Aug 30, 2010

Graffiti Summit to Save Art in Schools


Graffiti Summit to Save Art in Schools

For decades the Tri-State school system fought to keep graffiti out of schools, but now graffiti artists may be the last hope for their under-funded arts programs.

New Jersey high school P.S. 15 has issued an invitation to “turn their walls into the ultimate canvas,” according P.S. 15 Vice-Principal Jose Correa. And from August 28th- 29th they will partner with the Urban Art Foundation to host this year’s “Meeting of Styles,” an international gathering of the world’s finest urban artists that is for the graffiti world the World Cup, Super Bowl and a United Nations summit all rolled into one.

Artists from more than ten countries will be participating, including international urban art sensations Prisco and MS BLESS from Puerto Rico, and Ame72 from Israel. Each artist will be given wall space in P.S. 15 located at 98 Oak St. in Paterson, NJ. Art lovers are invited to watch as the gray concrete is transformed in an explosion of color and movement. Only the best of the best have a spot at the Meeting of Styles and for this brief time all rivalry is put aside. Artists who are usually competing with one another, whether on the street or for lucrative contracts in the world of Hip-Hop marketing, come together to share their techniques and advance the art form.

Graffiti artists from all over the world say they are excited at the chance to practice on the soil that gave birth to their movement. Some wereoriginally from New York or New Jersey, but because of harsh anti-graffiti laws enacted in the ’80s, they were forced to take their art into exile. “In America we were hunted. In Europe a lot of guys got rich,” says artist SUEWORKS who is the chief organizer of this Meeting of Styles. “But our roots are here. Finally graffiti can come home.”

The new appreciation for graffiti art and culture is going further than ever before thanks to the work of the Urban Art Foundation that is sponsoring the event. The newly formed New York City non-profit has become the ACLU of urban art. “We are taking back the street for artists in the same place it was taken away,” says Eric Granowsky, Executive Director of the Urban Art Foundation, “the courts.”

In 1985 New York City Mayor Ed Koch made possession of spray paint illegal in the hands of minors and the City began aggressively prosecuting artists. At the same time, “The Buff,” a system for chemically washing away spray paint from NYC subway trains was removing the artists’ primary canvas. Not only could an artist be arrested and face vastly disproportionate fines and prison sentences, but days of work could be wiped away in an instant with nothing more than soap and water.

The Urban Art Foundation is now using the same legal system that disenfranchised graffiti to defend it. “We are creating a fund to pay the legal fees of unfairly prosecuted graffiti artists and to repeal discriminatory laws,” says Craig Dershowitz, Co-founder of UAF. “And we’re fighting legal battles to have classic graffiti murals preserved as landmarks.”

Granowsky, who made his fortune as a NYC real estate developer says that these are treasures the City cannot afford to lose. “Books are written to sell to a market, art is created to appeal to collectors and critics, movies are made to sell lunch boxes, graffiti is pure. Not only are some of these murals part of iconic New York,” he says, “but contrary to popular belief, the right kind of graffiti actually pushes property values up. Just look at Williamsburg.”

The Meeting of Styles is also an example of the way the Urban Art Foundation is using the electric interest in graffiti to help raise funds to make sure that art stays in New York and New Jersey classrooms. Sponsorship money and proceeds generated on site will go directly to restore arts programs in schools.

But more, organizers say that the urban art represented at The Meeting of Styles takes art out of captivity in museums and private galleries and puts it back into the hands of ordinary people to enjoy and encourages young people to develop their creativity. “These guys made art cool,” says SUEWORKS of participating graffiti legends like REE, CRAINE, SNAKE, KING TWO, PART ONE, STAN, and SNOW. They inspired us as kids and with The Meeting of Styles, they will reach a whole new generation and treat the City to a display like it hasn’t seen in more than 20 years. The art is back.”

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Craig Dershowitz, above, is co-founding the Urban Arts Foundation, which will try to landmark graffiti such as that by Espo (Steve Powers).


The underground world of graffiti artists is coming out this weekend.

For years, so-called taggers have converged in New York, mostly under public radar, to advance what they say is an art form. Some say it's a crime.

The first public "Meeting of the Styles" at P.S. 15 in Paterson, N.J., aims to change the latter notion. Artists from around the world, rivals and crewmates alike, have been invited to decorate walls at the school.

A group called the Urban Art Foundation will be launched at the meeting. Fashioning itself as an ACLU for those charged with graffiti-related crimes, the group plans to raise legal funds, create a database of attorneys and even attempt to turn some of the city's high-profile graffiti spots into landmarks or protected areas.

"We want to decriminalize art and at the same time promote it for future generations," said Craig Dershowitz, co-founder of the group, which is in the process of becoming a nonprofit.

The city cracks down on graffiti aggressively, from subway trains and tunnels to bridges and buildings. There is a vandals unit in the police department with a database and "Worst of the Worst book" of the 100 or so graffiti vandals that they identify as the top menaces. The mayor has an anti-graffiti task force with representatives from various departments.

New York Police Department officials declined to comment on efforts to battle graffiti. According to statistics, graffiti-related arrests have grown from 2,962 in 2006 to 4,158 last year. This year there have been 2,685 arrests as of Aug. 22.

Graffiti proponents argue that the punishments for what they do is too severe. Though some agree that they break the law, they say that being sent to prison to serve time is too harsh a punishment.

Fred Kress, coordinator of C.A.G.E.—Citizens Against Graffiti Everywhere—disagreed. Mr. Kress oversees a group that formed in 2006 to clean-up graffiti in Queens and provide intelligence to authorities. Graffiti, he said, has been a huge blight and menace across Queens. "We're trying to take down graffiti on every level," Mr. Kress said. "We want to see them reformed or locked up and I would like them to pay restitution. These are vandals, certainly not artists. If it's so artful, why aren't they doing it on their own cars and homes?"

Those in the graffiti world, say New York's historic role in the graffiti subculture is a draw for artists and tourists across the world. Thousands of photos of ever-changing graffiti hotspots are posted on the Flickr website every day, for example.

And there are a handful of informal and formal graffiti and street art tours.

Many individuals who are charged with graffiti-related crimes eventually turn to legal street work after tiring of run-ins with the police. Indeed, most of the people forming the Urban Art Foundation no longer do graffiti, but have moved on to sanctioned or legal urban artwork.

Sueworks, 38, who lives in New Jersey, gave up plastering his tag after spending a couple of weeks in jail and ending up on probation. "I was a young kid, just trying to get my name out there, trying to get noticed," said Mr. Sueworks, whose tag is SUE (Styles Under Evolution).

Now, he has a small graphic design company and designs logos and album covers. "You can bring graffiti in a positive way and bring light to cities and have them preserve this art when it's kind of dying on the street and hidden more in galleries," he said.

Aug 29, 2010

I'M A RIDER 07

CJ'3




At 26, C.J. has already made a name for himself as a designer, animator, illustrator and graphic artist both in the United States and abroad...This past spring he traveled to Israel to join graffiti artists to paint murals with collage and distressed painting techniques on bomb shelters and an indoor recreational center in Israel, at the Gaza border. Artists 4 Israel, the New York based non-profit organization that sponsored the trip, defined the mission as an opportunity to foster artistic exchanges between Israeli and international artists to promote peaceful and multicultural environments.

PHOTOGRAPHIC EVIDENCE

Aug 27, 2010

LO-HEAD 1997 FLASHBACK

Cool, Photographer Jax caught me in central park posting stickers in 1997. Checkout the steez lo-head Polo Sport my dudes!

Aug 26, 2010

BLACK IRISH - MAKE MY DAY (Official Video)

Big shout-out to Black Irish for come out official with the track and music video.
Black Irish drops the first visual off the upcoming album “CadillacSupaClova“. The music video of “Make My Day”, produced by Da Beatminerz, was shot at our recording studio and at a bar in Hoboken, NJ. Shout out to Logrithmic on directing and editing the video.
Oh-yeah! Sueworks in the opening scene. Good Look'n Homie!

Aug 25, 2010

Aug 23, 2010

VIDEO FLASHBACK

GS 60 FLASHBACK

SUE, KH, LUST

Aug 22, 2010

Aug 21, 2010

SUEWORKS ON SIRIUS XM RADIO

Thanks to Lord Sear and Cent for inviting me to the Extended drunk mix show on shade45 sirius/XM satelite radio. Had a great time, got ripped! Now I know why they call it The extended drunk mix. LOL!












Aug 20, 2010

AOK CREW & SUEWORKS FLORIDA

Do u see me? when I paint I always blend into my environment. Thanks to the AOK Crew from Florida for putting me on their wall.

Aug 19, 2010

LARGEST 3D GRAFFITI MURAL

Unique Photo is getting a makeover sponsored by Olympus! artists Sue Works and MEAR will be transforming the dull side of our building into an incredible piece of art.
Read full article: uniquephoto.blogspot.com






BENEFIT SHOW

Aug 18, 2010

MEETING OF STYLES 2010

CLICK ON FLIER TO VIEW LARGER

Aug 17, 2010

MONSTERS - (2010) Official Trailer

T.DEE SOLO EXHIBITION

Shout-out to my homie T.Dee for coming back to the art scene. Graff needs real artists.

Aug 15, 2010

JERSEY FRESH JAM

SUE

SUE & SNOW

MEK & AZMA

2ILL & KA

DEMER

BRONX TEAM

SEW

ERA PFE

KES PFE

DEMER, MEK, AZMA

FRESH PAINT NYC BOOK

Sueworks comes out in this book with Ree, Teck, MTA wall.


Bill Schon has shared the cover image of his new book, Fresh Paint NYC, that will be coming out soon. This particular book is a look at the New York graffiti scene in the past 10 years. Focusing on that time period comes more recent work and people that are still part of the scene now. Being 176 pages in length with over 400 pictures this will be a welcome addition to your art book collection.

Buy: Fresh Paint Book

Aug 14, 2010

THE RUMBLERS CAR SHOW

ENVELOPE EVOLUTION

THANKS TO THE BILLS WE GET EVERY MONTH, I FOUND A GOOD WAY TO USE THEM.




Aug 13, 2010

THE FANS!

"They love us, They really do!"

Sprayground

Very nice advertisement fom Sprayground, oh yeah! and now a word from my sponsor.

"Los Angeles super model Megan Daniels photoshoot wearing the latest Sprayground products. On location in Los Angeles, California. More Photos and Video Coming Soon."
Enjoy!




www.sprayground.net

TURNTABLE-IZM SHOW EPISODE 10 & 11



EPISODE #11
EPISODE #10