All posts tagged: Specter

Specter: The Gentrification Series

To use a mangled metaphor, it looks like street artist Specter has thrown his terry cloth headband into the basketball ring in the ongoing Atlantic Yards dispute between pro-development and anti-gentrification forces in downtown Brooklyn.

Specter
Street artist Specter’s “A Nightmare on Atlantic” (photo © Jaime Rojo)

For those of you who have been living under an IKEA, gentrification has been plowing through New York City since at least the 1950’s and it went on steroids in the 1990’s as developers began mowing down anything in their path by brandishing a legal claim of “Eminent Domain”.

Specter
Closeup of Specter piece (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Don’t take my word for it, even conservative stalwart George Will wrote about it’s perceived mis-use a few weeks ago in the Washington Post.

Specter

Specter's "Caucasian Invasion" (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

For my money, and I’m broke, social critique doesn’t get richer than this, and this series will get tongues wagging if these posters stay up for any period of time before being bulldozed.  Start the clock!

Included in the Atlantic Yards plans are new condos and a giant shiny new stadium for the basketball team The New Jersey Nets (huh?). That is helpful to know when looking at these hand made posters that have appeared in the affected neighborhood; the gentrifying forces of the moneyed class are depicted as parodies of movie genres; a Kung-fu movie, a horror movie, and a high-stakes pimps-n-hos movie.

Specter (detail)

Specter (detail) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The genres are employed effectively, and point clearly to topics not usually so blatantly discussed when talking about gentrification – I’m thinking specifically of the one called “Caucasian Invasion”. That one might get some of our more socio-politically astute neighbors in a frothy choked-up indignation.

Specter
Bling!  (Specter) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Up close, not so much. Specter (detail) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

As you can see across the bottom of the pieces, the hand painted posters are also for an art show at the MoCADA gallery in two weeks.  But these are more than merely advertisements.

Specter
Specter (photo © Jaime Rojo)

The one styled as a high-end gourmet grocery store poster also hits home – I need to get one of those locally-grown pineapples! Maybe Dean & Deluca?

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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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Year In Images 2009 from Jaime Rojo

Street Art photographer Jaime Rojo captured a few thousand images in 2009 to help document the wildly growing Street Art scene in New York.

A veteran of 10 years shooting the streets of New York, Rojo has amassed a collection of images that capture the scene with the appreciation of an artist. To celebrate the creative spirit that is alive and well on the streets of New York, this slide video gives a taste of what happened in ‘09, without pretending to present the whole scene or all the artists, known and anonymous, who add to the ongoing conversation.

Included in this collection of images (in no particular order) are pieces by Skewville, Specter, The Dude Company, Judith Supine, C215, WK Interact, Anthony Lister, Miss Bugs, Bast, Chris from Robots Will Kill (RWK), Os Gemeos, Cake, Celso, Imminent Disaster, Mark Cavalho, NohJ Coley, Elbow Toe, Feral, Poster Boy, Bishop203, Jon Burgerman, Royce Bannon, Damon Ginandes, Conor Harrington, Gaia, JC2, Logan Hicks, Chris Stain, Armsrock, Veng from Robots Will Kill (RWK), Noah Sparkes, Robots Will Kill, Heracut, Billy Mode, Revs, Skullphone, Spazmat, Mint and Serf, Roa, Aakash Nihilani, Broken Crow, Peru Ana Ana Peru, & Cern

All images © 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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Wish #5: Specter

10-Wishes-for-10No 5Names_Specter

10 Wishes for 2010, #5, Specter

For ten days we’re presenting ten artists and their wishes for the new year, 2010, in no particular order.  Together, they are a tiny snapshot of the people who are part of the giant explosion of street art in New York.  Individually, each has added their expression of the creative spirit to the decade now ending.

Today’s wish comes from Specter, whose large scale hand drawn and painted wheat-pastes have championed the homeless, the worker, the marginalized in unconventional unusual locations all over. What one may not guess is the sense of humor behind them. Here’s Specter’s wish for the new year;

“If had only one wish for the new year I would have to say I would want to be this guy if only for a few days — a chick magnet!”

Image courtesy Specter

Image courtesy Specter

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Images of The Week 12.06.09

Images of The Week 12.06.09

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

Our Weekly Interview With the Street

Click to enlarge.

Here's to the new kid on the block
Welcome Wagon Calling – never have seen this before but it’s in a number of interpretations in a number of locations. (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood
Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (detail)
Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (detail) (©Jaime Rojo)

C215, Chris Uphues
C215, Chris Uphues (© Jaime Rojo)

Of Mice and Cats. We at BSA have noticed that perhaps street artists are more partial to cats than they are to dogs. Your comments please...
Of Mice and Cats. BSA has noticed that perhaps street artists are more partial to cats than they are to dogs. Your comments please… (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Billi Kid
We spotted Billi Kid and Shiro flying at night (©Jaime Rojo)

Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood
Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (detail)
Courtesy of Your Friendly Neighborhood (detail) (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Lister
Pursed lips, arched eyebrow, Anthony Lister (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

LMNOP 64 (Our cats in Street Art theory is further re-inforced)
LMNOP 64 (Our cats in Street Art theory is further re-inforced)(photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Specter
Specter, from his “Manage Work Flow” series (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

LMNOP 64
LMNOP 64 (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Spazmat
One of the neighborhood regulars (Spazmat) (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Specter's first installament of his new "Readymades" series
Take an abandoned building, whitewash while masking out rectangle shapes, creating “framed” art, sign name. Discuss… “Readymades” series, Specter (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo ©Jaime Rojo)

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Week in Images 11.29.09

Week in Images 11.29.09

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009Our Weekly Interview with the Street

Specter
Voy!  Delivery!  (Specter) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster
Somewhere between drawing the drapes and playing “I’m a little teapot”, Emma’s hair began to grow and curl like a Victorian furniture, causing her head to become heavy.  (Imminent Disaster) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster (detail)
Imminent Disaster (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Overunder
OverUnder (photo Jaime Rojo)

General Howe
Thanks to nanotechnology, soldiers can be shrunken and posted in fairly well hidden locations (General Howe) (photo Jaime Rojo)

"Vintage" Elbow Toe
Okay, everybody push your chair away and stand up from the Thanksgiving table and reach for the ceiling with me.  One, two, three, streeeeeeetch!  (Elbow Toe) (photo Jaime Rojo)

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Images of the Week 11.15.09

Images of the Week 11.15.09

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009Our Weekly Interview with the Streets

Specter
A new installment in Specter’s series of portraits of New York’s homeless individuals (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

A good couple. "Vintage" Elbow Toe and C215
A “vintage” ElbowToe and C215 (photo Jaime Rojo)

Composition #3
Something new incorporating farm animals and airplanes (photo Jaime Rojo)

Composition #4
And another (photo Jaime Rojo)

Quel Beast
Quel Beast (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter
Brooklyn got a new sculpture this week – a 3D version of Specter’s homeless series.  When we saw this, many people were walking up to it, taking pictures of it, discussing it with each other.  One woman said, “This is New York!”  (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter
Specter (photo Jaime Rojo)

Oopsy Daisy
Oopsy Daisy (photo Jaime Rojo)

medallion
(photo Jaime Rojo)

dd
Mutual of Ohamastan’s Wild Kingdom (photo Jaime Rojo)

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Images of the Week 11.08.09

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009
Brooklyn Street Art – Our Weekly Interview With the Streets

Specter
Man on the street by Specter (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter (detail)
Specter (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Vintage Botanical Elbow Toe
Vintage botanical by Elbow Toe (photo Jaime Rojo)

Pickett
“And, but, see, the thing is, the lady at the desk didn’t even know that I had about a thousand dollar bills rolled up in my back pocket and I could of bought any of those pictures.  She just looked at me and told me I couldn’t come in”. (Pickett) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Damon Ginandes
The new Damon Ginandes figures look with ennui and curiosity at the ebullient high school students passing by. (photo Jaime Rojo)

Damon Ginandes (detail)
Damon Ginandes (detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

She was hiding inside a phone booth
Found this little lady hiding inside a phone booth (photo Jaime Rojo)

MBW
MBW is delving back to the early days of comedy and cinema with this portrait of Charlie Chapman (photo Jaime Rojo)

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Images of the Week 11.01.09

Brooklyn-Street-Art-IMAGES-OF-THE-WEEK_1009Our Weekly Interview with the Street

C Damage
C Damage Bear Guy (photo Jaime Rojo)

Avoid Pi
Avoid Pi is taking a new approach with this framed triad of photos.  If you can name them send us an email! (photo Jaime Rojo)

Cake
Blue-eyed Cake (photo Jaime Rojo)

"Army of One' JC2
“Army of One” by JC2 (photo Jaime Rojo)

Imminent Disaster
Half disaster (Imminent Disaster) (photo Jaime Rojo)

MBW
American jazz saint and snappy dresser Louis “Sachmo” Armstrong is back in New York, courtesy of MBW. Born poor in New Oleans, he ended up in the borough of Queens. (Jaime Rojo)

Pimax
Transformer viking warrior dude is just so frustrated and verbally constipated that he resorts to giving the finger. (Pimax) (photo Jaime Rojo)

QRST
Gimme Shelter (QRST) (photo Jaime Rojo)

The Dude Company and A Later Collaborator
Stupendous collage and stencil work. Definitely the Dude Company – but who is the collaborator? (photo Jaime Rojo)

The Dude Company (Detail)
The Dude Company (Detail) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Revs
Revs is also doing collaborations more (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter
“Eat Fruit and Die” (Specter) (photo Jaime Rojo)

MBW
You must be my Lucky Star (MBW) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Pimax
A new Marilyn and a Red Velvet Underground banana (Pimax) (photo Jaime Rojo)

From that classic New York underground album referenced above, Femme Fatale

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Images of Week 08.09.09

Images of Week 08.09.09

Our Weekly Interview with the Street at BrooklynStreetArt.com

El Sol 25 and Passenger Pigeon
El Sol 25 and Passenger Pigeon (photo Jaime Rojo)

Cake with a Snack
Cake with a Snack (photo Jaime Rojo)

Celso keeps good company
Hola, I’m Veronica and I’ll be your hostess for this evening. These are my parents, and they will be in the basement until dawn (Celso, Cake) (photo Jaime Rojo)

El Sol 25
Michael the Mannequin (El Sol 25) (photo Jaime Rojo)

I Am
Thoughtful I Am (photo Jaime Rojo)

Roce Bannon keeps night hours
Keeping night hours (Royce Bannon) (photo Jaime Rojo)

The Dude Company
The Dude Company (photo Jaime Rojo)

The Dude Company
Rockin’ the Mike (The Dude Company) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Bast
Bast is Back and Wild as ever (photo Jaime Rojo)

Bast
Bast to meet you (photo Jaime Rojo)

Blanco and Shin Shin

Child with a toy hand grenade (original photo by Diane Arbus1962) and Shin Shin (photo Jaime Rojo)

Dash Snow RIP
Dash Snow RIP (photo Jaime Rojo)

Gazlay
Gazlay does Bowie (photo Jaime Rojo)

I Am
I Am (photo Jaime Rojo)

Jon Burgerman
It’s a whole new Doodle by British Sensation Jon Burgerman! (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shepard Fairey Obey

Andre keeping an eye out (Shepard Fairey) (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shepard Fairey
“Think & Create, Paint & Destroy” Shepard Fairey (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shepard Fairey

Aung San Suu Kyi

by Shepard Fairey (photo Jaime Rojo)

Shepard Fairey
Shepard Fairey (photo Jaime Rojo)

Specter "Billy Bobby"

Specter (photo Jaime Rojo)

WK Interact

WK Interact

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