Paris

Lebenson Gallery Presents: Dain “Born Again” (Paris)

Dain “Born Again”

Dain (Image Courtesy of the Gallery)

Dain (Image Courtesy of the Gallery)

Opening June 24

6 to 9 pm

After two very successful New York shows, Brooklyn born artist DAIN, makes his first solo show in europe at the Lebenson Gallery in Paris. His love for old Hollywood glam is evident in all his work. This, along with his roots in graffiti, create a gritty yet classy street art style . ” BORN AGAIN” will bring back to life an era long gone..”

http://www.lebensongallery.com/

director@lebensongallery.com

56 rue Chapon
75003 Paris
Tel :

+33 (0)9 81 88 75 61

Ouverture Du mardi au Samedi de 11h à 19h
Tuesday to Saturday 11 am to 7 pm

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Logan Hicks in Paris Spraying Stencils on the Street for Show

The Bearded Brooklyn Brotherman Readies His Solo Show at Galerie Itinerrance

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Sunday afternoon stencil artist Logan Hicks had to “take it outside” – so often the case with artists who use cans to create.

The artist who employs the dissapearing
The artist who celebrates the vanishing point perspective is framed here by the streetscape of Paris.

His intricately cut stencils were there for any passerby to see as Logan set up shop on the street, carefully placing layer after layer, strategically sticking a bit of blue gaffers tape here and there to keep them in place, and wielding well-rendered plumes of colored aerosol above the templates to fill the empty shapes.

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Logan Hicks

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A classic stencil painting  by Logan Hicks celebrates the symmetry and rhythm of shape and pattern in this image of subway platforms.

Logan showing one of his newest pieces, "Life Line"

Logan showing one of his newest pieces, “Life Line”

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Logan Hicks

"The Long Road" by Logan Hicks
“The Long Road” by Logan Hicks

By nightfall he finished preparing his latest pieces, including his near classic “The Long Road” and a new addition “Life Line”.  Today he’s taking it inside to paint a mural inside the gallery.

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*************************************************************************

Galerie Itinerrance

(images courtesy of and copyright of Itinerrance and Logan Hicks)

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LUDO in Brooklyn, Pretty Malevolence Growing on the Wall

LUDO in Brooklyn, Pretty Malevolence Growing on the Wall

Giant green flowers with closed circuit televisions instead of pistols, drone planes with insect legs, cacti that turn into syringes, a cabbage that features a hardened metal dome and 5 gun turrets – all in black and acid green, all surreal hybrids of natural beauty and man’s darker nature.

That’s what LUDO has been creating in Paris and London and Milan for three years or so as part of his “Nature’s Revenge” series of wheat-pastes. The marrying of these two worlds is jarring and uncomfortable, and that’s his point. He wants you to think about man’s march toward technologically more sophisticated ways of being inhuman, of our mindless oggling of the next shiny electronic bauble and our subsequent shameless allegiance to it.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

In a way, the nature/technology hybrids are not as futuristic as we may like to think – nanotechnology has been talking about flying insect sized cameras since the dawn of this century – and greater awareness of the precarious discoveries man is making and his inability to meet them may be a side effect of the series. Plumes of oil, anyone?

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Now in New York, LUDO is already making us think, and I’ve got to admit I’m thrilled. I like it when art makes me think, even if it is about things I don’t understand or am uncomfortable with. It’s kind of like cloud computing. Or James Dobson. Or blue cheese.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA:  Did you ever see the movie called “Little Shop of Horrors” ?
LUDO: No.

BSA: Because it’s about a man-eating plant…
LUDO: No. I have to see it.

BSA: Okay, one down.  So it’s true that you studied sociology and graphic design. Do you see any connection between sociology and your street art?
LUDO: Yeah, certainly I am interested in people. I am interested in bringing a message to the street that can easily be understood.  Certainly street art is a bit of sociology. I mean you try to grab what you can from the society and incorporate it into your work and then take it back out to the streets with your personality in it.

Ludo

LUDO puts up a circuit-board butterfly (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: So you are using your art to communicate with people on the street?
LUDO: Yes, actually I try to go out in Paris on Sunday during the day – and while I am putting work out sometimes people come to talk to me.  Just normal people who just want to ask me about the work.  It is good.  Okay, maybe it is a little for your ego, or a lot for your ego but then it for me a study.  I won’t doing any art so people will hate me, or to fight with me. I’m not interested in that.  It’s better to have them in a good mood.

BSA: Tuthfully, you also like to watch the reaction of people who see your work.
LUDO: Yes because they are interested in the fact that it’s a kind of a naïve subject; with a flower or birds but they like to get a little closer and see that there are guns – it’s nice, it’s interesting.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: Right so let’s talk about that ; Guns, violence, implied threats of violence, high technology – is it about fear?
LUDO: No, it’s more about everything that stupidly rules the world.  I mean guns, technology, humans, new gadgets – That is what I like to take and remix and give a message.

BSA: Do you have any animals at home?
LUDO: Yeah, an English Bulldog.

BSA: That’s it?
LUDO: No no, I don’t have any insects.  I do have a garden for food, and an aromatic garden (herb garden).

BSA: You’ve been doing the “Nature’s Revenge” series for about two years?
LUDO: Maybe like three.  This butterfly is a new one for me.  I try to go out maybe every time with a new piece. I’m not interested in always put up the same stuff. I try to see the spot and imagine the pieces.

Ludo

LUDO (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: Why was this butterfly so difficult today?
LUDO: The wind! The paste too.  Usually the paste I use is really strong and with a big piece it sticks immediately.

BSA: You have done some gallery work, mostly group shows. When street artists transition from the street to the gallery, many artists change their work. When you think about street artists that go into the gallery, who do you like?
LUDO:
I am a big fan of Neckface. And I’ve always been really interested in how he works in the streets. And his gallery work is awesome; it is so strong; it’s thin lines, it’s clean, it’s perfect – even if the message continues to be so strong.  That is what I like. If someone who is a street artist does gallery work, I think it has to be different, it needs to reach a different level.

Ludo and Armsrock

LUDO and Armsrock (photo © Jaime Rojo)

BSA: So who are some of your favorite street artists right now?
LUDO: Yeah Neckface will always be. I love Bast.  I like also Sweet Toof.  Yeah so those are the three.

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Stencils of the Week 05.18.10 from BSA

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History X

Stencil artist Indigo from Vancouver BC has quickly become one to watch.
Stencil artist Indigo from Vancouver BC has quickly become one to watch. This piece comes from a small festival she took part in last months called “Paint Your Faith”, in part sponsored by a Church in Vancouver. See link to this event below.
Si Senor! SR X has been working out (image courtesy SR X)

Si Senor! SR X has been working out (image courtesy SR X)

Bogota based artist Stinkfish is doing fine work on trains in Oaxaca, Mexico, including this stencil made from a photo fo a young girl. Stencil in this case is used here as a basis for painting. (photo courtesy Stinkfish)

Bogota based artist Stinkfish is doing fine work on trains in Oaxaca, Mexico, including this stencil made from a photo fo a young girl. Stencil in this case is used here as a basis for painting. (photo courtesy Stinkfish)

This wall appeared this week in Paris: Attributed to Mosko et Associés, Artiste-Ouvrier, Miss,Tic, Jérôme Mesnager, Da Cruz  (photo © Morac)

This wall appeared this week in Paris: Attributed to Mosko et Associés, Artiste-Ouvrier, Miss,Tic, Jérôme Mesnager, Da Cruz (photo © Morac)

Mural @ Studio Orizzonte, via Barberini 60 www.fefeproject.com/Copyright Romefotoblog

C215's mural @ Studio Orizzonte in Italy (© Romefotoblog)

Read more about “Paint Your Faith” here.

Read more about Indigo here.

See more Sr. X here

See more Stinkfish here.

C215’s show at Fefe Project

Stencil History X


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Stencil Top 5: 05.11.10 from BSA

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of StencilHistoryX

Eimeme (Portugal) Visual Street Performance (VSP), Porto http://www.flickr.com/photos/eimeime/  Although London based artist Best Ever distinguished himself at the  highest point at the 6th edition of Visual Street Performance held in  Porto, as for stencil art, we discovered the Portuguese artist Eimeme. The VSP is a collective unifying event that combines music, lectures,  indoor and outdoor artworks. It is especially supported since 2005, the  year of its creation, by the young prodigy's national street art Vhils. http://www.visualstreetperformance.com/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/45590745@N04/
Portuguese stencil artist Eimeme shows this piece as part of the 6th Edition of “Visual Street Performance” held in Porto. The event combines music, lectures, indoor and outdoor artworks. Created in 2005 the event was the brainchild of street artist Vhils.

Dolk 4 Mai Outdoor stencil, Duoshow with M-City, Brooklynite Gallery, NYC copyright Becki Fuller
Dolk  (photo © Becki Fuller)

Ender 6 mai Portrait de Michel-Ange http://www.flickr.com/photos/enderstencil
“Portrait de Michel-Ange” by Ender

Czarnobyl 6 mai Fat Lady, solo show @ATM Gallery until May 29, 2010. Copyright urbanartcore
“Fat Lady” by Czarnobyl “Mutations” at the solo show at the ATM Gallery in Berlin (image © Urbanartcore)

Quasikunst Boulevard de Sébastopol, Paris 4e http://www.flickr.com/photos/quasikunst/
Quasikunst on the Boulevard de Sébastopol in Paris

See more Eimeme images here

See more Ender images here

ATM Gallery in Berlin

See more Quasikunst images here

Learn more about Visual Street Performance here

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C215 Donates a Smoking Piece to the Auction Benefit

It isn’t unusual to look at the heavily lined faces of this artist and find that you drift away for a moment, lost in a thought. This particular portrait by French street artist C215 of Jon Cartwright has appeared on the streets of New York, London, Paris, and Sao Paulo.* C215, well known for his intricate stencils and portraits of people that somehow allow their inner glow to come out, generously donated this piece for the Street Art New York Silent Auction Benefit this Saturday.

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Using the bottom side of what was once a letterpress sorting drawer of heavy wood, C215 chooses a subject that looks off into a haze of smoke, reflecting for a minute on the issue of the moment, or remembering someone, a conversation, or a phrase.

* source Metro.co.uk

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Street Layers from Paris, Berlin and Vienna

From the Editor:

In the past I breezed by destroyed posters and flyers that amass on construction worksites and abandoned buildings with little thought. Thanks to the work of photographer Vinny Cornelli I have learned to see them entirely differently – like Earth Science, like strata; a layer of text or design or photography with internally consistent characteristics that distinguishes it from contiguous layers. The destruction and consequent revealing of shapes, color, and texture create haphazard new compositions. Sometimes it doesn’t work, but hell yeah, some times it does, and Vinny is always on the lookout.

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

From photographer Vincent Cornelli:

After my recent trip photographing street art in Hamburg, it brought me back to some of the photos I took last  summer in Paris, Berlin and Vienna.  I thought it would make the perfect follow-up piece for my bi-weekly posts for BrooklynStreetArt.com.  I think I would rather let the pictures speak for themselves.  Hope you enjoy them.

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

© Vincent Cornelli

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Stencil Top 5 for 03.08.10 on BSA

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of StencilHistoryX

"The colour Out of Space" by UK's Eelus from "Lily Stay Put" solo show in London ( image ©Unusualimage)
“Lily Stay Put” by UK’s Eelus from “The Colour Our of Space” solo show in London at Blackall Studios (image ©Unusualimage)

Boxi from the Carmichael Gallery curated show just opened: “Re-Creation II” at Ogilvy & Mather (photo ©Lois In Wonderland)

Boxi from the Carmichael Gallery curated show just opened: “Re-Creation II” at Ogilvy & Mather offices in Manhattan (photo ©Lois In Wonderland)

Discours sur la paix  Pochoirs sur couverture de livre  Pour l’exposition personnelle de Stéphane Moscato STF @ Galerie Guillaume Daeppen, Bâle, Suisse

"Discours Sur La Paix" book cover for the solo show by Stéphane Moscato STF at Galerie Guillaume Daeppen in Basle, Switzerland.

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Fu from France "Attachée", (stencil on canvas 33 x 46 cm", from the series "Erotique & Sexy" (image courtesy of the artist)

Indigo

"Owly" by Indigo from Vancouver (stencil on canvas) (image courtesy the artist)

See more at StencilHistoryX.com

Lois in Wonderland on Flickr

Keep it eel with EELUS

See more work by Indigo

Stéphane Moscato STF

Galerie Guillaume Daeppen (Switzerland)

Blackall Studios (Shoreditch, London)

“Re-Creation II” Show (NYC)

Carmichael Gallery (Culver City, CA)

Olgivy Gallery

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Stencil Top 5 for 03.01.10

Stencil-Top-5

The Stencil Top 5 as picked by Samantha Longhi of StencilHistoryX

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Czarnobyl (POL) (spray on MDF, 7 colors and 9 stencils) (image courtesy Stencil History X)

Learn more about this piece by Czarnobyl at Stencil History X

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"Seems So Long Ago" by artist Btoy for the "Art for Bhopal" show at Pure Evil Gallery in London. (image courtesy Pure Evil Gallery)

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Artist Joe Iurato stands in front of his piece for the Art Whino "G40" Show in Washington DC. (image courtesy the artist)

ffd

An anonymous piece in Paris (photo ©Lepublicnme)

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A portrait of David Bowie by MBW at his New York show (photo ©Lois in Wonderland)

See more at StencilHistoryX.com

Lois in Wonderland on Flickr

See more work by Joe Iurato

See more work by Btoy

Lepublicnme’s Flickr

Pure Evil Gallery

Art Whino “G40”



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The Paris Review: BSA Correspondent’s Report

Space Invader oversees a Parisian cafe (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Space Invader oversees a Parisian cafe (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

“When good Americans die, they go to Paris”

by J. Mikal Davis

Well, it felt like I had died and gone to heaven as I found myself in the center of Paris the day before New Years Eve. The streets of Paris are filled with beautiful people, amazing places to eat, hella old buildings, and some great art.

Always appreciative of the female form in Paris (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Always appreciative of the female form in Paris (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

Places like the Centre de Pompidou and Palais de Tokyo are pockets of saturated street art where the kids get up knowing full well that thousands of tourists a day come through on their way to see some great art inside these institutions. Imagine my surprise when I rolled up and there was a huge Katsu fire extinguisher piece in the courtyard of the Pompidou.

Spring snake (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Spring snake (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

I think my favorite was a neighborhood called The 11th, which is kind of between rue de Republic and Bastille metro stop.  The 11th is a hip neighborhood that houses the only rock-n-roll record store in Paris (“Born Bad”), amazing little shops and cool little galleries.

John Howard from San Paulo (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
John Howard from San Paulo (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

I found this great spot called “The Lazy Dog” on 25 rue de Charonne that had an incredible collection of Street Art books and magazines, cool clothes inspired by street culture, and a vast array of prints from some of todays’ sickest artists, like Dutch artist/graphic designer Parra and French print star Genevieve Gauckler to name a couple. They also had a gallery in a separate building next door where they were showing the prints of Evan Hecock – which was a great surprise as I had just become familiar with his work.

Mimi the Clown prays (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Mimi the Clown prays (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

The streets in this general vicinity are crammed with some great stuff so keep your eyes peeled as you walk. There might be a Space Invader starring right at you.

Keeping an eye on the Rue (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Keeping an eye on the Rue (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

I was also really blown away by crazy vertical pieces that were on the side of some buildings. At first I could not fathom how these kids were able to do it and why the verticality of it, but as I studied it more I realized that there are actual ladders (like fire escape ladders) on the side of the buildings that were just hard to see against the brick of the buildings.  Kids will hang off the side of ladder and throw up a piece.

Hold still, just gotta clip this wire (The Zoo Project) (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Hold still, just gotta clip this wire (The Zoo Project) (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

There were a few roller pieces on sides of buildings (Zoo Project being one of the best I saw) and the tunnels of the subway were filled with some nice traditional graff  pieces, but the majority of the street art was wheat paste.  As I was hunting around I met this guy Billy on the street who was doing the same thing as I was.

D (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Don’t know who did this geometric bubble of shapes and faces (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

We got to talkin’ it turns out he has a blog of street art from Paris and all around Europe. Unfortunately, unless you know French you won’t be able to read sh*t but he has some great images of a lot more of the Paris scene.

A Hellbent on the entrance to... Le Hell?  (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
A Hellbent on the entrance to… Le Hell? (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

Billy also recommended that I go check out Rue Denoyez, which was this little forgotten stretch of buildings that had seen better days (like starting in 1850), but some artists thought it would be a good place to work.

Obviously I wasn't the only one interested in this piece that said "Street Art Without Borders" and was signed Magrela, Sola, Sinka, and Zito (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Obviously I wasn’t the only one interested in this piece that said “Street Art Without Borders” and was signed Magrela, Sola, Sinka, and Zito (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

More artists followed and began painting huge colorful murals on the walls and…. well I guess you know what happens if you have been in NYC long enough to remember what Williamsburg,  Long Island City, Gowanus, and Bushwick used to be like and what they are now.

Talk about good placement, this is a deer in the brush.  (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Talk about good placement, this is a deer in the brush. (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

So these are some of the pics I took while I was there of some of the stuff that struck me. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did! Au revoir!

Another Zoo Project (photo © J.Mikal Davis)
Another Zoo Project (photo © J.Mikal Davis)

If you would like to file a correspondent report from your city, drop us a line at info@brooklynstreetart.com

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Fall Fashion 2009 Forecast: Brooklyn Street Wear

At BSA we know you’re too busy to keep up on everything so we try to gather trends to help you live a more fulfilled consumer life.

Now that Labor Day is over and you are wondering what to wear to the MBP Urban Art Festival next month, our streetwear insiders present the results of their Brooklyn research in these video presentations of fashions for Fall ’09.

Special thanks to Sharon Husbands and Unita Lay.

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