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Graffiti - Graffiti Tagging Crews



It doesn't matter where you live in the world, chances are you've seen graffiti somewhere around your local community. It seems to spring up in every culture, although it tends to be more prevalent in big cities.

But is it vandalism? Or is it art? That's a difficult question to answer, mainly because there are so many different types and styles of graffiti. The most basic form of graffiti is "tagging" - which is usually a simple graphic, usually letters, perhaps a play on the creator's initials or nicknames. Often small and monochrome, it's probably one of the most annoying and frustrating types of graffiti, because it is small enough to deface almost any surface, and is almost universally condemned as having no artistic merit.

Graffiti, however, isn't restricted to tagging. On larger surfaces, many graffiti artists employ multiple colors and intricate designs to create their pictures. This is the type of graffiti that starts to cross the line into being artistic. It's this type of graffiti art that is now being showcased in a number of art galleries, both in the USA and around the world.

The other problem with graffiti as art is that the issue is clouded by the location of the art. If some of these stunning designs were created on a canvas, or a wall specially set aside for the purpose, then it would be easier to recognize them as art. Unfortunately most graffiti is placed on private property, without the owner's consent, and so is less likely to be viewed as a welcome addition.

Around the world, communities and governments have become more vigilant in their attempts to reduce the amount of graffiti. In many places there are community groups or government funded teams who guarantee to clean up graffiti in 24 hours after it's reported. Trains in New York were given new coatings that allowed paint to just be "dissolved" off their surfaces.

In my own local area, the sale of spray paint to persons under 18 is illegal, and all spray paints are kept in locked display cupboards. Another area has a team of painters who regularly go around and repaint any fences that have been covered in graffiti. One homeowner I know has had his fence repainted 7 times so far! Over time, however, the amount of graffiti reappearing is reducing, which is a victory for the opponents of graffiti.

Still, simply removing the problem may in fact be a loss to the artistic community in general. If graffiti is considered in its most highly refined form, then are we in fact stopping artistic development in its tracks by making it impossible for budding graffiti artists to practice their craft?

When you illegally deface someone else's property, no matter how beautiful the art you create, you have still committed a crime. Maybe what we need to do is find ways that graffiti artists can learn and practice their craft, without needing to deface hundreds of properties in the process. Some communities now provide blank spaces and invite local graffiti artists to paint them. Others have graffiti walls, where anyone can paint whatever they want.

Maybe there needs to be a shift in the thinking of graffiti artists, so they can discover the value of painting on paper, rather than walls. Would the great painters of the past still be as famous today if they had painted on walls, rather than on canvas? The problem is complex, so finding a solution that makes everyone happy is unlikely to be simple.

 
 
 
Some Other Useful Web Resources

1. Know The Ledge........Mode 2.......Know The Ledge........Mode 2......Know Th...
... How did you get into painting graffiti? I was bored after sitting ... there, but it must be said that crews like Public Enemy did in fact ... massively. We were mostly into tagging and parties then, that was ...
http://www.knowtheledge.net/mode2.htm

2. Articles - Graffiti Art
... artists to work together in crews, which are groups of ... effects. The forms of graffiti art have developed through ... from the mere gestures of tagging to established conventional ...
http://www.hiphop-network ...icles/graffitiart.asp

3.

4. graffiti-thilo.com - thilo gm_dbs_caos, giessen
name: Thilo aka T-Low city: Giessen country: Germany born: 1978 writing: startet tagging 1992, styles since 1993 crews: GM (Giessen Maniacs 2004) members: Warz, Pray, Scid, DJ Robcut, Score, Thilo ...
http://www.graffiti-thilo.com/profile.htm

5.
... of associated artists became "crews". The movement spread on the ... where hobos had popularized tagging, and spread nationwide with ... earliest active women on the graffiti scene. Also known as Sandra ...
http://graffiti.ask.dyndns.dk/

6. WorkingDefinition - Thesis - Chapter 8 - Taking the System
... a look at some of the crews will turn up kids from the ... surprisingly, the earliest graffiti artists gained notoriety by ... recourse. The first time this tagging movement received media ...
http://www.workingdefinit ...m/Thesis/Chapter8.htm

7. Parramatta City Council : Graffiti Management Plan
... on 95% of occasions for Council crews and contractors Infrastructure ... removal processes Provide graffiti removal information to the ... that experience chronic tagging Whole of community approach ...
http://www.parracity.nsw. ...ublications/graffiti/

8. History Reviews
History Books E-Book-Store-->History-->227 Related Subjects: Military History US History More ...
http://www.e-book-store.c ...tory/History_227.html

9. Interview with DES
... Creations. Much props to those crews for their history and their ... than that artist, but because graffiti has been labeled a "taboo ... that are bombing, piecing, tagging I say Don't let the art die ...
http://www.ill-kids.com/interviews/1DES.htm

10. Corner Carryout In a Crossfire on An Urban Frontier
... Page B01 The graffiti that fill the walls of the vestibule at the New Dragon Carryout tells the story: R.I.P. tributes to young people killed right outside, boastful tagging by the crews that sell ...
http://www.criminaljustic ...ercarryout_oct11.html

11. Types of graffiti - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... The graffiti vandal became a "writer," and groups of associated "writers" became "crews". The movement spread on the streets, returned to the railroads where hobos had popularized tagging, and ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_graffiti

12. john t. unger studio: Open Source Art Projects
... art, culture, collaboration, street art, tagging, graffiti, design, opensource October 27, 2005 in ... ... placed there at the request of television news crews, who had complained that the wild lines and ...
http://johntunger.typepad ...t_projects/index.html


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