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She is an unlikely icon. She hid in back lanes on Bankside, under the South Bank bridges, in the corners of council estates in Islington. She survived just months, sometimes weeks, before disappearing, buffed off or covered over in paint’s endless war on paint. Sometimes she left traces behind, a ghostly shadow of her body or an outstretched arm for those who still sought her out.

The Shelf Blog: Read Jared Bland’s interview with Nick Mount.
Her image spread. From maybe a dozen appearances late in 2003 and through 2004, the little girl and her lost balloon appeared in hundreds of photographs, from blurred cellphone captures to staged shoots. Her copied pixels multiplied around the globe through countless photo-sharing sites, blogs, and web zines. She made a cameo in Woody Allen’s Match Point, filmed in London while she still lived under Blackfriars Bridge. She showed up in tattoos, on running shoes, T-shirts, posters, and wedding cards — copies of copies, made by fans for themselves and, inevitably, for sale. And sell she did. In February 2007, Sotheby’s sold a spray-painted stencil of the balloon girl at auction for £37,200. Her creator, the British street artist known as Banksy, posted a drawing on his website of art buyers bidding on a framed canvas of his scrawled response: “I can’t believe you morons actually buy this shit.”

Modern graffiti emerged in New York in the early 1970s as spray-painted signatures, or tags, still its most common form. Later came throw-ups and pieces — larger, more colourful, more intricate versions of the tag. It is an inherently political art, an assertion of the artist’s existence and, more distantly, of his (occasionally her) right to expression. In graffiti, the art of rebellion takes a back seat to the act of rebellion, to getting up, as often and as brazenly as possible. The graffiti artist has neither the time nor the interest for emotion recollected in tranquility.

Graffiti wasn’t a rejection but an extension of the high art of its century, an art equally interested in shock and action over aesthetics. From Marcel Duchamp’s urinal through Jackson Pollock’s drips to Damien Hirst’s pickled cows, twentieth-century art spurned beautiful imitations for provocative concepts. Some say graffiti is beautiful, that it beautifies the city, just as some say Picasso’s cubist prostitutes are beautiful. But beauty was never the point of either, except as the enemy. Graffiti disfigures the city in the same way Duchamp’s urinal disfigured the art gallery. Mayors understood this; that’s why they fought it. Art dealers understood it, too; that’s why they bought it.

By the early 1980s, graffiti and graffiti-inspired artists like Futura 2000, Jean-Michel Basquiat, and Keith Haring had moved from city streets to gallery walls. Confused by graffiti’s lack of beauty, the commercial world was slower to catch on, but it came around because of the art’s supposed appeal to advertising’s eighteen-to-twenty-five demo. What had once subverted the ubiquity and clarity of billboards became a go-to style for advertisers from ibm to Apple. Today, many first-generation graffiti artists are designers for hip clothing companies or the entertainment industry.

Dressed up by art, pimped out by capital, aggressively hunted in its homeland by New York’s Anti-Graffiti Task Force. In North America and western Europe, traditional graffiti is now a mostly moribund art (elsewhere, for example in Brazil, it’s alive and dripping). But since the early 1990s, graffiti has been reinventing itself with new techniques and aesthetics under the new name of “street art.”

Many street artists began with graffiti, and many continue to use its spray can while adding posters, stickers, and sculpture. They’re still mostly young, for the obvious reasons that the work is usually illegal, potentially dangerous, and doesn’t pay. Men still outnumber women. On average, they’re whiter, more middle class, and better educated than their graffiti predecessors. Perhaps because of that education, graffiti’s political voice has expanded in street art, becoming less about the self and more about the world. It’s typically anti-corporate, though seldom overtly. Street art shares the sheets with culture jammers like Adbusters magazine, but it’s more hopeful than critical.

Following the example set by gallery art, some street art is more about the concept than the art. “Fuck Bush” isn’t an aesthetic; it’s an ethic. Shepard Fairey’s Obey Giant stickers and Akay’s Akayism posters are clever children of Duchamp, ironic conceptual art. But street art generally favours aesthetics, artistic styles that evoke feelings before thoughts. Some is grotesque, some fantastic. Some incites anger, some laughter. Some aims at wonder, the sublime’s territory. The California artist Above, for instance, hangs wooden arrows from utility lines over streets in North America and Europe, pointing up, above the familiar city to the unfamiliar sky.

Oddly — shockingly, in fact — the single most common aesthetic in street art, this child of shock, of defiant tags and disfigured letters, is cuteness. From São Paolo to San Francisco, Tokyo to Toronto, New York to New Orleans, the cute pokes its head through the tangled Duchamps of urban walls. Smiley faces. Pouting faces. Big eyes in big heads. Cartoon characters in cartoon colours. Sad cute. Silly cute. Sexy cute. Helpless. Playful. Innocent. Bambi goes downtown.

Street art’s turn to cuteness is a radical departure not just from traditional graffiti, but from its indoor relative. If beauty had a rough ride in the twentieth century, the cute got kicked to the curb, as impossible for high art to swallow as the disgusting was in Immanuel Kant’s time. “Nothing is so much set against the beautiful as disgust,” wrote Kant in 1764. “Good point,” said twentieth-century art, and went to work tagging toilets, scrawling moustaches on the Mona Lisa, defecating in tin cans, submerging crucifixes in urine, and feeding cow’s heads to maggots.

Comments (4 comments)

Stuart Simpson: I found this article to be most intriguing and cleverly composed. I am an art dealer in Nova Scotia, and I had not looked at street art in such a profound manner before. I hope that you will invite Nick Mount to contribute more articles to the magazine. Keep up the good work! September 04, 2008 11:02 EST

C.D.: In “The Renaissance of Cute”, Nick Mount describes the free gift of beauty to urbanites as a revolution. Hell, gardeners have been doing this forever!

Perhaps in downtown London or Toronto gardens are absent, but in Vancouver and Victoria they are an integral part of the streetscape. There’s even a direct equivalent to street art: guerrilla gardening; where people take over areas of emptiness and despair and bring colour & hope. Of course, like street art, there are no gallery owners or editors filtering the gardens, so the tacky amateur ones filled with red geraniums sit alongside captivating and sophisticated designs.

Perhaps the only reason gardens are not considered works of art is because they can’t be bought and sold.
September 16, 2008 09:21 EST

Anonymous:
share our story:

A insomnia frog:A insomnia frog
A Joyful party:A Joyful party
Bear in eggs:Bear in eggs
Big alligator:Big alligator
Birds and bear:Birds and bear
Carving and desert:Carving and desert
Chickens and ducks:Chickens and ducks
Clever crow:Clever crow
Crystal ball's dream:Crystal ball's dream
Hungry fox:Hungry fox
Mom's birthday:Mom's birthday
Only one goal:Only one goal
Piglets temper:Piglets temper
Small white and black pig:Small white and black pig
The camel is angry:The camel is angry
The old dog:The old dog
The poor and the rich:The poor and the rich
Broken dreams:Broken dreams
The little princess:The little princess
Dance bear:Dance bear
spring:spring
The little princess:The little princess
Three rats:Three rats
A selfish giant:A selfish giant

January 02, 2009 09:25 EST

Anonymous:


Dust off
your old sneakers



Do you own an
old pair of Nike’s or Adidas shoes?  Were you ever into playing sports like
basketball or skateboarding, or into Hip Hop music?  Were you born around 1970? 
If you answered yes to all of these questions, then you could already guess what
this is about.  Even if the answer was no to the last question, then you’re
still on page because most people these days understand the significance behind
Nike, Adidas, and the Sports and Music industry.  And if your not, then you will
now.




They say that it was the Nike Dunk that started it all off.  In 1985,
Nike brought out the Nike Dunk.  Originally these sneakers meant for the
college community of basketball players.  Instead, this style of sports shoes
started the sneaker sub-culture.   Although this style of sneaker was designed
to be used during high intensity basketball games, the spotlight quickly turned
to the fashion of wearing them, what they looked like, and which ones you
owned.  Twenty years later, Nike has brought the Nike Dunk back on the
courts with all its retro style and performance.

But why stop
with basketball shoes?  In 2000, Nike decided to jump into the skateboarding
scene with the new Nike Skateboarding product line. 



With Nike SB
has come the Nike Dunk SB.  For years, before skateboarding came out from
the underground scene, skateboarders utilized the rugged design of basketball
shoes.  Nike decided to capitalize on what Vans and DC shoes had been
monopolizing for years, and take what was already an amazing sneaker, and fit it
into the needs of skateboarders.  What the Nike Dunk SB brought in the
way of performance was extra-padded tongue and their patented Zoom Air insole.
In the way of style, this sneaker has already come out with six series, and
names for them like Grip, Forbes, and Vipers.



Another blast
from the past would be the Nike Air Force 1.  These sneakers first came
out in the early 80’s.  And like the hip hop culture, their popularity grew. 
However, this band did not reach their full fashion peek until 2002 when Nelly
released the song “Air Force Ones”. 



The other major
sports shoe brand is the Adicolor Shoes, an Adidas Original.  The design
became so popular because the plain white canvas was adaptable by painting,
drawing, and spraying on your own personal design, and even accessories were
sold to help you in your creativity.  In 2006 they pushed the envelope further
with a new color series using artists and designers from all over the world.




Another huge sneaker that was popular with the hip hop world was the
Adidas
Superstar
.  A very raw and controversial Hip Hop group that helped skyrocket
the Adidas Superstar to stardom was Run-D.M.C. This cutting edge group was known
for wearing their Superstars out on stage, and even wrote a song dedicated to
them called “My Adidas”.  Whether its Nike or Adidas, clean out that closet,
dust off your old sneakers, and get into the game. 


January 02, 2009 09:34 EST

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