaia was in school in Baltimore. They traded sketches, ideas, pictures, opinions – and when Gaia’s winter vacation started, they hung out at each other’s studios and kitchen tables planning the collaboration. Both guys had labored over their hand drawn and hand painted pieces for few weeks, so when it was game day, it really felt more like graduation.

Gaia

What’s this I see? Gaia (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia

Whoops, piece of it ripped. No prob, just lay on the paste (Gaia) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

It was cold on the street yesterday, but no one cared and the mood was celebratory. NohJ even refused to eat because he was too excited to put his work up – eventually he did eat though.

Gaia

Gaia  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia

It’s very popular right now to make fun of skinny jeaned hipsters, because, frankly, we have to make fun of somebody.  In Gaia’s case, he’s just skinny. Gaia  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia

The double headed furry thing of doooooomb.  (Gaia) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Horsing around and doing bike tricks and break/dip/jerk dancing of course was a periodic pursuit by galloping Gaia so the work got interrupted by Major Lazer and Free Gucci once in a while. We think it was the cup of coffee that pushed him over the edge – you might as well give him a dumptruck of cocaine – the kid was jumping around like a long-tailed-cat in a rocking-chair convention.

NohJColey

NohJColey had some last minute cutting to do of his pieces on the floor inside where it was warm. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Meanwhile, on a totally different wavelength, NohJ was chilling to ear-blasting jazz from Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers – giving him a valium-nuanced, snappy kind of gait.

Gaia NohJColey

Gaia and NohJColey laying in the back ground depth (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: They really look like animals from over here
Gaia: Yeah they don’t look like sh*t when you’re close to them.

Brooklyn Street Art: It looks like you did some mirrored lambs heads.
Gaia: Yeah. I did this mural in Baltimore which was a bear head and then a cow head on another wall, and all the kids at the pre-school thought that the bear was either a seal or a dog.
Brooklyn Street Art:
I thought that big bear you did looked like a woodchuck.
NohJ: I always know what your animals are though.

NohJColey

NohJColey (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gimme that sheep! I wanna have it!

Gimme that sheep! I wanna have it! Gaia lends a hand to the giant hand (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: So why did you use this ochre color, usually you use just black and white.
Gaia: NohJ and I had talked about something that would tie everything together and make it a little more continuous. I figured I’d just do the color ochre to tie in with the rest of his pieces, so it would make it a little bit more congruous or fluid between the two of us.

NohJColey

NohJColey working with his piece (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: What’s this additional paint layer you are putting into the background on the wood right now?
NohJ: Basically it’s to add dimension. That’s it.
Gaia: And texture…
NohJ: I mean the wood has texture but..
Gaia: It’s a trope.
Brooklyn Street Art: A trope?
Gaia: What were we calling it before? Distressed! It’s a distressed trope. It’s a trope of distress.
NohJ: I like the border on the far right, it’s getting into the “Sepia Zone”.

Gaia and NohJColey

It’s hard for Wall Street to hold it’s head up. (Gaia and NohJColey) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: How long have you guys been planning this piece together?
Gaia: This? Like for a month or two.
NohJ: Yeah like two.

NohJColey

This screen almost looks like it is reading his vital signs. Looks like his heart may need some regulation (NohJColey) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: NohJ, what’s the New York Stock Exchange logo thing on the little screen?
NohJ: He’s a stock broker. He’s like totally f**king obsessed with trading stocks. He cares nothing about family. He has a new-born son, he cares nothing about it. He just wants to trade stocks. That’s pretty much what it’s about.

NohJColey

Ouch! That’s gotta hurt.  (NohJColey) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

All the added elements, the watches, the hands with the glass of wine and the cell phone, those are what the person is drawn to and pretty much what they care about on a daily basis. Now there is a lamb, a mutated creature in their midst. But they are so caught up with the pristine life that they’re unable to embrace something or someone that is different.

NohJColey

NohJColey (Detail) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Are people going to know what this piece is about?
NohJ: Probably not.
Brooklyn Street Art: Are you going to try to tell them?
NohJ: I think it’s open.
Gaia: Well the internet always serves as a wonderful place of clarity

Is all in the hands

One of Gaia’s favorite symbols, and one of his hands. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Your styles are so different from one another. Do you feel like it was difficult to collaborate on a piece?
Gaia: Uh, no, not at all.
NohJ: Not really.

Gaia

Working the seam (Gaia) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Gaia: I actually like when you have collaborations when you have an initial idea and there isn’t too much communication between the two collaborators because then you don’t too much overthink it and it starts to fall apart. You don’t get constipated, you just do your thing.
NohJ: I felt a bit constipated, in the beginning.
Gaia: I mean it’s always tough to begin something.
NohJ: I only felt that way because I’m working with your lamb and I’m like, “What kind of imagery works well with a lamb?”
Gaia: That’s interesting because I knew exactly what I was going to do – two lambs. And you had to do a response to that. I don’t know if that’s fair.
NohJ: Yeah it’s fair.

Gaia

Gaia in an Empire State of Mind (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Well somebody had to start the process.
Gaia: Yeah, I guess. I’m just always a little sensitive about collaboration because of school.
Brooklyn Street Art: It’s because you’re a sensitive fella.
Gaia: I don’t know, I try to be. It’s my….it’s how I get girls.
NohJ: Oh that’s how you do it.
Gaia: That’s how I do it.
NohJ: Ahhhhhh, maybe I should.
Gaia: No man, you’re always like back in the corner, you’re like the whisperer guy with the girls.
NohJ: But that’s sensitive too.

Gaia and NohJColey

JUBILATION!  Gaia and NohJColey do a few tricks for the street fans (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Where did you learn all your break dancing skills?
Gaia: I can’t break dance, I wish I could break dance.
Brooklyn Street Art: What is that dance you just did in front of your piece?
Gaia: It’s dipping.
Brooklyn Street Art: Dipping!
Gaia: It’s like L.A. sh*t.
Brooklyn Street Art: It’s like “Baltimore” Dipping?
Gaia: Yeah Baltimore Dipping.
Brooklyn Street Art: It’s like a dipping sauce dance!
Gaia: I wish I could f**king break dance. That would be awesome. I’m gonna learn.

 

jhg

THE FINAL PIECE “Mutual Discrepancy” by NohJColey and Gaia

Brooklyn Street Art: Uh-Oh, here comes NohJ with a 40 ounce and two cups.
Gaia: Oh here it comes, double cups!
Brooklyn Street Art: None for me. If I start now I’m in bed by nine.
NohJ: I’ve been busting my ass for this.
Gaia: You have been.

<<<  >  >>>>>>  <<> <<<  >  >>>>>>  <<>


Here is “Mutual Discrepancy” the short film by Nicolas Heller, a NYC/Boston filmmaker who likes to explore personalities on the street.

An aspiring director, Nicolas worked with Gaia on a short over the summer of 2009 and is in the process of doing a documentary on him. You can a short video he did of Gaia and see some of his other film work at NicolasHeller.com.  Many thanks to Nick for his skillz.

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Help in Haiti: Ways to Help Relief Effort

Patterson, Quinn, Markowitz, Bloomberg, among others are in full support of our Haitian brothers and sisters in Brooklyn and in Haiti
Patterson, Quinn, Markowitz, Bloomberg, Graham among others are in full support of our Haitian brothers and sisters in Brooklyn and in Haiti

“Brooklyn is the ‘Caribbean Capital of America’—by some counts, we have the largest Haitian population in the United States—and our hearts go out to our Haitian brothers and sisters in need,” said Borough President Marty Markowitz and Deputy Borough President Yvonne Graham.

“Brooklyn and Haiti share the common motto ‘In Unity There is Strength,’ and Brooklynites have been united once again—as we were in 2008 following a series of devastating hurricanes and a tropical storm—in opening up their hearts, wallets and pantries to the victims of this catastrophic earthquake. Our office will be working closely with the Caribbean community in the days ahead to lend support to Brooklyn and New York City-based relief efforts.”

from brooklyntheborough.com

To find out what you can do to help relief efforts in Haiti, call 311 or visit Brooklyn-Usa.org.  If you are trying to connect with a loved one in Haiti, call the U.S. State Department hotline at 1-888-407-4747.
  • The American Red Cross is pledging an initial $200,000 to assist communities impacted by this earthquake. They expect to provide immediate needs for food, water, temporary shelter, medical services and emotional support. They are accepting donations through their International Response Fund.
  • UNICEF has issued a statement that “Children are always the most vulnerable population in any natural disaster, and UNICEF is there for them.” UNICEF requests donations for relief for children in Haiti via their Haiti Earthquake Fund. You can also call 1-800-4UNICEF.
  • Donate through Wyclef Jean’s foundation, Yele Haiti. Text “Yele” to 501501 and $5 will be charged to your phone bill and given to relief projects through the organization.
  • Operation USA is appealing for donations of funds from the public and corporate donations in bulk of health care materials, water purification supplies and food supplements which it will ship to the region from its base in the Port of Los Angeles. Donate online at www.opusa.org, by phone at 1-800-678-7255 or, by check made out to Operation USA, 3617 Hayden Ave, Suite A, Culver City, CA 90232.
  • Partners In Health reports its Port-au-Prince clinical director , Louise Ivers, has appealed for assistance: “Port-au-Prince is devastated, lot of deaths. SOS. SOS… Temporary field hospital by us at UNDP needs supplies, pain meds, bandages. Please help us.” Donate to their Haiti earthquake fund.
  • Mercy Corps is sending a team of emergency responders to assess damage, and seek to fulfill immediate needs of quake survivors. The agency aided families after earthquakes in Peru in 2007, China and Pakistan in 2008, and Indonesia last year. Donate online, call 1-888-256-1900 or send checks to Mercy Corps Haiti Earthquake Fund; Dept NR; PO Box 2669; Portland, OR 97208.
  • Direct Relief is committing up to $1 million in aid for the response and is coordinating with its other in-country partners and colleague organizations. Their partners in Haiti include Partners in Health, St. Damien Children’s Hospital, and the Visitation Hospital, which are particularly active in emergency response. Donate to Direct Relief online.
  • Oxfam is rushing in teams from around the region to respond to the situation to provide clean water, shelter, sanitation and help people recover. Donate to Oxfam America online.
  • International Medical Corps is assembling a team of first responders and resources to provide lifesaving medical care and other emergency services to survivors of the earthquake. Donate online.

AMERICAN RED CROSS
Text “HAITI” to “90999″ to make a $10 donation.
2025 E Street, NW
Washington, DC 20006
(800) REDCROSS (733-2767)

Special reporting from BoroughingBrooklyn.com and The HuffingtonPost.com

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SPECTER: Inside the Studio

SPECTER: Inside the Studio

BSA_INTERVIEW

It’s great to find a Specter portrait on the street because he doesn’t waste your time.  His people are people you know, and they are usually looking right at you. You get it.

Specter. The pice in situ

Specter’s portrait of Sho Shin (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Recognition is instant, along with clarity.  Specter’s realistic portrayal cuts right to the chase. A street guy with a shopping cart loaded with bottles, a food delivery guy on his bike, or a grizzled proud dude wrapped in a red blanket.  I’m here.

 

Specter "Billy Bobby"

Specter “Billy Bobby”  (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

You’re looking at a very large hand-drawn and painted piece with great detail. It’s also one of a kind and has been in Specter’s studio and mind for a few weeks, maybe months, if he’s completed it in sections.

Prospero by Specter (photo © Jaime Rojo)

“Prospero” by Specter (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Each piece is the result of interviewing the subject, shooting a photo of them, and living with their image, thinking about the conversation and what he got out of it. Without preaching, the piece draws attention to the human, and the human condition.

First we introduce you to "The Beast" to keep us warm

Firing up “The Beast” to keep us warm.

On a freezing cold bitter day recently, BSA hung out with Specter in an unheated studio… well until he blasted us with this rocket-launcher sized heater.  After that I was pretty toasty, maybe even burnt on the edges.

When a person on the street he has met becomes a subject for art, Specter thinks it is important to at least get to know them a little.  He just asks general questions, nothing too personal, to try to get an idea where they are coming from. Understandably, not everyone wants to talk, let alone answer questions.  If they have a cart of scrap metal or bottles, for example, they may think Specter is trying to find out their source.

“Also, I’m trying to portray them as human beings. How could I do that if I’m just crossing the street and snapping a picture? The way that I do it –  I’m trying to make it a personal thing,” he says.

His Sketch for his one of his portraits on his series "Manage Work Flow"

Specter’s early sketch for his one of his portraits in his series on homeless people (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: People seem to stand and stare at your work, more than other people’s work perhaps. Have you ever stood there with them?
Specter:
Yeah sometimes, I usually go check out my pieces when I first do them, then I kind of disappear. I guess I usually catch people on the first few days, which is probably the best time because the pieces are really new.

I like to shoot it with people a bit, I always try to see what they have to say. Somehow, luckily, it’s always been positive, and that’s just luck.  I love getting the feedback because in neighborhoods in Bed Stuy and other parts of Brooklyn like that where they are not used to having art they seem so appreciative…   people are always so interested.

Brooklyn Street Art: Well isn’t that kind of refreshing compared to the observations you hear from the  ‘art crowd’?
Specter:
Yeah, very refreshing because they are looking at it as a gift, instead of looking at it analytically.  They’re like, “Okay, somebody just dropped off this gift here”. They always have questions about the piece too – not like art people who are like, “Why did you chose this and what does it mean?” – it’s more like “Why does this guy have a flower?”  And I say “I don’t know, why do you think?” And they have a definite opinion, and suggestions about how it could be better.  They have all this input.  I love it.

Specter. The piece on the Street

The finished piece takes on dimension and meaning. This old sign for a business long gone becomes a new context for a street guy.  (© Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art:  So for you it’s a gallery of the streets…
Specter: In a way, but it’s this anonymous art, which makes it more fun.  I don’t like getting patted on the back too much. I’ve always been confident of my work and proud of the effort I put in but I’m not really sitting around waiting for compliments.  I almost kind of embarrassed to get compliments. I kind of prefer street art (for that reason). I’m a little embarrassed by taking credit because it’s not so much about me. It’s more about the piece and the people enjoying it, the public enjoying it.

“It always sound stupid to say but I’m just the channel, I’m not the actual creator.  I just don’t want to give myself too much credit because a lot of these ideas are already out there. I’m just putting them together.  It’s more really about the piece and how it’s making its way into the environment, and people enjoying it.  That’s why I don’t sign my work”

 

 

Specter's first installament of his new "Readymades" series

Specter’s first installment of his new “Readymade” series, which he creates by whitewashing a facade, and masking rectangular shapes that become de facto finished pieces. After he signs them of course. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art:  But the new ones you’ve been signing – the “Readymade” Series.
Specter: Yeah the reason I’ve been signing them is because it’s like a joke. It’s funny to sign them because that’s the whole point because it’s like “yeah I did this” – and all I really did was crop out a section.

 

His Acrylics

Cups of acrylics for mixing. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art:  So can you describe a “Readymade”? It’s like you are drawing attention to something that is already there, asking people to make some kind of judgment on it, where they would have just walked by it before.
Specter:
It’s really influenced by (Marcel) Duchamp, and his “readymades” obviously and his initial concept was to set up to take things that already exist and put them in artistic context.  The way that street art is turning the streets more into a space where work can be discussed and interpreted  as a gallery – I wanted to take that same angle.   Also I wanted to take on the “muralization” – which is more of the public art aspect.

Working on a new piece for a show

Working on a new piece for a show (detail) – Williamsburg Savings Bank in Brooklyn is showing two different times.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: You mentioned Duchamp. Who else is a touchstone for you?
Specter:
Definitely REVS is my all-time favorite.

Brooklyn Street Art: Why?
Specter: Because he is like the king in New York. He was like the first guy to take something like a wheat-paste and say, “This isn’t some p*ssy sh*t, this is another way to get up and this is as hardcore as anything”  He just basically opened up the game. And that is kind of the way I approach it too.  For me it’s not about a medium, it’s about how is the best way to get this up.

I never used the wheat paste until I started showing with Fauxreel and I was like “Wait a second I could use these as an installation. They don’t have to be a picture, they can be installed in a space and create an environment”.

I was doing a lot of 3-D work and I was itching to get back into drawing and painting so it was a way to bridge the gap because painting directly on the wall takes so long.  It’s just not plausible in those kind of spaces.

 

Specter

Specter also ventured into some sculpture of his own this fall, with this gold plated tribute to recycling, mounted on a podium, and suitable for going on your mantelpiece, if you have an absolutely mammoth-sized fireplace. (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: So we’ve got REVS as an influence, but that is about technique in getting up and possibility, but it’s not about who inspires you as an artist.
Specter: I mean his work inspires me too. He is a beautiful sculptor.  I enjoy that as well.  A lot of street artists I do appreciate, especially artists like BLU – I love what they are doing, that animation stuff. David Ellis is another artist who is very inspiring. I saw his sound sculpture (at Anonymous Gallery’s booth in Miami), it was out of control, just a beautiful piece. Obviously I love the business sense of a Jeff Koons, that idea of how someone can be so powerful and is really honing it in.  Also he is playing with people.

(check out RJ Rushmore’s video of David Ellis’s sound sculpture – good job RJ!)

Another detail of the same piece

Get it?  Sneakers! Totally similar, right?  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: Where is the connection to the graffiti tradition in your work?
Specter:
Well, that’s how I started. I basically taught myself how to draw, how to paint through graffiti so I guess the “tradition” is the way I approach the piece.  I’m kind of just doing it of my own accord.

Brooklyn Street Art: You don’t go after people’s property, people’s homes…
Specter:
No I don’t go after people’s homes, or their trucks. I mean, I guess when you’ve been doing this so long you kind of get a bit of conscience about it, I guess.  It’s also that I’m more interested in how the piece relates to a space.  So the abandoned properties fit more into what I’m trying to say.

The way the art is transformed is through these spaces.   How I started honing in my graffiti skills where people were starting to recognize me as an artist, I was going to these abandoned spaces and using them as galleries, like canvasses.  So in that respect I’m kind of still working in the same thing.

 

Tools of the trade

Tools of the trade (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: What were you writing when you were doing graff?
Specter: I was “Specter”, that’s why I kept it.  The reason why the name stuck with me so long basically is because I was kind of the guy who would get up a lot, but no one would really know where I was.  With the art work I always found a way to pull stuff off so people were like “How did he do that?”.

Original photograph for another portrait for the "Manage Work Flow" series

Specter’s original photograph for a portrait for the “Manage Work Flow” series, named so as an ironic twist to the language of corporations and their economists; using the same term to reveals it’s underlying inhumanity.  (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Brooklyn Street Art: There is something devious about your whole approach.
Specter: Yeah of course. I try to be nice.  The way I look at life is you put in what you get back.  I’m very much into that, but I am kind of hidden and devious.

Brooklyn Street Art: You do tend to go to areas that are not typical.
Specter: Yeah I do. That’s the whole idea, that’s where the whole “Specter” thing came in, it’s kind of like a ghost,  a spirit that is kind of floating through and drops off these artworks.

Specter. The piece on the street

The finished piece on the street (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter has some work in a show next month at MoCADA in Brooklyn.

The show’s name is “The Gentrification of Brooklyn: The Pink Elephant Speaks.”

Museum of Contemporary African Diaspora Art (MOCADA)
Opening “Set it Off” Reception
Thursday, February 4, 2010
6:00pm – 9:00pm Free to the public
MoCADA (80 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, NY)

There are also some rumors of a show this year at Brooklynite Gallery, but nothing’s been locked down yet.

An untinted print of one his portraits on Homeless People

An untinted print version of Sho Shin by Specter (photo © Jaime Rojo)

A sreaw hat for the summer

A straw hat for the summer, should it ever come back (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Mayor Mike A.K.A. “BLOOMIE” caught Tagging Tats Cru

Brooklyn-Street-Art-STREET-SIGNALS_1009

Street Signals

Turning his face from the camera so he could not be identified, writer BLOOM catches a tag across a Tats Cru
Turning his face away from the camera so he could not be identified, writer BLOOMIE catches a tag across a Tats Cru piece. (photo courtesy Tats Cru)

Okay, things are not always what they seem – this was a legal spot peeepull!  But it is a funny sort of recognition of the place that graffiti has evolved to.  I’m sure this will keep the arts and culture pundits chewing on the implications and ramifications for days. OMG!

Thanks to – and for more on this story see the Tats Cru blog – like they say “Only in New York Baby”!

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Trusto Corp, Kid Acne and EMA Trample Through Brooklyn

Aided by Kid Acne’s small army of sword wielding vixens and EMA’s genteel mustachioed dude, Trusto Corp left some words for thought on the streets of Williamsburg.

Geez it’s great to be back home in the freezing bitter city!  What have we missed?

Went parading through the ever-changing Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn yesterday and BAM, we’ve been hit! Always keep your eyes peeled in Brooklyn, even as you hobble up the street shaking from cold, avoiding patches of black ice. It’s amazing how sometimes things come in threes, like the Three Muskateers, the Three Stooges, and of course, Triple XXX ratings at your local porno theatre.

Kid Acne, whoever that is, must also be a fashion designer or a costume designer or just fancies laddies who play dress-up – because this new fleet of pastie-ups are chic and sexified, and possibly violent. EMA rings in that old-world charm with the oval locket portraits of a guy who is probably part of a barbershop quartet.  And don’t ask me about Trusto Corp – these very seriously realistic looking signs have a variety of sentiments that range from encouraging illegality to insulting me for being fat. Which I’m not!

Trusto Corp

That SO cannot be true! I am in Williamsburg! By DEFINITION I must be cool. Right? Right? (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Kid Acne's ladies are now carrying swords all the time, have you noticed? Makes me think of that Tina Turner song "What's Love Got to Do With It". ("I've been thinkin' of my own protection") (© Jaime Rojo)

EMA

You might want to trim that - looks like trees are growing! (EMA) (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Trusto Corp

Is that a threat or a promise? Either way arms are involved (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Nice hat, what's your hurry? (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Kid Acne (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

And they're all topless, did I mention that too? (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Trusto Corp

You got me. I don't write the news folks, I just report it. (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne ©Photo Tristan Eaton

The mailman better watch his hands! (Kid Acne) (© Tristan Eaton)

Kid Acne

Oops, must have fallen during that last roller-derby match. (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Awwww, the sling is blocking the bare breasts! (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Trusto Corp

The burrito truck guy is probably wondering why business is off (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne ©Photo Tristan Eaton

Kid Acne ©Photo Tristan Eaton

Kid Acne

Kid Acne (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Trusto Corp

Well that's comforting, I'm still in style! (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The Vixen and the Dude (Kid Acne EMA)

The Vixen and the Dude (Kid Acne EMA) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Interesting placement (Kid Acne) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Kid Acne

Kid Acne

Trusto Corp

And so is the life of these signs. Half of them are already gone! Weird. There used to be more of these boardy type pieces around - I think the department of Transportation must take them down, or fans. (Trusto Corp) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

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BSA’s Wish for 2010

As we start a new year, we say thank you for the last one.

And Thank You to the artists who shared their 10 Wishes for 2010 with Brooklyn Street Art; Logan Hicks, Chris Stain, FKDL, CAKE, Specter, Hellbent, Jef Aerosol, Broken Crow, Elbow Toe, and Martha Cooper.

Brooklyn-Street-Art-2010Our wish for 2010 is an endless supply of paints, paper, glue, scissors, found objects, photos, markers, pizza boxes, pizza, poetry, tape, thumb-tacs, oak tag, foamcore, ladders, scissor lifts, extension cords, brushes, exacto blades, clamp lights, legal spots, abandoned lots, generous landlords, chalk, tacos, blue tape, pencils, charcoal, wheat-paste, acrylics, projection lights, comfortable sneakers, sketch books, black books, fabric, grease paint, rollers, and community.

Absent these things, we hope to see more and more people who can access the transformative powers of the creative spirit.  That’s the beauty that lies smack in the middle of today’s exploding Street Art scene and that’s why we love you.


TOMORROW : OUR FAVORITE IMAGES OF THE YEAR.

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Gaia Hand Paints a Red Roll-up

Street artist Gaia is often thought of primarily for wheat-pasted lino prints of animal/human mashups as metaphor, but it’s nice to note that adept hand-painting is also in Gaia’s quiver of skills.

It's a red-rooster rollup!  Gaia (photo ©Keith Schweitzer)
It’s a red-rooster rollup! Gaia (photo ©Keith Schweitzer)

Here’s a brief motion collage of a hand-painted installation a few weeks ago on a roll-up door in Chinatown, NYC. Photographed by Keith Schweitzer and invited by No Longer Empty, Gaia creates a rooster portrait, where the proud sitter penetrates the passerby with an intense gaze.

Or is it a blank stare? I never know.

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Book Thug Nation Print Show & Book Release, DEC 18

JustSeeds Collective featuring Chris Stain and Josh MacPhee

Artists Josh MacPhee and Chris Stain and the Just Seeds crew will be having an informal relaxed event in Williamsburg tonight – Chris promises new prints!

Print Show and Book Release by Just Seeds Crew

Print Show and Book Release by Just Seeds Crew

There will be new work by the Justseeds artists on display and for sale, free snacks and drinks.

Friday, Dec. 18th
8-11pm
at Book Thug Nation
100 N.3rd St.
Brooklyn, NY

Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative is a decentralized community of artists who have banded together to both sell their work , to collaborate with each other, and create art in support of social movements.  We believe in the power of personal expression in concert with collective action to transform society.

Outside the new Book Thugs store

Outside the new Book Thug Nation store

About the book:
Paper Politics: Socially Engaged Printmaking Today
Josh MacPhee (ed.) (PM Press, 2009)
Paper Politics: Socially Engaged Printmaking Today is a major collection of contemporary politically and socially engaged printmaking. This full color book showcases print art that uses themes of social justice and global equity to engage community members in political conversation. Based on an art exhibition which has traveled to a dozen cities in North America, Paper Politics features artwork by over 200 international artists; an eclectic collection of work by both activist and non-activist printmakers who have felt the need to respond to the monumental trends and events of our times.

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NYC Street Artists Collaborate! Reason No. 31 to love New York

NYC Street Artists Collaborate! Reason No. 31 to love New York

According to the new issue of New York Magazine , whose cover story “Reasons to Love New York” is on newsstands today, Reason Number 31 is because our street art is collaborative.

click to enlarge and see all the names they helpfully tracked down

Street Artists have a greater spirit of collaboration than you might imagine

Billi Kid provided pictures that document the ongoing conversation of street artists in one part of the city.  And it’s pretty rare to hear about “Beef”, something that was a mainstay of graff culture back in the daze.

According to the article, “In gallery-rich Chelsea, a brick wall on West 22nd Street became, over the past year, an ephemeral showroom for international street art. The canvas changed appearance almost daily, as artists (some identified here) overlaid new pieces over the work of their predecessors.”

When reached by BSA for comment, street artist Billi Kid was big-hearted and magnanimous, full of Holiday Spirit, “It’s all about community. It’s all about collaboration. It’s all about joy. HAPPY HOLIDAYS EVERYONE!”

That just makes me want to say “Ho-Ho-Ho!” or, as we used to say at Christmas when I worked at a mega-club on West 29th Street, “Whore-Whore-Whore!”

Now it is probably inpolitik to say such a thing, but “Sex Worker-Sex Worker-Sex Worker” just doesn’t have a Christmas ring to it.

VIEW THE NEW YORK MAG Street Art Slideshow here:

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