Posts Tagged ‘CCTV’

LONDON///$$$///BANKSY ON THE AUCTION BLOCK…

February 7th, 2008

banksyauction2.jpg
“Wot eew lookin at?”…

We may be balls deep in a foreclosure crisis and the beginning of a big, old-fashioned recession, but you’d never know it from the results of Sotheby’s first (and frighteningly titled) “Urban Art Auction” that took place this week. British Bad Boy BANKSY made up the bulk of the sale’s offerings, that also included work from FAILE, BLEK LE RAT, KEITH HARING, ADAM NEATE, SPACE INVADER, ANTHONY MICALLEF, and Japanese Pop artists AYA TAKANO, CHIHO AOSHIMA, and TAKASHI MURAKAMI. We’re not sure Takashi Murakami appreciates being classified as an “urban artist” but then again, we’re not sure Sotheby’s cares. Nonetheless, as predicted, Mr Banks stole the show with his top piece fetching a jaw-dropping $443,489 USD (these ARE just spray painted stencils, mind you). With the Pound Sterling, well, “sound as a Pound,” it doesn’t seem like this overheated street art scene is going to die down anytime soon (even a Space Invader piece sold for $32,678 USD in the auction). Our advice to old-fashioned painters spending hundreds of hours hunched over their easels? Adopt a nom de guerre, cut yourself some stencils, rack some paint, and cash in NOW! “Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheet’ed?” HAVE A LOOK: Read the rest of this entry »

LONDON///CONSERVING BANKSY…

November 11th, 2007

banksconsv4.jpg
Banksy’s revenge: City workers maintain his bombs…

Nary a week creeps by without some news regarding our favorite art outlaw turned high art demigod, BANKSY, but this week’s notice in the EVENING STANDARD that the London district of Islington has given Banksy’s street works official protection was trumped only by the revelation that Islington’s city workers were now being trained as art conservators (using taxpayers’ funds) so that they are able to touch up and otherwise mend Banksy’s street installations that get defaced by other taggers:

COUNCIL ADDS ITS OWN TOUCH TO A BANKSY
By Jack Lefley, Evening Standard

Works by maverick street artist Banksy are being restored by council workers to protect them from graffiti vandals. One piece in Islington has been repaired five times by workmen who paint over the offending “tags”. A worker was spotted retouching the artist’s “Tate Gallery” piece in Martineau Road, near Arsenal’s Emirates Stadium.

Banksy’s work sells for six-figure sums to Hollywood stars such as Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. But some of his pieces that appear in public places without permission have been condemned as vandalism. Tower Hamlets council has threatened to remove any work by the artist that appears on its patch without permission.

But it seems that Islington makes a clear distinction between his creations and that of the graffiti vandals ” tagging” over his work. One onlooker thought the workmen were about to remove the piece in Islington on Monday afternoon and stopped to remonstrate with them. Vicky Bamforth, 40, of Hackney, said: “I was driving past and got out because I thought they were about to try to get rid of it. I asked them what they were doing and they were very cagey. But eventually they admitted that it kept getting vandalised and they were repairing it.”

She added: “A lot of people in the area really like Banksy’s work and it’s a bit worrying the council thinks anyone with a paintbrush is qualified to restore pieces worth thousands. “At what point does it stop being a Banksy and start being a collaboration with Islington council?”

Islington today defended its policy to clean up and repair the artist’s work. It insisted it was spending taxpayers’ money on the operation in response to residents’ demands. Deputy leader and executive member for environment, Lucy Watt, said: “We take a very hard line on graffiti and remove it within 24 hours when it is reported to us. However, residents have been telling us Banksy is in a class of his own, his art sells for thousands, and they don’t want us to remove the work. Because of the quality and renown of Banksy’s work in Islington many people want to see it preserved.”

banksconsv5.jpg
A couple more strokes and “Banksy is shite” all but disappears…

banksconsv3.jpg
The old man, nearly good as new. Banksy 10,000, world, naught…

banksconsv2.jpg
Don’t even think about calling, your neighbours will kill and your children…

Exclusive

Features

NEWS///OPENING NITE: SHEPARD FAIREY’S “SUPPLY & DEMAND” AT CINCINNATI CAC BREAKS ATTENDANCE RECORD

Screen shot 20s10-02-21 at 7.54.39 PM
Friday was a big nite in the Midwest when SHEPARD FAIREY’s Ohio installment of his traveling retrospective “Supply & Demand” opened at the CINCINNATI CONTEMPORARY ARTS CENTER and shattered the institution’s all-time attendance record.

Read Full Article

NYC///ART HYPE///MR BRAINWASH PERFECTS THE ART OF TURD POLISHING WITH THE OPENING OF “ICONS”

4363964574_0f10031e70_o
What has to be the final nail in the “Street Art” coffin was driven in last weekend by none other than MR. BRAINWASH (aka: “The Christian Audigier of Street Art”) when he opened his massive, self-produced “Icons” show in a rented space (which, ironically, was once a real art gallery, pre-recession) in the heart of Chelsea. As the subject of Brit Street Art king Banksy’s recent docu-parody film, “Exit Through The Gift Shop,” MBW has been the focus of much hype and speculation as his presence finally seeps into the fairly muddy stream of mainstream consciousness. Last week’s Wall Street Journal article articulated this particularly well:

Read Full Article

FASHION///R.I.P./// DESIGNER ALEXANDER McQUEEN COMMITS SUICIDE IN LONDON

alexandermc
One of the fashion world’s foremost visionary designers ALEXANDER McQUEEN was found dead today in his London apartment, an apparent suicide just days after the death of his mother, and the suicide of one of his close friends Isabella Blow, who discovered the young designer and helped forge his early career:

Read Full Article

MOCA’S “COLLECTION: THE FIRST THIRTY YEARS” PROVES THE MUSEUM SHOULD BE AROUND FOR 30 MORE

ScreeRRn shot 2010-02-03 at 2.55.18 PM
Despite MOCA’s financial woes of late and near collapse last year amid the chaos of the economic holocaust, the veritable Southland institution seems on to a bright future now, having secured ST buddy JEFFREY DEITCH as its new director (starting June 1) and financial security (for the moment). If ever there was a time to celebrate, it is now. HAVE A LOOK:

Read Full Article

FEATURE///IN THE STUDIO WITH SHEPARD FAIREY AS HE PREPARES FOR DEITCH GALLERY’S CLOSING SHOW

SHEPVRRISIT1
By now it’s no secret that JEFFREY DEITCH is closing shop in downtown NYC to head West for the sunnier confines of the MoCA Director’s office, starting June 1st. That leaves SHEPARD FAIREY’s upcoming portrait show as the farewell exhibition at one of the city’s most legendary and influential commercial art institutions in the city’s history.

Read Full Article