Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Understanding Street Art




How many times a day have you been walking along and seen something that breaks the monotony of your routine? When was the last time you randomly saw something that while driving your car made you stop and think? Laugh? Get angry? Maybe it was today, or last week, or 2 years ago. Regardless of when it was, you may have experienced street art.

Street art is any art developed in public spaces — that is, "in the streets" — though the term usually refers to art of an illicit nature, as opposed to government sponsored initiatives. The term can include traditional graffiti artwork, stencil graffiti, sticker art, wheatpasting and street poster art, video projection, art intervention, guerrilla art, flash mobbing and street installations. Typically, the term Street Art or the more specific Post-Graffiti is used to distinguish contemporary public-space artwork from territorial graffiti, vandalism, and corporate art.

The motivations and objectives that drive street artists are as varied as the artists themselves. There is a strong current of activism and subversion in urban art. Street art can be a powerful platform for reaching the public, and frequent themes include adbusting, subvertising and other culture jamming, the abolishment of private property and reclaiming the streets. Other street artists simply see urban space as an untapped format for personal artwork, while others may appreciate the challenges and risks that are associated with installing illicit artwork in public places. However the universal theme in most, if not all street art, is that adapting visual artwork into a format which utilizes public space, allows artists who may otherwise feel disenfranchised, to reach a much broader audience than traditional artwork and galleries normally allow.

(The last two paragraphs are from the related Wikipedia article.)

Some Street Art Links:

Wooster Collective

Streetsy

Gimpy Raven:
-U.S. Invasion
-Watership Down

No comments: