Beyond the Street: The 100 Leading Figures in Urban Art

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Beyond the Street: The 100 Leading Figures in Urban Art” is a behemoth of a book loaded with a who’s-who of the contemporary urban art scene edited by Patrick Nguyen and Stuart. Surveying the work from figureheads such as Aaron Rose, Wooster Collective, Deitch Projects, Stephan Doitschinoff, Faile, Brad Downey and Swoon, in-depth interviews supplement loads of color images and artist biographies to create a 400-page tome of information.

Below, Cool Hunting gets an exclusive preview of the book (it comes out in the U.S. on 20 May 2010) with this interview excerpt conducted by Nguyen with New York-based artist Steve Powers, a.k.a. ESPO.

Londoners can catch the U.K. book launch party the Friday, 7 May 2010, from 6-9 pm at Phillips de Pury & Company on Howick Place. For those in New York, the event takes place Thursday, 27 May 2010, from 6-9 pm at Deitch Projects.

Pick up the book from Gestalten or pre-order from Amazon.

What led you to become an artist in the first place?

It was just raw, desperate hunger for attention. Because I grew up in a household with a lot of other children, drawing was a way to separate myself from the pack. So I got into it as a three-year-old and have been a compulsive drawer ever since.

Is it true that you were an art school dropout? If so, why did you quit?

Yeah, I dropped out of two different art schools. I just had a sneaking suspicion as I was handing over my tuition that you probably didn’t need anything they were teaching at art school to be an artist. Like being a musician, either you have it or you don’t. If you have the talent and you put in the hours and you get lucky, art school’s not going to help you anyway.

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When did you start doing graffiti?

I was doing graffiti as a teenager, basically as a sophomore in high school in the suburbs of Philadelphia. It was something new to me. It was just brutally breaking out of the neighborhoods of New York and Philadelphia and starting to go national with “Style Wars” and “Subway Art.” And it had everything I wanted in art: color, design, line, it was illegal, but not that illegal—all the things that captivate teenagers. Typically in those days, in the mid-eighties in Philadelphia and New York, it was really a young person’s game. They’d start at 12 and were done at 18. I started a little late at 16, and I didn’t really finish until I was 30.

Continue reading and see more images after the jump.

Could you describe some of the background to the ESPO tags you used to do on storefront grates in New York?

At a New Year’s party in 1997, I got in an argument with a graffiti video director/producer. I basically laid out the theory that I could paint anywhere in New York any time I wanted, and get over without getting arrested for it. He said, “Absolutely not. It can’t be done.” It was something I’d been thinking about for a while. At the time, Mayor Giuliani wanted people to be responsible for the graffiti on their own properties and for owners to be fined if they didn’t remove it. Well, the property owners in New York are an extremely powerful group of people, so that never really came to pass. But I liked the idea of doing something so fundamentally benign like painting over graffiti and then turning it into graffiti at the last minute. I didn’t anticipate the reaction it would get, but once I’d done it a couple of times, I decided to keep going and ended up doing around 75 grates. The rule of thumb in New York is that if you’re doing something new, you can’t just do it once or twice; otherwise, the next person’s going to pick it up and take all the credit for it. So in doing it as many times as I could, I really held on to the idea for myself.

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When did you stop painting illegally and become a “respectable member of society?”

I stopped doing graffiti in ’99. I’d been painting for 15 years by that point and had done everything two or three times over. I really just wanted to focus on making art. To me, the term graffiti art is an oxymoron. Graffiti does its own thing; it doesn’t need to aspire to anything more than graffiti. It’s cool if it does, but I think calling yourself a graffiti artist places an unnecessary burden on you. You’re probably not going to make that good graffiti, and you’re probably not going to make that good art if you’re trying to do both at the same time.


Quick Fruit Concept Packaging

Une série de visuels présentant un packaging très intéressant pour un jus de fruit, édité en 3 saveurs. Ce design judicieux sous forme de fruit découpé est l’oeuvre du designer Sud-africain Marcel Buerkle, apportant une vraie identité au produit. Plus d’images dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

Label Love: Get Eco-Chic With Mr. Larkin

imageBeing a San Francisco native, I’ve grown up with recycling, composting, and other Earth friendly habits that’s become second nature. One aspect of eco-living I’m still having trouble with is actually fashion! I love buying vintage and second-hand clothing, but have a hard time finding organic and other eco-friendly clothing that I like. So I was pleasantly surprised to find a collection designed right here in San Francisco! Mr. Larkin is a young label designed by Casey Larkin where the entire collection uses organic and sustainable textiles and techniques such as using organic cotton, peace silks (silk harvested after the silkworms emerge from their cocoons) and dying them with maple leaves, berries, and other natural dyes. One of my favorite looks from her Spring 2010 collection is the Olivia dress which is made from a hemp/silk blend hand-dyed with local Japanese maple leaves and encrusted with rhinestones from the 1940s. Mr. Larkin can be found in boutiques around the US and online at Beklina. Take a look at my slideshow to see more of my favorites from the Spring 2010 collection.

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Got, Got, Got Need

To raise money for his local hospital, illustrator Elliott Quince is producing 32 handpainted portraits of players in the forthcoming World Cup, all in the style of football stickers

Remember the Fussball Helden book produced in time for the last World Cup? Quince’s Got, Got, Got Need project is in similar vein, the big difference being that he has painted a portrait of a player from each team, all of which will be sold to benefit the Neonatal Unit at Luton and Dunstable Hospital which cared for Quince’s daughter last year.

Quince’s subjects include Wayne Rooney (top, looking particularly handsome), Lionel Messi

 

Nemanja Vidic of Serbia

 

Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal

 

and Stephen Pienaar of hosts South Africa

From June 10, for the duration of the tournament, all 32 will be displayed at The Offside Bar and Gallery in Islington. All will be for sale (if you’d like to buy one, you can register your interest via this website).

More info here

Trestles Beach footbridge by Dan Brill Architects

Dan Brill Architects of the UK are among 12 international practices shortlisted to design a pedestrian footbridge for Trestles Beach, a surf spot in southern California. (more…)

Design of hard drives seeks to disappear

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pOne of the things they taught us at ID school was that a product about to go extinct will, in its dying design throes, begin to resemble its successor; its designers will fruitlessly mimic the look of the incoming technology in a bid to prevent the incumbent from being eclipsed. Thus landline phones, the thinking goes, will in their last iteration look like cell phones, and even muscle cars like the Mustang of the ’60s sadly started to look more like the Honda CVCC’s of the ’70s./p

pWhich brings us to an interesting question: What will external hard drives look like before they disappear? Since the replacement technology–offsite storage–is invisible, what will they mimic?/p

pIn some cases they will mimic…nothing, or should we say, nothingness. For example LaCie’s line of Sam-Hecht- and Neil-Poulton-designed hard drives are ultra-minimal black boxes with as much in the way of visual features as Wonder Woman’s invisible jet. /p

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pOn the other hand Seagate, which A HREF=”http://blogs.forbes.com/velocity/2010/05/05/newly-competitive-seagate-spins-new-ideas-in-hard-drives/” announced its revamped-design hard drives/A this morning, is mimicking something else sitting on some customers’ desks–Apple laptops. /p

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pBoth companies’ designs seems to be trying to disappear, either vying for invisibility or seeking to blend into objects already on the desk surface like a chameleon. Almost like they’re saying “Maybe if they can’t see us, they won’t throw us away!”br /
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Jean Nouvel Still Upset He Had to Trim MoMA Tower

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Back in October, starchitect Jean Nouvel finally won his battle over protesters and leery city officials when he got the go ahead for his MoMA tower plans. But that doesn’t seem to have been enough for him, given that he still seems pretty miffed that, in order to get the structure all the necessary thumbs up, he was going to have to shave off 200 feet from its top (and installing some shiny new fins to the side). He recently spoke to New York, offering up some fairly damning statements, wherein he just can’t understand why people dislike the building and “Why Manhattan, of all places, is afraid of heights?” According to the piece, there’s still a lot of revising to do in order to get the building’s plans to reflect the approved changes and it sounds like Nouvel’s not even certain he wants to go ahead with it anymore. Here’s a bit:

In Nouvel’s view, Tower Verre is not just another commercial high-rise but an emblem of its moment, a testament to the city’s self-renewing vitality, and a crown on its mutable skyline. “We’re in midtown,” he says. “A place where we have to make a real skyscraper. It emerges from the skyline and you say: Okay! That’s where MoMA is! It testifies to what the skyscraper is at the beginning of this century. It’s not a copy of what the twentieth century did. It brings new forms of expression. The corsetlike structure on the perimeter of the building, the way it follows setback rules with a dynamic form of ascent that’s not the habitual stepwise manner, a structure that erases the distinction between outdoors and in — these things tie this building to the culture of these last few years.”

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Paul Eluard Cultural Centre by OFF Architecture

Paris studio OFF Architecture have won a competition to design a cultural centre in Cugnaux, France, with their design featuring a woven wooden façade. (more…)

Help Mom Relax For Mother’s Day With Pampering Spa Products

imageMother’s Day is all about taking a moment to show the most important woman in our life how much she means to us and how much we appreciate all that she has done and still does for us. It’s no secret that being a mom is a full-time job so help give her a well-deserved break with pampering products that bring the spa experience into the comforts of home. A one-time trip to a spa day is no doubt fun and totally worth it, but spa kits and products for home can be used multiple times and allows mom to indulge herself on more days than just one. Whether it’s a mani-pedi that makes mom feel more pampered and put together, or a relaxing soak in the tub with the works that she needs to unwind, click on the slideshow for some favorite spa-at-home gifts!

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Warren Buffet: Quote

Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.
—Warren Buffet by way of Benjamin Graham

–> Source