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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2015 18:07:59 GMT
Brilliant stuff Feralthings so great to have you and your threads over here. Here is an interesting piece I picked up not from a Graff artist but an Afgani calligraphy artist Nawid Allam. Just love the way this piece kinda attacks the purity of the calligraphy with the scores through it. Excuse the photo but the glass is very reflective so makes hard to photo it came framed so not bothered to change but love the piece
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Post by cnh on Apr 8, 2015 18:28:58 GMT
That's a beauty johnnyh (lovely framing job too) need to buy myself a piece of Arabic Graff
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Post by feralthings on Apr 9, 2015 14:34:29 GMT
Beautiful piece! I love the layers of different calligraphy, johnnyh. I haven't come across his work before but I'm very glad I have now. Here's a little video of Tunisian artists Mohamed Kilani Tbib AKA The Inkman's recent residency at Galerie Itinerance in Paris:
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Post by feralthings on Apr 21, 2015 20:04:16 GMT
A couple of new canvases by eL Seed (love that one on the right!): A UV painting out in the Egyptian desert by Aya Tarek: And the two artists in conversation:
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Post by someonesbrain on Apr 23, 2015 13:57:49 GMT
Never heard of eL Seed until now. Amazing stuff. What the fuck?! He's even got his own MTN limited edition can! Isn't that what we are here for. Learning about art and artists and have some fun ...
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Post by feralthings on Apr 28, 2015 16:45:47 GMT
There's an interesting looking exhibition on at the moment at the Arab World Institute in Paris called ' HIP-HOP, du Bronx aux rues arabes'. The exhibition covers all four main elements of hip-hop culture including, obviously, graffiti. The exhibition concentrates on hip-hop as a medium for social and political expression and if you ever make it along to the Institute it's worth checking out the beautiful modernist windows that have apertures which automatically opens and closes depending on how bright the sun is shining: Last night, JonOne and Yazan Halwani painted this collaboration and there will also be painting by Evol, JayOne and MeenOne:
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Post by adman on Apr 28, 2015 17:31:24 GMT
Love a wall full of paint!
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Post by Deleted on Apr 28, 2015 17:44:11 GMT
Brilliant posts as always feralthingsSimon Mathewson follow Feralthings posts you will learn and introduced to loads of new artists & stuff like the rest of us.
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Post by mikeydread on May 2, 2015 22:51:57 GMT
Bumped into this chap today. Iranian graf writer & sticker lover Ghalamdar.
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Post by cnh on May 2, 2015 23:15:58 GMT
Bumped into this chap today. Iranian graf writer & sticker lover Ghalamdar. Been checking him out on Instagram, thanks for sharing mikeydread
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Post by Deleted on May 3, 2015 18:15:05 GMT
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Post by feralthings on May 6, 2015 12:33:54 GMT
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Post by feralthings on May 17, 2015 8:43:06 GMT
Ammar Abo Bakr and Mohamed El-Moshir have been arrested by Egypt's security forces for legally painting this wall in Cairo a few days ago - at least in the UK you only have to worry about the police or BTP. I gather that (aside from executing their political opponents) the current el-Sisi regime is buffing all the street pieces painted during and in support of the 25 January revolution - it's a shame our governments have learnt nothing from supporting dictators like Karimov, Suharto and Pinochet! OK, rant over. Here's another pieces by Amma Abo Bakr showing Sanaa Seif who was jailed for three years for peacefully protesting against Egypt's Protest Law which prohibits peaceful protest:
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Post by Deleted on May 17, 2015 16:02:13 GMT
Great post Feralthings terrible for them
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Post by shootagain on May 21, 2015 8:04:32 GMT
A friend of mine has the following artworks available for sale : Painted by Kais Benhamida, he's the CEO of Orange Egypt, not a full time artist. Apparently, it translates into "Oh How Much I Love You". My friend is open to offers (PM me directly if interested) as he's seperated from his wife (was a commission) and for obvious reasons won't hang that piece on his wall anymore ;-( What do you think feralthings ?
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Post by Commissioner on Jun 20, 2015 1:57:06 GMT
source: aljazeera 'I wanted to replace photos of politicians with something more positive. That was when the choice came of Fairouz,' On Hamra Street, which runs through the vibrant commercial centre of West Beirut, a new mural covers the side of a five-storey building. It is the face of iconic Lebanese performer Sabah, rising out of a cloud of Arabic calligraphy. For Yazan Halwani, the 22-year-old Lebanese artist behind the mural, this is just the latest piece in a body of work that spans the city and its famous characters. Halwani has adorned walls with portraits of poet Khalil Gibran and singer Fairuz, as well as lesser-known local heroes such as Ali Abdullah, a homeless man on Bliss Street who died one winter's night in January 2013. Although Beirut's graffiti scene is still young, Halwani is one of its vanguards. Al Jazeera caught up with him to talk about his latest urban experiments, his run-ins with the police, and how he uses graffiti to tell stories of Beirut. Al Jazeera: The works that you are most famous for are a mixture of portraiture and calligraphy. Why did you choose to combine the two? Yazan Halwani: It wasn't a moment's decision. It was actually a progression. At first I was doing Western-style graffiti with its flashy colours, the wild styles, the tagging - stuff like that. At some point, around [the age of] 18, I noticed that I needed something that had more identity. In order to do that, I started looking at calligraphy. My uncle had a calligraphy book and he showed it to me, and I've been borrowing it for a few years now. I don't think I'm going to return it. The idea for the portraits came partly after I had done Samir Kassir, which had a positive effect on people, and also after I realised I was always removing photos of politicians.
I wanted to replace those figures with something more positive. That was when the choice came of Fairouz, of Ali Abdullah. They are the stories of the city.
Halwani embellishing one of the walls of Beirut with Arabic calligraphy
Al Jazeera: You've spoken before about tagging, the practice of signing one's name or pseudonym on a public wall, as being no better than the local politicians who cover Beirut with their names, logos and faces. Is that why you no longer do it?
Halwani: Definitely. Actually, the initial form of tagging that existed in Lebanon is not what the graffiti artists started; it was the political militias who used to do it.
[Those tags] were in the form of stencils most of the time. During the civil war, whenever a political militia would gain control of an area, they would stencil their logos. So that is one factor [as to why I stopped tagging].
Another factor is that Beirut is actually a city that is already destroyed and is being rebuilt, so going around and vandalising a city that was already vandalised is just like [kicking] someone who is already on the floor.
I do think tagging is a kind of vandalism. If you want to do something different here, you need to help [the city] stand up. I think you have to try and contribute in a positive manner to the city that's trying to rebuild itself.
Al Jazeera: What sort of attitude do the authorities take to your work? Do they harass you about it?
Halwani: Whenever people ask me, 'What happens when the police come?', they imagine that I always have to run or something. Actually, when the police come, you just explain to them that you're not a gangster, you're not doing anything harmful, you're just painting a wall - because that's what you're doing.
Most of the time, they understand.Sometimes they even want to paint with you. Other times, when my work is more political, they have taken my papers - for the Samir Kassir one, for example.
The interesting thing is that whenever you can you talk it out and explain you're just someone trying to embellish the city and remove the signs of war, they understand because they are part of the city too, and they know its story.
Portrait of homeless man on Bliss street
Al Jazeera: Recently you've started dabbling in cement sculptures; why?
Halwani: I love cement. I don't know why. I guess because it's everywhere here. Cement is a very bad material to make a sculpture out of, but I think the reason I insist so much on using it is that it's the way this city might talk. I imagine it would form words out of cement, out of itself.
This is why I started with calligraphy sculptures. It's kind of a new form of street art. Instead of just scribbling on the wall, you get a sculpture and leave it in the street.
The first sculpture said 'Beirut', very simply, as if this was the first word the city would say: its own name.
Also, sculptures give a new level of interaction in the street compared to a mural. A mural might be something you look at, but a sculpture is something you step over or move around.
It's a more playful approach to street art.
Al Jazeera: How important is the relationship between the wall and the graffiti for you?
Halwani: I think in the new direction I'm taking, which is away from typical urban graffiti, I try not to do graffiti that is alien to the street. I want it to feel native to it.
One example is a piece I did on a very dirty wall. Instead of repainting it, I tried to remodel the dirt, creating new layers with a spray can in such a way that they would look like the shadow of the letters. The other example is the Fairuz piece.
The background was actually supposed to be a different colour - it was kind of pinkish, which is not the colour of the building.
So I changed it to bring it closer to the colour of the building and the surroundings, to make sure it seemed as if this graffiti was always there.
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Post by mikeydread on Aug 4, 2015 14:46:31 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Aug 5, 2015 15:50:24 GMT
Great vid Mikey much appreciated
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Post by bjornca on Aug 5, 2015 20:30:08 GMT
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Post by feralthings on Oct 15, 2015 7:22:20 GMT
Three writers - Heba Amin, Caram Kapp and Stone - were hired by the makers of the TV-series Homeland to add authenticity to the set they were using as a Syrian refugee camp. They were asked to spray pro-Assad graffiti because the producers thought that this is what's common in a Syrian refugee camp (which implies a slight misunderstanding about the whole situation) but instead they went a little bit off script and wrote graffiti reading things such as ' Homeland is racist', ' Homeland is a joke, and it didn’t make us laugh' and ' This show does not represent the views of the artists'. The writer's full statement, including the images below, is online here and worth a read.
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Post by IggyWiggy on Oct 15, 2015 7:47:59 GMT
Three writers - Heba Amin, Caram Kapp and Stone - were hired by the makers of the TV-series Homeland to add authenticity to the set they were using as a Syrian refugee camp. They were asked to spray pro-Assad graffiti because the producers thought that this is what's common in a Syrian refugee camp (which implies a slight misunderstanding about the whole situation) but instead they went a little bit off script and wrote graffiti reading things such as ' Homeland is racist', ' Homeland is a joke, and it didn’t make us laugh' and ' This show does not represent the views of the artists'. The writer's full statement, including the images below, is online here and worth a read. A great read, thanks for posting. Homeland truly is watermelon.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 15, 2015 10:01:03 GMT
feralthings. Ha ha that's brilliant thx for the link Cheers J
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