Key Pages
- |Changes [Feb 26, 2009]
The camera...and so was i
"(A) Today is the first day of the rest of your life.
"(B) Its the first day of the rest of my finals! You ass
"--Meyer basement, on a desk"
An example of graffiti on the Stanford campus, but the story itself is something else. Check it out in In the academic sense... below.
Themes:
I'm interested in art in public spaces, and how one might even try to define that topic. Murals, sure. Statues and installations, yes. Parks, why not? But graffiti? Advertising billboards?
I'm particularly into graffiti. Here are some examples I found while I was studying abroad in Chile:
I added a little piece of graffiti that I found in Bratislava, Slovakia this summer. At first I found it sort of disturbing but then I understood the sentiment. The oddest thing was that Reagan died later that day (or at least that was when I found out about it). The following day, there was an 'altar' of sorts in the center of town with an American flag. The whole thing was laced with irony.
[Alex]: I'd agree with Serena that graffiti tells us something about under-represented groups. I'd say there's an intuitive leap to label graffiti as anti-establishment (and the photo below does nothing to counter that). I wouldn't say that's wrong, but I'd also argue that sometimes graffiti serves as an interesting study in conformism.
Here's a piece that I came across in Sicily - along with your picture and the countless other examples of anti-American graffiti in Europe and elsewhere, it starts to paint a picture of a disgruntled European underclass chafing under American superiority (not hegemony but a distaste for a Bush-led America taking a proactive foreign policy?). But where do their views come from? A carefully considered analysis of Middle-Eastern and global politics or a more gutteral reaction against a differently cultured assertion of power? The conformity of rebellion seems to be something that has become glorified in Europe lately. Isn't this another form of mindless followership in parallel to the flag-waving, "Pray for Our Troops" warmongers of our own culture?
I know a lot of graffiti in Pompeii was focused on a) brothels b) games and c) local politics; does anyone know of any examples of ancient graffiti that deals with anything beyond local politics? Any "Romanes eunt domus" out there? Or any ancient graffiti that's more image than message, as Dave brought up?
NB: These pictures are included on the page Art or not?
Zangemeister, Carolus, ed. Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, volume IV: Inscriptiones Parietariae Pompeianae, Herculanenses, Stabianae. Berolini, 1871.
http://www.graffiticreator.net/