All posts tagged: London

Black Rat Projects Presents: “Small Acts Of Resistance” A Group Show With Works By Peter Kennard, Dotmasters, Matt Small, Know Hope, Armsrock and Swoon (London, UK)

Black Rat Projects

Swoon. Detail. (© Jaime Rojo)

Swoon. Detail. (© Jaime Rojo)

Black Rat Projects is delighted to invite you to our forthcoming show ‘Small Acts of Resistance’.

In ‘Small Acts of Resistance’ Black Rat Projects brings together six international contemporary artists whosework bears the stamp of both the artist’s aesthetic vision and the activist’s world changing ambition. Works by Peter Kennard, Dotmasters, Matt Small, Know Hope, and Armsrock will be on display from Thursday 4th November – Tuesday 30th November 2010. In addition to this, there will be a large-scale site specific installation created by Swoon.

Armsrock indoor installation. Brooklyn 2009. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Armsrock indoor installation. Brooklyn 2009. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Occupying public space – whether it is within the realms of media and advertising or the architectural surface of the cities in which they work and live – has become a core characteristic of the way these five artists work. They have had their work published in books and magazines, shown in galleries, pasted in the streets and have performed in front of audiences. Between them they disrupt the smooth image that corporate capitalism seeks to spread at once highlighting its repressive character. An interventionist spirit informs their artistic practices and they are constantly engaged in a process of understanding how their work might function in the world, in a way that supports, and not conflicts with their ideals. For the first time Black Rat Projects brings this group of likeminded artists together under one roof to explore common threads in their work and world views.

Know Hope. (Photo © Know Hope)

Know Hope. (Photo © Know Hope)

This exhibition references in title a recently published collection of stories collated by advocacy director of Amnesty International Steve Crawshaw and Human Rights activist Jon Jackson. The preface to their book was written by Czech writer and dissident Vaclav Haval who explains the misnomer in the title: ‘Today, millions around the world live in circumstances where it might seem that nothing will ever change. But they must remember that the rebellions that took place all across Eastern Europe in 1989 were the result of a series of individual actions by ordinary people which together made change inevitable. Small Acts of Resistance pays tribute to those who have sought to live in truth, and the impact that can have. In my lifetime, I have repeatedly seen that small acts of resistance have had incomparably greater impact than anybody could have predicted at the time. Small acts of resistance are not just about the present and the past. I believe they are about the future, too.’

For biogs of the artists or a pdf or available works please email in to info@blackratpress.com

A preview evening for the exhibition will be held on Thursday 4th November from 6pm – 9pm. Invites will be sent out via email. We hope to see you there.

Best wishes, BRP.

www.blackratprojects.co.uk

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Stencil Top Five 10.23.10

Stencil-Top-5

As chosen by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History X

Bansky in London (Photo © Pau Nine O)
Bansky in London (Photo © Pau Nine O)

The Dude Company. Soirée Plastic, Brasseries de Bellevue, Bruxelles. (Photo © The Dude Company)

The Dude Company carries his love for Brooklyn show all over the world, including here in Brussels. “Soirée Plastic”, Brasseries de Bellevue, Bruxelles. (Photo © The Dude Company)

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Xooox at The International Moniker Art Fair in London (Photo © Stencil History X)

brooklyn-street-art-c215-orticanoodles-stencil-history-x-10-10-web

A collaborative piece by C215 & Orticanoodles. (Photo © C215)

To see more photos of Paul Nine O click here:

To see more The Dude Company work click here:

To see more Xooox work click here:

To see more C215 work click here:

To see more Orticanoodles work click here:

Go to Stencil History X for more stencil art:

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Stolen Space Gallery Presents: Will Barras “Bad Reception” (London, UK)

Will Barras
brooklyn-street-art-will-barras_bad-reception

Bad Reception’
By Will Barras
29.10.10 – 14.11.10
“When I used to phone up Duncan (Mr Jago) he would have to go and stand on a chair in his kitchen to get reception, so I painted ‘Bad Reception’, the first painting I made for this body of work and the title of the show. You can see a character standing on the ledge outside his flat on the 25th floor. Does he have to stand on the ledge to get phone reception, has he just been given terrible news and he is about to jump, is he spying on the penthouse opposite, or does he just like standing on the ledge?”

Bad Reception will show case never before exhibited works, painted over the course of the past two years, by Will Barras. Featuring stunning paintings in acrylic, spraypaint, oil and ink on canvas and linen as well as a brand new limited edition hand pulled screen print by the artist.

“Mr Benn was a cartoon character who would leave his house everyday in a suit. I think he probably intended to go to work, but on his journey he walked past a costume shop which he could never resist going inside. Inside he would be given a costume and a fantastic adventure would begin… He would become a spaceman, a caveman, a chef, a knight of the realm, a wizard, a clown, a hunter… the list goes on…The brush strokes tell their own story. The shapes and colours gain momentum and begin to take you on a journey. I want to maintain the natural flow and energy, the tension between abstract and figurative, while developing and elaborating on a narrative. To generate a multiple choice of possibilities of what could be happening Ideas usually develop from the everyday mundane, broken phone converations and awkward situations … and the way we all, in some small way, do what Mr Benn does. And with this in mind its not just whats happening within the paintings…I imagined what kind of person would have made these paintings, who would have painted these pictures. I like the idea that they weren’t painted by me, but found buried underground, or discovered in a monestry, or they’ve been hanging in the quarters of a shipwreck…..” (Will Barras)

Will Barras’ composition and fluid lines provide poignant detail in liquid abstraction. The subject matter is readily familiar, but captured in a manner that seems to jar time and space with psychedelic abstraction. It is his way of expressing the emotional movements of this labour. It is therapy and pleasure and necessity.

STOLENSPACE GALLERY
Dray Walk, The Old Truman Brewery
91 Brick Lane
London E1 6QL
United Kingdom
P: +44 (0) 207 247 2684
info@stolenspace.com

Nearest tube:
Liverpool Street or Aldgate East

OPENING TIMES
Tuesday – Sunday
11:00am – 7:00pm

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Fun Friday 10.15.10

Fun-Friday

Fun Friday

Mighty Tenaka in Dumbo with “Cimmerian Shade”

brooklyn-street-art-cimmerian-mighty-tanaka-gallery1

Featuring the artwork of Katie Decker, FARO, Hellbent, Marlo Marquise, John McGarity, Don Pablo Pedro and Ellen Stagg

More about the show HERE

“Portraits” by Sten + Lex with Gaia at Brooklynite

Brooklyn-Street-Art-Portraits-Sten-Lex-Gaia-Oct-2010

This is a hot shot straight to Number Uno on the charts Ladies and Germs. Italians with their own understated stencil technique and UES wild-eyed jerkin chicken man. Read more on this show here from yesterday on BSA.

Dan Taylor “Notes from the Inside”

brooklyn-street-art-FUNFRIDAY-dan-taylor-pandemic-gallery

Pandemic is reliably snarky, eclectic, and often on the money.  Keep your eye on them because they also think.  A lot.

Plus, Dan Taylor was raised by squirrels.

Muralmorphosis

From The Philadephia Mural Arts Program, an animated mural handed back and forth amongst several artists, in the style of Exquisite Corpse.

Artists: Eve Biddle/Joshua Frankel, Rodney Camarce,Bonnie Brenda Scott, Seth Turner, Mauro Zamora.
Curated by Sean Stoops.

Ben Eine at The Moniker Art Fair

“Hell’s Half Acre”

Kind of like going to Macys!

Launched in October 12th and produced by Lazarides in collaboration with Tunnel 228 and off-site exhibition of Dante’s “Inferno”.

Via Babelgum.

Visitors explore a unique interpretation of the nine circles of hell through the vision of artists including Conor Harrington, Vhils, George Osodi, Antony Micallef, Doug Foster, Todd James, Paul Insect, Mark Jenkins, Boogie, Ian Francis, Polly Morgan, Jonathan Yeo.

David Choe Goes to Hell

Here’s his creation of his piece for Lazaride’s “Hell’s Half Acre”.

Via Babelgum

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Carmichael Gallery Invites You To Their Preview At The Moniker International Art Fair (London,UK)

Moniker International Art Fair
brooklyn-street-art-moniker-art-fair-carmichael-gallery

Carmichael Gallery
Invites You To Our Booth At The
Moniker International Art Fair
Boogie, Boxi, Martha Cooper, Eine, Gregor Gaida, Hush
Inti, Mark Jenkins, Aakash Nihalani and Sixeart

Private View
Thursday, October 14 2010

5 – 7 PM

Please RSVP to rsvp at carmichaelgallery dot com

Village Underground
54 Holywell Lane
London EC2A 3PQ

Open To The Public
October 14th 7pm-9pm
October 15th 11am-9pm
October 16th 11am-9pm
October 17th 11am-5pm
Admission Is Free

http://www.monikerartfair.com/

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Images Of The Week 10.10.10

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010

This week, K-Guy primates appeared in the urban jungle of NYC while Vango, in Kiellarny, Ireland touched on American pop culture and Brooklyn’s own Faile gifted NYC with an amazing Prayer Wheel.

K-Guy "see-no-hear-no-speak-no" Definition of Primate: an archbishop, or the highest-ranking bishop in a province, a group of provinces, or a nation. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
K-Guy “see-no-hear-no-speak-no” One of the three definitions of Primate is: an archbishop, or the highest-ranking bishop in a province, a group of provinces, or a nation. (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Faile. “Dreams Begin. Death Awaits me. Worlds Spin”  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile. "Dreams Begin. Death Awaits me. Worlds Spin"  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Faile. “Dreams Begin. Death Awaits me. Worlds Spin” (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Faile. "Dreams Begin. Death Awaits me. Worlds Spin"  (Photo © Jaime Rojo)
Faile. “Dreams Begin. Death Awaits me. Worlds Spin” (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

Vango "Sesame Slum" (Photo © Vango)
Vango “Sesame Slum” (Photo © Vango)

K-Guy
K-Guy “see-no-hear-no-speak-no” (Photo © Jaime Rojo)

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Isaac Cordal’s Street Art Installations of Little Cement Urbanites

“Cement Eclipses”

The vastness of the world can become limited by the familiar as we march or stumble or crawl mindlessly through the habitual behaviors of day-to-day existence, creatures of habit as we are.  With the simple act of miniaturization and thoughtful placement, London based Spanish street artist Issac Cordal magically expands the imagination of pedestrians finding his sculptures on the street.  With the master touch of a stage director, his figures are placed in locations that quickly open doors to other worlds that you don’t know of, but evidently exist.

Issac Cordal "Home" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

Issac Cordal "Home" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

“Cement Eclipses”, is a project of small cement sculptures that began while Cordal studied fine arts in Pontevedra, Spain in the early 2000s.  Meant as a critique of the rapid overdevelopment (and subsequent public debt hangover) of the Spanish coast over the last decade, “The figurines represent a kind of metamorphosis through which an urban human leaves his role of citizen and begins merging with the city and slowly becomes part of urban furniture,” explains the artist. More broadly the installations can be interpreted as post-modern alienation, complete with feelings of dislocation in the built environment.

Isaac Cordal "Climate Change Survidor. Hackney, London. 2010

Isaac Cordal, “Climate Change Survivor”. Hackney, London. 2010

Some figures march lock step with slumped shoulders single file, overwhelmed and pummeled into conformity. Single figures freeze bewildered in an artificial environment of concrete, molded plastic, and urban residue.  Singular men and women are suspended and isolated in a motion or pose that can take on multiple meanings. The sympathetic figures are easy to relate to and to laugh with; meticulously placed in scenes that provide a looking glass into a world strangely akin to your own.  Describing the characters and the world they live in, the artist talks about urban man’s “voluntary isolation and alienation from nature, hiding himself among sidewalks, streets, walls,” and you can almost feel sorry for the figurines. And you might knowingly chuckle.

Isaac Cordal "Businessman" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Businessman" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Border" Hackney, London. 2010

Isaac Cordal “Border” Hackney, London. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Lost" Hackney, London 2010

Isaac Cordal “Lost” Hackney, London 2010

Isaac Cordal "Follow The Leader" Brussels, Belgium 2010

Isaac Cordal "Follow The Leader" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Public Swiming Pool" London, UK. 2010

Isaac Cordal “Public Swimming Pool” London, UK. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Parasite" Shoreditch, London. 2010

Isaac Cordal “Parasite” Shoreditch, London. 2010

Isaac Cordal "Empty Fridge" Brussels, Belgium. 2010

Isaac Cordal “Empty Fridge” Brussels, Belgium. 2010

All images are courtesy of the artist and are ©Isaac Cordal

Visit the artist site for more on his Cement Eclipse project:

http://isaac.alg-a.org/

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Images Of The Week 09.19.10

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_05-2010

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 on BSA 09.13.10

Stencil-Top-5

This weeks top stencils as picked by Samantha Longhi of Stencil History X

Boxi. Image Courtesy of Samantha Longhi. Stencil History X

Boxi at the STAMP (Street Art Melting Pot) festival in Hamburg, Germany  (courtesy Stencil History X)

Check out an interview with Boxi by Samantha Longhi here

Grafeeney. (Courtesy Stencil History X)

Martin Whatson. Image Courtesy of Samantha Longhi. Stencil History X
Martin Whatson sprays this stencil on aluminum. (Courtesy of Stencil History X)

Finbarr. Image Courtesy of Samantha Longhi. Stencil History X

From the Schoony Show at Blackall Gallery in London, “Mummy’s Little Army Boy”, by Finbarr (Courtesy Stencil History X)

Snikk. Image Courtesy of Samantha Longhi. Stencil History X

“Eyes of Night”, by Snikk in Berlin. (Courtesy Stencil History X)

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Lazarides Gallery Off-Site Exhibitions Presents: “Hell’s Half Acre” A Group Show (London, UK)

Lazarides Gallery

©Image Courtesy of the Gallery

©Image Courtesy of the Gallery

Featuring Conor Harrington, Vhils, George Osodi, Antony Micallef, Doug Foster, Todd James, Paul Insect, Mark Jenkins, Boogie, Ian Francis, Polly Morgan, Jonathan Yeo and more…
12th October 2010 – 17th October 2010

Launching the 12th October, Lazarides in collaboration with Tunnel 228 invites you to our newest off-site exhibition, Hell’s Half Acre.

The labyrinth of tunnels beneath Waterloo station will be converted into a large-scale evocation of Dante’s Inferno. Visitors will explore a unique interpretation of the nine circles of hell through the vision of your very favorite Laz artists plus additional contributions from outside the normal roster including: Conor Harrington, Vhils, George Osodi, Antony Micallef, Doug Foster, Todd James, Paul Insect, Mark Jenkins, Boogie, Ian Francis, Polly Morgan, Jonathan Yeo and many more…. Interaction with the works will be encouraged and par in part of this multi-sensory experience.

Hell’s Half Acre will be open for viewing 12th – 17th October from 6 pm to 11 pm Tuesday through Thursday with extended hours over the weekend. Entry to the exhibition will be free, but as space is limited please book ahead. Time slots will be available shortly, so please bear with us until then.

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