Punishment to fit the crime

February 3, 2008

Likely in response to the 15-year-old graffiti artist who was stabbed to death by a neighborhood resident last weekend in Manurewa, New Zealand, the government announced the start of a program designed to crackdown on graffiti. The program called Stop (Stop Tagging Our Place) will include legislation to fund anti-graffiti programs, limit sales of spray paint and increase law enforcement efforts.  

One part of the crackdown is an increased use of ‘restorative justice.’ Apparently taggers who are caught would be forced to clean up some of their own work.

“I think some of the most effective punishment is when taggers have to clean up their tags in the full glare of the public,” said Auckland’s Police Minister Annette King.

I’m not sure if it will work, but it is an interesting idea. Maybe taggers would be less inclined to paint on illegal walls if they themselves would have to paint over what I can only assume they consider to be great art work.  

As Seen In Puerto Rico

February 3, 2008

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Graffiti found in San Juan, Puerto Rico

Photo by Kayla Webley

A 15-year-old boy in New Zealand was stabbed to death while reportedly painting graffiti on a fence in a suburban neighborhood near Auckland. A 50-year-old businessman, who lives near the fence, appeared in court for the murder.

In response to the murder of the tagger the mayor of the town said, “Graffiti is an issue we absolutely want to get on top of.”

 Yeah. So is murder.

 A New Zealand newspaper article: Does graffiti cause murder?

Glow-in-the-Dark Graffiti?

February 2, 2008

This gadget blogger obviously doesn’t approve of street artists using glow-in-the-dark for graffiti, but I think it would be rad to see (on a commissioned wall, of course).  Apparently when the paint dries in day light it looks like a fine off-white powder maybe this would be a less-offensive form of graffiti?

As Seen In Chicago Alleys

January 28, 2008

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Little Village, Chicago

Meeting of Styles 2007

As this blogger points out, the problem with graffiti art being anonymous, is that when you stumble upon a really great piece there is no information card attached to the artwork to tell you who made it, when it was painted and what they were referencing with the work.

New technology being tested in Hamburg, Germany, by the new media agency Jung von Matt, would give the viewers information they are looking for. The technology would allow artists to affix interactive stickers to their work that, when photographed with a mobile phone camera, explain the details of the graffiti.

Hamburg’s first interactive wall, called Nextwall, allows viewers to watch videos of the artists painting the wall,  download wallpapers for their phone and virtually ‘tag’ the wall with an “I was here” feature. Another blogger notes the technology can also be expanded to include a comprehensive guide to the graffiti via Bluetooth and allow users to download coupons to area stores.

I wonder if making graffiti more informational would cause more people to foster an appreciation for the art. Graffiti is often just understood and appreciated by the artists themselves and their close circle of followers — could this new technology bring graffiti to the masses?

An alleged graffiti artist was tried in an Ontario, Calif., court for spray painting at a local skate park. Nothing new, right? Except that in this newspaper’s report, the judge himself acknowledged that the blue-colored abstract looked “more like a painting than mere graffiti.”

The man was still sentenced to 100 hours of community service for the painting, because — art or not — it was a problem for the city, the judge said. A problem that cost the city $1,300 to remove.

As Seen In Chicago Alleys

January 25, 2008

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In Little Village, Chicago

Please note this is not what I would consider a positive example of graffiti, but I do try to show both sides of the graffiti I find. This truck was parked at the site of the meeting of styles event, from what I have heard, this was done by kids who wanted to be a part of the event, but were not participants. 

An event in Birmingham in the U.K. will open the line of communication between graffiti artists and community members as they tackle the debate over graffiti art vs. graffiti vandalism.

A group of Birmingham’s graffiti artists will explain the different between graffiti art and graffiti tagging, and how they as artists can help reduce the level of graffiti tagging by harnessing the energy and creativity behind graffiti into something more positive and legal.

The event will discuss one way of reducing illegal tagging – providing ‘managed’ legal graffiti art zones.

An open dialogue between graffiti artists and community members is essential to increasing the understanding of graffiti as an art form and not just an illegal act. I would like to see events of this type occurring on this side of the pond — they may lead to the most productive efforts in the war against illegal tagging.

As Seen In Chicago Alleys

January 21, 2008

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By Like.

Chicago’s South Side