Tats Cru does 5th Ave.

From the NY Times:

TATS
Spray paint and nozzles used by Tats Cru while creating painted canvases to be displayed in the windows of Lord & Taylor. (Photo: David Gonzalez/The New York Times)

Biz Markie’s “Just A Friend” from 1989 echoed through Tats Cru’s South Bronx studio, where a hazy cloud of spray paint hung in the air. As the grafffiti artists worked on a mural, they’d stop, lean back to gauge their progress, and then lean in close to do fills and lines.

Now after years of doing walls, they are finally doing windows. Next month their graffiti paintings will be the backdrop to Lord & Taylor’s windows along Fifth Avenue, following in the footsteps of other artists like Red Grooms and Larry Rivers whose work has appeared at the flagship store.

Every now and then a crew member would hum along to the Biz’s rap. “You, you got what I nee-eed, but you say he’s just a friend,” the Biz sang in his famous off-key delivery. “But you say he’s just a friend!”

TATS The crew is preparing the canvases for the 11 windows in their Hunts Point studio.

The music was from a time when the group’s work was a bit more renegade, bringing with it the adrenaline-rush risk of run-ins with the vandal squad. But the crew has long since become the city’s undisputed mural kings whose pieces grace buildings, buses, record covers, movie sets and even a Broadway stage.

“Getting our work on Fifth Avenue is like a gallery show for us,” said Hector Nazario, one of the group’s founding members whose nom-de-graf is Nicer. “How often do we get to put our work legally on Fifth Avenue? I mean, yo, we could have always put it there before. Whether it would have stayed or we got arrested is another question.”

The idea to enlist the South Bronx crew originated with several Lord and Taylor executives who have been scouting established and emerging artists as collaborators for their store windows. One of them knew of Tats through the ex-girlfriend of one of the muralists. In pretty short order, the go-ahead was given.

The crew is preparing the canvases for the 11 windows in their Hunts Point studio, before installing them and putting on the finishing touches at the store in early July. They are working off designs provided by the store – of cityscapes and skyscrapers – and adding their own touches and colors on canvases that are as large as 10 by 15 feet.

“Instead of DKNY on one building, we’ll put a big Tats, and the color’s will be more fun,” said Wilfredo Feleciano, known as Bio. “On one side they want us to do silhouettes. But instead of blond-looking women, we’ll have some with poofy Afros, more ethnic.”

He has only been by the store once, he said, stopping when he saw a crowd one December. “Oh wow,” he said. “They hooked up the windows for Christmas.” His colleague Nicer joked about how they still can’t afford to shop there. And for all the aerosol spray that envelops them when they work, they were surprised when they first entered the store. “Yo,” Nicer said. “Soon as you walk in they’re spraying perfume everywhere!”

Five members of the crew worked in the panels on Thursday, including Sotero “BG 183” Ortiz, and Raoul and David Perre, twin brothers from Germany known as How and Nosm. They were painting a Brooklyn Bridge scene where the arches were shaped like spray paint cans. “This bridge was built by a German,” said How. “This is my interpretation.”

Had he ever done windows before? “Yeah,” he joked. “We painted over them.”

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Posted in Advertising, Billboards, Graffiti, Murals, New York, Tats Cru, Trains | 1 Comment

Nina Solo Show

Nina Pandolfo Solo Show
Aos Nossos Olhos: To Our Eyes
June 30 – August 2

Opening Monday June 30 at 7pm

Galeria Leme
Rua Agostinho Cantu, 88,
Butanã, São Paulo Brazil
CEP 0-5501 010
Tel: 55 11 3814 8184
www.galerialeme.com

Posted in Art Show, Graffiti, Los Angeles, Murals, Nina, Street Art | 1 Comment

Fort Worth Star – Telegrams

We love that we are in the Fort Worth Star – Telegrams Fab Five right up there with “The Man with the Golden Arm” starring Frank Sinatra! and the reissue of “Moon Safari” by Air

Is tagging crime or art? Both sides make compelling arguments. The film moves as fast as the artists, and the interviews are as succinct as the tags.

See the entire Fort Worth Star article here

Posted in Graffiti, News, Press, Street Art | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

LA’s Illegal Billboards

While tagging a freeway in Los Angeles is a felony, billboard companies are allow to put up illegal billboards which haven’t been inspected for safety with impunity….

From the LA Weekly:

Billboards Gone Wild: 4,000 Illegal Billboards Choke L.A.’s Neighborhoods

Is City Hall corrupt, or just inept?
By CHRISTINE PELISEK

Shortly before Thanksgiving, a furtive crew of workers for L.A. Outdoor Advertising poured a cement foundation next to the Harbor Freeway and anchored a huge metal structure into the wet cement. A few days and roughly $100,000 later, the crew had erected L.A.’s latest illegal billboard atop an equally illegal 10-ton superstructure that can be removed only with a wrecker.

Adding insult to injury, the whole thing was built in full view of the windowed offices of Los Angeles city billboard inspectors — a tiny, and some say incredibly inept, group who are failing in City Hall’s purported effort to find and remove an estimated 4,000 illegal billboards blighting L.A.

So pathetic is the battle against outdoor advertising companies that the massive billboard went unnoticed for months by leaders at City Hall, including big-time billboard proponent and council member Ed Reyes, in whose district the sign sits. It was left to irritated commuters, like pissed-off clutter critic Dennis Hathaway, who spoke up at a January public hearing, where city engineer Eric Cabrera called L.A. Outdoor’s ballsy stunt an “egregious disregard of the law.”

Onlookers recall that when an attorney representing L.A. Outdoor stood to defend the sign, Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety Commission President Marsha Brown, a political appointee of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s, spat: “Your client should go to jail!”

But Brown’s comment was just talk.

To read the rest of the article visit the LA Weekly here

Posted in Advertising, Billboards, Los Angeles, News | Leave a comment

culturenow.com review!

“a beautifully shot and edited documentary that asks us to re-think the borders of public space and art.”

Samantha Skinazi of culturenow.com did a nice little review of Bomb It – here it is:

Jon Reiss’ global graffiti documentary hard hits a vital contemporary nerve. Where is the public space? Who owns it? And why do advertisers have the right to control our visual landscape with images that are often vulgar and disturbing? A consumer culture (that we all very readily accept) tells us that money buys these rights of control and access. Bomb It challenges this. The film suggests that there is nothing natural, neutral, or normal about this relationship. I’m not saying this is a Socialist film; it’s a beautifully shot and edited documentary that asks us to re-think the borders of public space and art. Interviews with graffiti artists and writers from Los Angeles, New York, Sao Paulo, Paris, Barcelona, London, Capetown, and Tokyo re-situate graffiti outside the prison gates and inside a riveting dialogue about how we as humans negotiate a place for ourselves in controlled environments. Chaz Bojorquez, Cornbread, Revs, Os Gemeos, KRS One, Blek Le Rat, and Shepard Fairey deconstruct commonplace notions that graffiti is thoughtless and ugly and always gang-related. The film gives graffiti back its history and philosophical and social virility as an outsider art movement. The international perspective reveals graffiti culture as something innately human, dating back to the earliest days in caves – a mixed drive to say: “Hello world, I’m here,” and to use art as a weapon to fight and express the alienation and ugliness of modern cities.
by Samantha Skinazi ~ 16|Jun|2008

Posted in Global Graffiti Documentary, Graffiti, Graffiti Films, Headline, News, Review, Street Art | Leave a comment