Speaking of school, one of our favorite students of life and hometown graffiti/street art/ contemporary art hero Futura 2000 is opening his new exhibition today at the Bronx Museum, illustrating that if you keep up your work, your style, your discipline, and your passion, eventually people may celebrate you in your front yard. If you meet him, Futura will be more than willing to school you on NYC graffiti culture, history, and how to spot the genuine over the fake.
Meanwhile, in New York this week, “Artists4Ceasefire launched a partnership with artist Shepard Fairey and humanitarian organizations to call for a halt to weapons transfers that violate U.S. and international law.” With the art we have seen in the streets around this city and the new campus protests that immediately commenced this week, it appears that this is turning into a grassroots movement, with a majority of Americans who want immediate action to stop the killing and achieve a permanent ceasefire.
Here is our weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring Praxis, BK Foxx, CDRE, Alex Itin, OSK, Matt Crabe, Lady Sea Wench, Just Jud, Jobe, JM DiZefalo, PT, Fionac, CIR, 4OK, Dray, RAZL, CONZ, and 17 Matrix.
Urban Nation Museum in Berlin invites New York legend Lady Pink to paint the museum façade to open the new exhibition, “Love Letters to the City.”
Opening at the URBAN NATION Museum on Friday, September 13, 2024, this multi-factorial and dynamic showcase, curated by Michelle Houston, celebrates the city’s essence through the eyes of over fifty international and Berlin-based street artists.
Keeping the focus local, the festivities with the Bülow Streetart Jam start Monday, September 9, with the Bülow Street Festival leading up to the grand exhibition launch. Hosted by the Berliner Leben Foundation and Gewobag, the community-centered event will invite participants from all over to be part of the art-making. The day after the exhibition opening, there will also be a Fresh A.I.R. Open House on September 14; where artists will offer a behind-the-scenes look at their current projects.
“Love Letters to the City” invites you to consider how art transforms and reflects urban spaces, our adoption of and reaction to them, and, ultimately, how they become part of the definition of a city. The new exhibition aims to spark critical conversations about urbanization, gentrification, and social issues. Among the extensive offerings are powerful works that challenge our perspectives and possibly inspire change within our shared human-built environments.
Come to Berlin to celebrate with BSA and UN as we explore the profound impact of street art on our cityscapes.
Exhibition Opening: September 13, 2024, 7–11 pm URBAN NATION Museum, Bülowstraße 7, 10783 Berlin
Participating artists: 2501, Aniruddh Mehta, Banksy, Blek le Rat, Bordalo II, Carlos Mare aka Mare139, Chop ’em Down Films, Crash, Dan Witz, Daze, Drew.Lab_One, Elfo, Evol, HA Schult, HOGRE, Isaac Zavale, James Reka, Jaune, Jazoo Yang, Joel Daniel Phillips, Johannnes Mundinger, Jordan Seiler, Kenny Scharf, Lady Pink, Liviu Bulea, Martha Cooper, Matthew Grabelsky, MILLO, Moses & Taps, Nika Kramer, Octavi Serra, Owen Dippie, OX, PAINTING DHAKA Project, Paradox, Rocco and his brothers, Sebas Velasco, Shepard Fairey, Stephanie Buer, Stiftung Berliner Mauer, Stipan Tadić, Susanna Jerger, Tats Cru, THE WA, Vhils and Zhang Dali.
BÜLOW STREETART JAM September 9 to 14, 2024 Bülowstraße around the URBAN NATION Museum
The week before the grand opening of the exhibition LOVE LETTERS TO THE CITY creative people from all over the world will paint new Community Walls and create Floating Murals. Among the highlights is the new museum façade of the URBAN NATION by Lady Pink, a tribute to the city. The artist Jazoo Yang invites you to become part of a unique community wall, where you can put your fingerprint on a wall at Bülowstr. 95 and leave a colorful trace. Join in on September 14, 2024, 12-6 pm.
FOR COMPLETE LIST OF PARTICIPATING ARTISTS AND SCHEDULE CLICK HERE
BÜLOW STREET FESTIVAL September 13 to 15, 2024 Zietenstraße, 10783 Berlin, at the URBAN NATION Museum
In conjunction with the opening of the LOVE LETTERS TO THE CITY exhibition at the URBAN NATION Museum and the Berlin Democracy Day month of action, we are focusing on diversity and creative exchange in our city. The Bülow Street Festival brings together social and artistic projects committed to an open and inclusive society. It offers an opportunity to discover art and culture together and be inspired by the city’s creative energy. The weekend attracts visitors with artistic workshops, temporary floating murals, rousing music, exciting performances, delicious street food and more. Come celebrate with BSA as we will be in Berlin all week – come Celebrate with us!
OPEN HOUSE at Fresh A.I.R. #9 September 14, 2024, 4-8 pm Bülowstr. 7, 10783 Berlin
Fresh A.I.R.’s OPEN HOUSE offers an exclusive look behind the scenes and the unique opportunity to talk to artists and peer over their shoulders. Come by on September 14 between 4 and 8 p.m.
Today we have images from the the 9th Edition of the International Street Art Festival Graffitea in Cheste, Spain! Every April for the last nine years, Graffitea presents locals with a dynamic celebration of urban art – transforming the streets of Cheste into a massive canvas with works made by national and international artists.
Located approximately 30 kilometers west of the city of Valencia, Cheste is becoming a notable destination for street art and cultural tourism. Cheste’s vibrant cultural scene is highlighted by several key attractions that draw visitors from far and wide, like the historic town center, its picturesque plazas, Valencian architecture, traditional local markets, the Circuit Ricardo Tormo racing events, and The San Francisco de Asís Church with its baroque architecture and intricate interior.
This year’s festival featured an impressive lineup of artists, including Jota López, B:K Mafia, Bublegum, Barbiturikills, Luca Ledda, La Compañía de Mario, Yeko Yekill, Nemo LKA, Zorro, and Lluís Salvador. Each artist has contributed to an ever-expanding collection of over 130 murals that adorn the façades and walls of Cheste’s residential and industrial buildings. In addition, the festival’s artistic director, Toni Espinar, has created the inaugural mural in the “Muros Insumisos” (Insurgent Walls) series, which aims to provoke thought and dialogue through art.
This year’s theme emphasized the freedom of expression and community collaboration that Graffitea is known for. In addition to live painting, the festival included guided tours, educational workshops, and the screening of a documentary exploring the historical roots of hip-hop, produced over two years of research and filming. Schools in the area also participated, creating collaborative murals as part of the UrbanEducArt competition led by Valencian artist Xemayo.
Cheste, with a population of approximately 8,500, is becoming well known for its street art scene and Graffitea continues to enhance the city’s cultural landscape, cementing its place in the broader network of contemporary art museums and cultural events. The festival’s impact has been recognized with awards for cultural governance and is gradually attracting more international attention. We thank photographer Lluis Olive for regaling BSA readers with some photos he captured during a recent trip to Valencia.
In the past two decades, Asbury Park, New Jersey, has undergone a dramatic transformation, evolving from a struggling, economically challenged city into a pleasantly eclectic one. This shift, driven by gentrification, has attracted a wealthier demographic, including professionals and artists from nearby New York City, drawn by affordable housing, a revitalized waterfront, and the promise of a burgeoning cultural scene. For many, it has become a trendy, artistic destination.
The Wooden Walls Project, launched in 2015, has been central to its evolution, thanks to Jenn Hampton and Porkchop of Parlor Gallery. A slew of artists—officially and unofficially curated— have regaled Asbury Park with many large-scale murals and street art installations. This week, you’ll see a few examples of work we caught down by the beach as summer slowly burns toward fall.
We’re also regaled by a few other pieces we’ve caught recently elsewhere.
Here is our weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring Logan Hicks, Joe Iurato, Pref, Beau Stanton, Hyland Mather, Ellena Lourens, Porkchop, Bradley Hoffer, H Kubed, Amberella, ONEQ, Ray Geary, Cameli, and Leaf 8K.
“Graffti inserts itself like the blade of a knife between creation and destruction, between publicity and furtiveness, between word and image, cartoon, icon, and hieroglyph. Beyond its incorporation of actual characters—Doctor Doom, Underdog, Cheech Wizard—the words and letters themselves slide toward mummery or Kabuki, cloaking their sense in costumes, in masks. That its meaning is inchoate is part of the point. If you can explain it, you probably don’t understand.” – Jonathan Lethem
“When Art Talks Back: Jonathan Lethem on Graffiti As Visual and Written Expression” : We’re linking here to a recent article by Lethem on Lit Hub by way of highlighting his unique entryway into a scene that belongs to anyone and no one. He looks at the complex relationship between graffiti and the urban environment of New York City, especially during the era of rapid gentrification. Through personal experiences with graffiti, he discusses how it functions as both a visual and verbal form of expression, a dialogue with the city.
In his essay, Lethem speaks of graffiti as a historical and cultural response to the changing landscape of New York, characterizing graffiti as an act of “shouting back” at the erasure of old urban layers and the imposition of new ones. His perspective highlights how graffiti serves as a historical marker and a form of cultural resistance against the forces of urban renewal and homogenization. Additionally, he speaks of graffiti as a blend of visual art and written language. He writes of visual aesthetics as a unique form of communication, placing graffiti at the intersection of word and image – a form of artistic dialogue.
While he describes the early graffiti writers and newer people he has discovered, we think of the timeless quality of his observations and pair them with some of these newer images by photographer Jaime Rojo.
Author of about a dozen novels, Jonathan Lethem’s work has been translated into thirty languages. He’s been the recipient of the National Book Critic’s Circle Award, The Berlin Prize, and a MacArthur Fellowship, among other awards. Lethem excels at merging highbrow literary techniques with pop culture elements, creating intellectually engaging and entertaining narratives. Sharp, wry humor distinguishes his work, making him a good fit for BSA readers.
Maybe the extreme heat this month in Italy causes the mind to become soft.
Or perhaps the grandiosity born of difficult circumstances still pushes you to paint open pleas for attention. He wouldn’t be the first whom you’ve met.
Whatever the case, somewhere in Italy, a citizen will be contemplating this fresh text on an abandoned building and questioning nearly every word. If they understand English, they will still question every word and wonder if they should feel offended–or find Elfo and see if he is okay.
The conventions are done and dusted, and the candidates are locked in. Everyone’s got their pick: some are waving the Kamala flag, while others are riding the Trump train. But while the political stage is buzzing, the street art scene is still playing catch-up. The new Democratic contender hasn’t exactly made it onto many murals yet. But if you want to know how folks are really vibing, just check out the street portraits—artists are always a step ahead of the polls when it comes to capturing the public mood.
Here is our weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring ERRE, Hops Art, BK Ackler, Hops1, Wane COD, PHD, DRIK, Mack Colours, Olig, Souls, No Name Stencil, RAIZE, Scottie Marsh, Ques, 718 Crew, and Wild Cat.
On the night Kamala Harris accepts the Democratic nomination, street artist Shepard Fairey reveals his new poster, which is available for home printing. This follows his iconic “HOPE” poster of Barack Obama, with the latest design focusing on the theme of “FORWARD.” While Harris may not have the same popularity or charisma as Obama, she has committed to advancing the country, contrasting with the Republican candidate, who appears to offer a look back to better times. Her potential administration would likely include many of the exact key figures as Obama and Biden—Blinken, Yellen, Rice, Austin, Holder—offering a hint of what’s to come. With roughly 70 days remaining, Americans are buckling their seatbelts yet again.
“We are not going back.” These words from Kamala Harris summarize the moment we are in, and in order not to go back, we must go FORWARD! While we have not achieved all the goals we might be seeking, we are making progress – all in the face of expanding threats and regressive political adversaries.
But we are not going back. In fact, we have a very real opportunity to move forward. If we act we can move forward our desire for a healthy planet, for corporate accountability, toward equality and away from racism, sexism, xenophobia, and homophobia, for equitable access to opportunity, for full access to the medical care we want or need, for fair and just immigration policies.
I believe VP Kamala Harris and her VP pick Tim Walz are our best chance to move forward. They are our best chance to push back on encroaching fascism and threats to democracy, and our best chance for creating the world we all desire and deserve. Politics is messy… but messy is no excuse for checking out. Messy is the work and the work can be joyful. Messy is what it takes to get through the daunting mess in pursuit of a better future. But we only win if we show up. Be ready for Nov. 5. Check your voter registration status now.
This art is a tool of grassroots activism for all to use non-commercially. I was not paid for it and will not receive any financial benefit from it. I created this work purely in pursuit of a better future. Let’s get there together! ~ Shepard Fairey
Art by Shepard Fairey. Reference photo by Lawrence Jackson / Biden for President is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0; For personal, non-commercial use only.
In the urban landscape where human ingenuity meets the raw edges of industrial neglect, street artists like Mariusz Waras excel in transforming overlooked spaces, animating them. Waras (AKA M-City), is known for his expansive murals and street art that appears across over forty countries, is one example of how the artist’s vision can reframe and rejuvenate neglected urban environments. Similarly, the digital realm has seen artists and technologists in the Demoscene meticulously re-engineering code to craft immersive experiences that challenge and redefine virtual spaces. These digital pioneers have turned lines of code into poetry, movement, and sound, projecting their creations onto walls to alter perceptions and environments.
The exhibition LOOP at CSW Łaźnia in Gdańsk, Poland, is a testament to this transformative power of art, bridging the worlds of physical street art and digital innovation. Curated by Anna Szynwelska, whose practice often explores the intersection of traditional and new media, LOOP embodies this fusion with its groundbreaking approach. Szynwelska’s previous projects, such as Bigger than Life and The Art of the Internet, reveal her dedication to examining how technology reshapes art and audience experience.
“The starting point of the exhibition and its core material are my works (mainly paintings) and their language,” says Waras. “Like I do when working on a painting, I reached to a digital library of elements, created consistently since the outset of the M-city project, namely to the graphic equivalents of various urban objects. Using AI tools, 3D visuals, and sonification, together with the team, I created an exhibition that fully relies on new technologies.”
LOOP integrates Waras’s graphic language with cutting-edge technology, featuring a dynamic 360-degree projection and interactive installations created with artificial intelligence. This immersive environment responds to visitor movement, making it unique and engaging. The exhibition merges traditional artistic practices with contemporary digital tools, reflecting Waras’s deep engagement with pixel aesthetics, graffiti, and electronic music. The interactive elements of LOOP not only blur the lines between creator and viewer but also integrate their presence into the evolving narrative of the installation.
LOOP’s innovative technical and creative dimensions are the product of a skilled collaborative team. Radosław Deruba, an artist and motion designer, has crafted the immersive virtual world that forms the exhibition’s core. Patryk Chyliński, with his expertise in artificial intelligence, trained the AI using a rich collection of Mariusz Waras’s digitized artworks, enabling a generation of continuously evolving visuals. Gosha Savage, an electronic music producer, designed the soundscape, enhancing the interactive experience with his auditory compositions.
Curator Anna Szynwelska integrated these elements into the exhibition, a dynamic environment that reflects LOOP’s technological and artistic innovations. As celebrated by the situationists in the urban environment, here, there is a continuously shifting dialogue between art and audience, each affecting the visual vocabulary. By combining his established visual style with new media innovations, Waras is experimenting with an intersection of street art and digital art, possibly transforming and redefining both.
Here is our weekly interview with the streets, this week featuring Stikman, Blanco, Lexi Bella, Jerk Face, Modomatic, Savior El Mundo, RX Skulls, Humble, Klonism, RD357, Flaco, REKER, Sintex, and BOFA.
Astonishing. On a humid rainy night on the Upper West Side, a block off Broadway. Is that too much? For your average New Yorker, it’s too much to say anything is astonishing unless you are deliberately exaggerating for effect. But how else can you describe a man walking across a wire between the Twin Towers, and how can you describe him 50 years later when he decides to commemorate that event by walking across the nave suspended on a wire above the floor of St. John the Divine before 1,500 guests?
Philippe Petit is no stranger to defying the possible. His original feat, accomplished on August 7, 1974, remains one of the most daring and poetic acts of rebellion in the city’s history. A meticulous planner, Petit, with the help of a dedicated team, including his friend Jean-Louis Blondeau, prepared long in advance. Together, they secretly rigged a steel cable between the towers, first using a bow and arrow to shoot a fishing line from one rooftop to the other—an extraordinary task in itself. The planning, the nerve, and the sheer audacity of it were later chronicled in the Oscar-winning documentary Man on Wire (2008), a testament to what one human spirit can achieve when driven by passion – and a refusal to accept limits.
As Petit took to the wire again last week on August 7 and 8 at St. John the Divine, a structure nearly as grand and imposing as you imagine, he was surrounded by the hallowed air of a place often described as the world’s largest Gothic cathedral. The nave, stretching some 600 feet in length and 124 feet in height, became a stage for this latest act of aerial artistry. Petit, now 74, crossed the wire several times, his balance pole extending nearly 30 feet across, with the audience gazing up in awe on his left and right. The cathedral, with its towering columns and vast expanses, offered the perfect setting for a performance that blurred the lines between the sacred and the profane, the possible and the impossible.
The musician and star Sting performed below the highwire with a small orchestra providing the delicate accompaniment while Petit moved determinedly above. Gently, one could observe a duet, a collaboration—a dance of sorts between the earthbound and the skyward. As Sting strummed his guitar and sang the familiar lines of “Fragile,” the lyrics seemed to resonate more deeply in this setting: “On and on the rain will fall / Like tears from a star, like tears from a star.” Undeniably, there was a haunting beauty in the way the music filled the space. It was not overwhelming, but it left room for the imagination to soar along with Petit. The interplay between the two artists—one grounded, the other aloft—spoke to the balance of human experience: our desires to rise above, yet bound to remain connected to the ground below.
The evening was not just about Petit and Sting. Other performers added layers of meaning and texture to the event. Grammy-nominated jazz clarinetist Anat Cohen welcomed guests with her music echoing through the nave, setting a tone of reverence and anticipation. A candlelit procession added a touch of the sacred, and young dancers from Ballet Tech embodied the future of performance art, their movements suggesting the beginnings of something great.
Interestingly, Petit also spoke frankly at the microphone at the end of his performance, confessing specific ill actions and inactions that he now regrets. Choosing his words carefully, he adjusted his original claim of crossing the wire at the World Trade Center from eight times to six, or perhaps four—due to his blurry memories, as if anyone in the audience had done it even once and could stand in judgment. A second confession was that he had never adequately given credit to his technical and artistic partner, Jean-Louis Blondeau, publicly in the way he should have, admitting to the possibility that his pride had prevented it. Members of creative teams across the New York audience shuddered in recognition of a senior person’s admission of stolen credit on a project. Regardless of the effect of his admission and contrition, one could certainly admire him for choosing the appropriate location.
Among the luminaries in attendance were director Darren Aronofsky, actor Forest Whitaker, and the famed singer Judy Collins—each had the chance to watch with rapt attention as history, art, and sheer human will combine in a rare display of daring, even in this city. Mayor Eric Adams, recognizing the occasion’s significance, declared August 7 “Philippe Petit Day.”
As the evening drew to a close, Sting returned with a new piece, “Let the Great World Spin,” written specifically for this occasion—a world premiere meant to capture the spirit of Petit’s journey and the legacy of his acts. It was a night that celebrated the convergence of past and present, the intertwining of legend and reality, and the unyielding pursuit of dreams, no matter how impossible they may seem.
Exiting the hallowed St. John the Devine onto wet, raining, darkened streets in Upper Manhattan, the continuation of the story was unexpected in its echoes in the public sphere. Considering the vastness of the possible again, New York’s public space lures you to surpass the possible. While not strictly an act of street art, the performance itself relies on the possibility of being witnessed from the street, the necessity of trespass, the spirit of defiance, and audacity that also overlap with the rebellion alive and kicking inside the average street artist whose work is un-permissioned, unbossed, unbought. To hear the forceful vocal delivery of this wirewalker now, 50 years after this great feat, the fire has burned ever since.
As the music faded, and the applause echoed through the vast cathedral, and the familiar cacophony of honking cars assaulted the mind outside on the wet and windy streets. One could not help but think that in this performance, in this celebration of defiance, determination, and daring, something astonishing had taken place.
In the dynamic urban landscape of London, Sebas Velasco has left his mark with a mural titled A Lasting Place at 12 Cobbett Street, Brixton. Born in Burgos, Spain, Velasco is renowned for his hyper-realistic style that captures the essence of urban environments. This mural, inspired by British musician Loyle Carner’s track “A Lasting Place” from the album Hugo, depicts a young Brixton resident standing against the iconic train line. The cool, muted hues of London night are punctuated by the station’s warm glow, creating a dialogue between the individual and the city’s pulse.
Velasco’s approach is deeply rooted in his environment. He involves a process of immersion in local culture, photographing the people and places that inspire his creativity. This mural, his first in London, blends his experiences in Brixton with spontaneous encounters that shape his work.
“I have always been very interested in social architecture, but I had no idea that London, particularly Brixton, was so rich in these aesthetics,” Velasco reflects. The mural stands as a narrative of Brixton’s character, shaped by the creative freedom he was given. The involvement of his long-time collaborator Jose Delou in the photographic staging adds authenticity, enhancing the connection between the artist and the environment.
Sebas Velasco’s work consistently explores themes of connection, bridging the past and present to resonate with viewers. As part of the London Mural Festival’s theme of “connection,” A Lasting Place sets the tone for a series of works exploring the relationships between people and the spaces they inhabit. The festival, from September 7th to 29th, features renowned artists like Aches, Bezt Etam, D*Face, and eL Seed. As part of the festival, this mural captures the narratives that make London’s streets both familiar and endlessly intriguing.