It’s always cool to learn about an artist’s process and the story behind his or her work. Street Artist Chris Stain shares with you here where he gained inspiration for his gallery piece called “Give ‘Em Hell”.
Give ‘Em Hell, by Chris Stain, currently on view at “Street Art Saved My Life : 39 New York Stories”. (photo © Carlos Gonzalez)
“When I was a kid growing up in Baltimore we always played baseball and pretended we were Eddie Murray or Rick Dempsey when stepping up to bat. It wasn’t until later that I realized that a baseball bat could be used as an equalizer when the bigger kids thought it was a good idea to kick my ass for the fun of it.
This piece represents for me standing up for yourself and the things you believe in. The boy in the picture was originally photographed by Boogie. The background photos were taken by me during a trip to Baltimore. I hand cut the image out of rubylith and screen printed it onto an old table I used to work on. Then I hand colored it with thinned out spray paint and wood stain.”
<<><><><><><>>><
From our interview with Chris for Juxtapoz:
“Born in 1972 and raised in East Baltimore, Chris Stain is a New York-based, self taught stencil artist and print maker influenced by social realism, the plight of working people, and skateboarder culture. His straight-forward portraits in urban or industrial settings harken back to the Depression, when bankers and masters of industry declared war on the blue collar and poor. With blunt realism and everyday protagonists, Stain encourages passersby on the street to draw direct connections between social and economic conditions of then and today.”
Read Chris’s answers to the Back Talk questions on Juxtapoz here:
Other Articles You May Like from BSA:
Did you see that micro-moon on Friday the 13th? We were up on the roof with artists and friends and weirdos celebrating "mid autumn moon" and looking at the New York skyline and that beautiful mo...
Our weekly focus on the moving image and art in the streets. And other oddities. Now screening:1. Grand Opening of "TALKING...& OTHER BANANA SKINS / UNARTIG2. Footprint by The Krank3. Six ...
A rich and storied collection from one of the streets most loved modern stencillists is C215: La monographie. C215. La Monographie. Éditions Albin Michel. Paris 2015 (photo © Jaime Rojo) On the st...
We were fortunate to have been invited to participate in the very first edition of Nuart Aberdeen back in the quaint days of 2017. We had a blast, and in the process fell in love with this city made ...
“I wanted to go back to the millennial roots of public and monumental art,” MP5 tells us about the inspiration for the new intervention in Torpignattara entitled “Millennials”. The Naples born Roman a...