Portal:Graffiti

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Welcome to the Graffiti Portal!

edit  watch  

The Graffiti and Street Art Portal

Graffiti artist spray-painting a wall in Bucharest, Romania

Graffiti and Street art are graphics applied to publicly viewable surfaces. When done without the property owner's consent, graffiti is a form of vandalism and are punishable by law in most countries. Graffiti and Street art includes traditional graffiti artwork, stencil graffiti, sticker art, wheatpasting and street poster art, video projection, art intervention, and street installations. This form of contemporary art is heavily influenced by elements of Graffiti such as: Anti-war, Hip-Hop culture, anarchism, Television and Movies, Feminism and Anti-consumerism.

Graffiti consists of a variety of styles. The simplest is the "tag" which is a signature of the graffiti artist. Each artist's tag is unique.Other styles are bubble (round graffiti letters) or freestyle (a combination of different letter types). Each graffiti crew has a personal style. Its main motivation is protest. Although many people consider graffiti vandalism, it is also a non-conventional form of art.


edit  watch  

Selected article

Banksy is the most famous  stencil artist globally.

Banksy is the pseudonym of a well-known yet anonymous English graffiti artist from Yate near Bristol. His artwork are often satirical pieces of art which encompass topics from politics, culture, and ethics. His street art, which combines graffiti with a distinctive stencilling technique, has appeared in London and in cities around the world.

Banksy started as a freehand graffiti artist then turned to the art of stencilling because it took less time to complete a 'piece'. Banksy's stencils feature striking and humorous images occasionally combined with slogans.

The message presented is usually anti-war, anti-capitalist, anti-establishment or pro-freedom. Subjects include animals such as monkeys and rats, policemen, soldiers, children and the elderly. There has been much controversy about Bansky's work, with Peter Gibson, a spokesperson for Keep Britain Tidy asserting that Banksy's work is simple vandalism. Banksy has also self-published several books that contain photos of his work in various countries as well as some of his canvas work and exhibitions, accompanied by his own writings. Banksy has grown to become the most famous Stencil Artist in the World.

Despite much speculation, Banksy's true identity remains unknown.

More...
Nominations...
Archive...
edit  watch  

Selected picture

Street Art in Munich
by Oliver Raupach .


This work is an example of Street Art on the wall of Elisabethmarkt in Munich, Germany. It shows the use of both free-hand aerosol paints and stencils. A stencil can be used to protect a surface except the specific shape that is to be painted. Stencils can be purchased as movable letters, ordered as professionally cut logos, or hand-cut by artists. The speed, portability and permanence also make aerosol paint a common graffiti medium.

More...


Nominations...
edit  watch  

Did you know...

  • ....that Foo was here is an Australian graffiti signature of popular culture, especially known for its use during World War Two, but also became popular amongst Australian schoolchildren of post-war generations. Foo is shown as a bald headed man (sometimes depicted with a few hairs) peering over a wall (usually with the fingers of both hands appearing to clutch over the wall as well), with the simple inscription "Foo was here".
Foo was here.
  • ....that Donald "Dondi" White (April 7, 1961 - October 2, 1998) is considered one of the most influential graffiti artists in the history of the movement?
  • ....that Flyposting is the act of placing advertising posters or flyers in illegal places. In the US, these posters are known as bandit signs, snipe signs, or street spam?


Nominations...
  • ....that TAKI 183 was regognized as the first writer in New York City in the early 1970's?
edit  watch  

Related portals

edit  watch  

Selected Lists

edit  watch  

Categories

edit  watch  

WikiProjects

edit  watch  

Quotes

I paint because I love it, and it adds character to any inanimate object. Whether it is a wall or a footpath. It brings the streets to life. -Rone
If you have a statue in the city center you could go past it every day on your way to school and never even notice it, right. But as soon as someone puts a traffic cone on its head, you've made your own sculpture. -Banksy
Nominations...
edit  watch  

Things you can do

edit  watch  

Topics

Street art formats

Types of Street Art, Street Art, Graffiti, Stencils Sticker art
Wheatpasting, Poster Art, Flyposting, Visual arts, Guerrilla art, Art movements, Performance art

Games

List of Street Artists, List of Graffiti Artists, List of Stencil Artists, List of Wheatpaste Artists, List of Poster Artists, Graffiti artists Category

Graffiti culture

Activism, Graffiti artists, Culture jamming, Direct Action, Graffiti terminology, Graffiti uses, Guerrilla art, Hip hop culture, Installation art, Murals, Propaganda, Screenprinting, Spray paint art, Stencil, Ethics

Artist ideologies

Art intervention, Anarchy, Anti-consumerism, Popular culture, Community ownership, Contemporary art, Property is theft!, Punk ideology, Reclaim the Streets, Situationism, Subversion, Subvertising, Anti-war, Hip-Hop culture, Anarchism,

Street art-related

Built environment, MTA, Private Property, Public Art, Public Space, Psychogeography, Rapid transit, Street Party, Urban Planning, Vandalism, Politics, Culture, Art, Jamming, Practical jokes, Hoaxes, Reality hacking, Chaos magic, Trolling, Civil disobedience, Aerosol paints

Street art by country

Australia, Spain, Germany, United States, Italy

edit  watch  

Associated Wikimedia

Purge server cache

Personal tools