Showing posts with label Eine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eine. Show all posts

Saturday 25 May 2019

New Old Banksy Street Art In Shoreditch



Banksy street art hidden for many years has been brought out of limbo in Shoreditch, visible at last to the millions of street art fans new to Banksy’s art since it last doused itself under East London rain. Two images, a huge rat and a TV being chucked rock star style out of a window have lain out of sight under protective wooden sheeting for 12 years though they are perhaps among the more “storied” of Banksy’s street artworks.

Banksy at the Foundry Car Park
Not one but TWO Banksy relics


Banksy frequented the legendary Shoreditch art and drinking establishment The Foundry, pincered between Great Eastern St and Old St and was a good friend of the hosts Tracey and Jonathan Moberly. Tracey told Graffoto that from around 2002 Banksy was very active inside, outside and around the Foundry, in that period he painted genuine masterpieces such as the Have A Nice Day helicopter above the chip shop opposite Foundry and the earliest of the Pulp Fiction pieces that faced the Foundry from the tube station building 100 yards away.

Old Street feat Banksy
Old St feat Banksy's 2nd Pulp Fiction


The Foundry was an amazing melting pot bringing together creative, cultural and cool people and stimulated all kinds of interactions. Courier cyclists were a specific sub-species who made a base at the Foundry and some evenings (particularly warm ones!) the pavement outside the foundry would be a crush of grimy bike couriers. It was a group of cyclists who organised the festival in the unlicensed car park to the rear of the Foundry for which Banksy painted the rat and the TV.

Eine & Banksy
Banksy feat remnant of "Last Days Of Shoreditch", Eine, photo 2019


In 2010, Hackney Council had a pretty hostile attitude to graffiti and was equally intolerant of street art, as the Moberly’s witnessed with the council’s repeated buffing of great art that appeared legally with permission outside the Foundry. The council then turned round and made the preservation of the TV and the rat a condition of the planning consent for the demolition of the existing building and its replacement by what was to be an 18 storey hotel but now has permission for 22 storeys. Should these Banksys have been elevated to heritage status?


Eine, Foundry Car Park
Protect that rat 2019 (clue: underneath that wooden wedge)


The TV out the window stencil, a brilliant rock and roll cliché, looked like it was made for that wall, it’s an image that has to be on the side of a windowless building that looks like it ought to have windows. The image wouldn’t work on say a garden wall or a bridge support.

Banksy at the Foundry Car Park


Inside the Foundry all kinds of crazy things went on and prominent in the bar was a array of flickering TVs, a TV flying out the window from the Foundry seemed entirely plausible.

Foundry Photo Jonathan Moberly, 2010
Foundry 2010: Graffoto, anonymous street artist, Tracey Moberly and a selection of TVs. Photo courtesy Jonathan Moberly


The TV out the window makes an appearance in Banksy’s 2005 book Wall and Piece but is not the Foundry one, the one in the book was up by Angel and by the time I located it the TV had been buffed (higher up the wall above this image) but Banksy’s tag was still visible and Shepard Fairey had visited.

Banksy tag, Shepard Fairey, 2006
Banksy tag, Shepard Fairey, 2006


Not only is the Foundry TV nicely placed and well executed, it has a Banksy tag next to it and they are increasingly rare out in the wild. In fact including this one I can only think of 3 surviving outdoors in London and we must fear for the existence of one of the other two as there is an artist’s impression of a development which shows the surface the tag is on is earmarked to disappear.

Banksy at the Foundry Car Park
Banksy stencil tag


The rat has always been a bit unsatisfactory, the reasons Graffoto criticised the council’s decision to preserve that rat are as valid today as they were back in 2010. It has never been clear what this rat is about, it rejoices in the nickname “Eat the rich” and is often described as a rat with a knife and fork but if you look carefully that is actually a jigsaw blade not a knife and the fork is more like a harpoon or a pitchfork, forks don’t neck down from the handle then widen into the prongs. We don’t know what the rat is doing, why it belongs at this location nor what the red ring around the eye is about and the technique is a bit sloppy. The things that look like fins are probably meant to be bedraggled fur, at least that’s what they look like on other Banksy rats but on this one it looks like a weird dorsal fin or the conning tower on a submarine.

Banksy Rat - Go Back To Bed, photo 2006
Banksy rat - that's what we call bedraggled, photo 2006, Smithfelds


However Banksy’s street art isn’t diminished by poor execution, they were never meant to be superb specimens of perfectly executed art and indeed evidence of haste is perhaps part of the essence of the way Banksy has to create his street art. Banksy’s relationship with the Foundry and the use by the Foundry of that car park to stage events suggests this rat probably wasn’t subject to the usual tensions of illegality, perhaps it could have been better executed, maybe like the ones in Cargo.

Banksy at the Foundry Car Park


More significantly, Banksy hated the rat! Tracey whispered to Graffoto last year that Banksy thought the rat was a piece of shit. Furthermore, when asked to comment on the closure of the Foundry in a 2010 BBC news broadcast, Banksy contributed via one of his classic emails saying

“No one ever went there for the beer-it was always a bit warm and flat. I would appeal to the developers not to keep my graffiti. It’s a bit like demolishing the Tate and preserving the ice cream van out the front.” 
Banksy, Newsnight email 4 Feb 2010”



There you have it, the artist Banksy does not wish the art to be preserved so the council’s 2010 decision is morally dubious to say the least. Note also the explicit confirmation that the artwork is a genuine Banksy, assuming of course that the BBC weren’t being spoofed.


Preservation of these Banksy pieces began before the planning decision though. The protective sheeting enclosing the TV and rat was erected in 2007, perhaps the idea of incorporating the Banksys on the Foundry site into the new hotel had already formed in the owners’ and operator’s minds at that time.  An early painting of that slanting façade was by Burning Candy members Sweet Toof and Cyclops, wittily captioning their creation Rat Trap.

Burning Candy
Sweet Toof, Cyclops BC 2008


The immediate future for the rat and the TV is that metal frames are going to be constructed around them and after separating the wall from the rest of the building structure and dismantling the walls above the art by hand, a massive crane is going to be used to lift the two wall segments separately over the building where they will be stored covered up at the front of the building site. The developers have not made their ultimate intention clear, their obligation is to provide free viewing access to the public of these two Banksys either within the hotel or somewhere else within the Borough. The developer is known to have planned to include 6 other Banksys from the Foundry building within the so-called Art’otel development but none of the other 6 survive.

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First, skin your rat


A few weeks ago Graffoto got an exclusive opportunity to watch the sheeting came down and the TV and rat were seen again for the first time in 12 years. As the sheets came off the first thing that appeared was the top parts of the old fire extinguisher ATG tag and it was immediately apparent that he paint had survived in pretty good condition.

ATG Fire Extinguisher Graff; EINE


After barely an hour of watching other people do real work, the TV and the rat were revealed in all their glory

Banksy at the Foundry Car Park
Banksy Rat (detail) 2019


For the meantime, make the most of the brief period visibility of those two Banksys before they lose whatever sense of context they may have had in their original location and ponder the puzzle of why the council decided to preserve this rubbishy rat against the artist’s own wishes yet remain oblivious to some real masterpieces that appeared on the Foundry building before and since.


Elmo, Tango ATG & Banksy
Elmo lean-over, Tango ATG - and Banksy. You decide!


Elmo, ATG
Elmo ATG, Goldpeg, Sweet Toof & the buff 2011


Elmo, Milo Tchais, Zezao, Tek 33
Elmo, Milo Tchais, Zezao, Tek 33; Feb 2011


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ROA, 2011 (okay, it's a different elevation but its too good not to include as art that the council has not protected)


Elmo, Masker, Milo Tchais, Run, Zezao, Gerard Gademann
Elmo, Masker, Milo Tchais, Run, Zezao, Gerard Gademann; May 2011


Elmo, Mr Wany, Masker, Zezao
Elmo, Mr Wany, Masker, Zezao 2012


Mr Wany
Mr Wany, desecrated by an advert, 2012


Jo Peel
Jo Peel animation, 2013


Fintan Magee
Fintan Magee (detail) 2014, also feat Eine, Pez, ALO, Borondo


Phlegm
Phlegm, 2015


Eine last days of shoreditch
Eine, 2016

Related Posts:

2010: Hackney Council insists on rat/TV preservation Graffoto post

2018: Foundry/Red Gallery Building closes Graffoto post

All photos: Dave Stuart except Jonathan Moberly where noted      

Saturday 10 November 2018

The S Sense of Eine

Everything Starts Somewhere

StolenSpace Gallery

17 Osborn St, London E1 6TD 

25th October – 18th November 2018


Break out the bunting, a typopgraphy typhoon has struck London, it’s an Eine exhibition.

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Back in 2007 EINE had a solo show at Kemistry Gallery, late of Charlotte Rd, and the power of seeing EINE’s typography migrate indoors from the streets where we were used to seeing them was intense.

EINE - Kemistry Show, Aug 2007
EINE - Kemistry, 2007


EINE's latest StolenSpace show delivers that visual punch in the eyes again, something that has perhaps not been so apparent in some EINE shows and events in the intervening years.

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The show title Everything Starts Somewhere hints at origins, starts and basically East London represents ground zero for Eine’s graffiti.

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Call Eine


Eine Vandalism
2007


Eine
Cans Festival, Leake St, 2006


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Scary S (check Graffoto, 2007)


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Shutter S (there have been loads)


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Fucks Sake, another Shutter S


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S for the Stella Dore door, also S for Steph


Most of the art is on canvas rendered in tried and trusted Eine colours and fonts. There are however some intriguing new developments, perhaps this is a “somewhere” where something is starting. Most obviously, a huge sculptural 3D letter ‘S’ dominates the second room.

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Although they are hanging on a wall, 4 glossy panels making out the word SEXY have the solid tangibility of a sculpture, "carved high density polyurethane" says the label.

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Sexy (detail)


In the early years the prints and canvasses to collect were the whole alphabet squares though EINE decided that trying to fit 26 letters into a square format didn't look right so he famously dropped the letter W. This photo is taken from the 2009 World Record 77 colour screenprint launched under the Nelly Duff imprint. There is no alphabet canvas or print in this latest show but the letter W will come up later.

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W free zone, Nelly Duff pop-up at D.S. Coachworks, Shacklewell St, 2009


The Kemistry show was definitely the start of something for Eine.  Two sides of the Kemistry Gallery were hung with cement based stencils and the stencil on cement canvas makes an appearance in this latest show.

Eine, I Stand Here For All The Right Reasons
I Stand Here For All The Right Reasons (detail)


EINE has also played with geometric patterns applied in matt and gloss to give illusions of varying depths and textures, something he has done before.

Eine Why Waste Tears On Someone Who Makes You Cry
Why Waste Tears On Someone Who Makes You Cry (detail)


“Modern Art” with all its colours and glitter brings to mind a line from the ever quotable Mr Eine in a talk at his Lights Of Soho exhibition in 2017 when he declared street art “Fucks pop art backwards!”

EINE - Modern Art
who needs captions?

Eine - Everything Starts Somewhere
S Backwards


Other than the show blurb mysterious stating that it started with an S, there was not much obvious evidence of where the “somewhere” was that things started, EINE graciously agreed to face a series of naff questions which posed the classic Pulp interrogative "Do you remember the first time?"  

Graffoto: Where and when did you first tag?

Eine: I would have been around about the age of 14 and I am now 48 so around 1984, 85, 86 was when I found graffiti.

Graffoto: You’re 48? ("horror" eyebrows hover above forehead)

EINE: I know, it’s a fucking joke, it’s like years and years of drug and alcohol abuse have preserved me, I look younger than my children.


Graffoto: What was your first tag?

EINE: So the letter S was my first ever tag, I destroyed London with that, like literally killed London. So everything started with an S. Everybody else had a tag and if you had a wall full of tags you couldn’t see them or read them. I had a symbol and my symbol would stand out on a wall of tags you couldn’t read, which is why I had this:

Eine Tattoo
EINE S throwie made flesh


I had just been arrested and was on bail for graffiti and, because I am not a complete idiot, whilst I was on bail I wasn’t going to do graffiti. My friend C__, an old graffiti writer from WD, Drax' [and friends'] crew, had just stated tattooing so I went round to his house and he tattooed my tag on his arm and that was my first ever tattoo.


Graffoto: When were you first chased by guards or police

EINE: God knows, definitely before I was doing graffiti. The first time I got arrested for graffiti was probably 1989, 90…I had definitely been chased a lot doing graffiti before that and the reason I got into graffiti was I was good at running away and I had a vague interest in art and it seemed like a great hobby. And I couldn’t break dance….

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"SEXY" detail


Graffoto: When did you first think it was art rather than graffiti

EINE: When I started doing street art. There was a period when the graffiti I was doing was beautiful but it was illegal and it was on the side of trains, the moment I started doing street art it was something that was productive rather than negative. And that’s the fundamental difference between graffiti and street art, I believe.

Graffoto: When did your first work appear hung on a wall rather than tagged on a wall

EINE: I did a group show with D*Face when he opened up his gallery in Paddington, I was in that. There was probably a couple of things that I was in. It was a fucking long and painful period, I was doing graffiti I had a job, I hated my job, I used to work for Lloyds of London. I left Lloyds of London, I wanted to be creative, I didn’t go to art school, I couldn’t use a computer so I was kind of making teeshirts and selling them in Japan, I was working in a bar, I was working on a building site, I was making stickers and I was making stencils so there was loads of things going on and then it was like suddenly “Oh my God, now I’m an artist – great!”. It was just like walking around Shoreditch when Shoreditch was like a fucking ghost town, with great big poles and sticking up hand made stencil posters on sides of buildings up high, so yeah it was like this really slow process.

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Supreme (detail)


When I first started doing this it was like..nobody was buying it but I was making it so I would give it to people cos I was always under the impression that I would rather have my art hanging somewhere than me painting over it. Anyway, we were going to Atlantis (art supplies shop, then in Whitechapel) and stealing everything, so that didn’t bother me…make a painting and give it away. I have always been of the belief that everything you make is a little advert for you so hopefully if you have loads of these little paintings hanging in people’s houses one day someone is going to go “Where did you get that from, I’m going to go and BUY one”. And it kind of worked to some degree. The first paintings I remember selling were from the show at Kemistry which was my first proper show in London. I had definitely done shows before then, group shows and I had definitely sold stuff but that was my first show.

EINE Kemistry 2007
EINE Kemistry Show, 2007


Graffoto: When did you first become a full time artist

EINE: When I left Pictures On Walls.  I left Lloyds and I worked on a building site and I worked at the Dragon Bar [seminal Shoreditch hangout for graffiti writers and street artists: RIP] for about 10 years and I haven’t had a job since I left Pictures On Walls..I’m shit with fucking dates but yeah I was still at Pictures On Walls when I had the Kemistry show cos I made all the concrete paintings outside Pictures On Walls [then located where Nobu Shoreditch stands today, had a convenient concrete apron outside] on a Saturday, so for 10 years being an artist has been my only job.

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Love Will Tear Us Apart (detail)


Graffoto: When did you first make a mark abroad?

EINE: The first place I painted abroad was Amsterdam. I had a friend called Dreph, we were in the same crew together, who went to Amsterdam and he came back and said “yo! They stopped buffing the Metros in Amsterdam.”  I literally went to my boss and told him “I’m taking 2 weeks holiday”. I had no money just got 2 mates, went to Amsterdam for 2 weeks, we slept in parks, stole everything and spent 2 weeks painting trains, all day and all night and fucked Amsterdam metro [chuckles]. I was still at Lloyds…eighty…… god knows when that was, a long time ago!

Graffoto: When did you do your first sculpture

EINE: Oooooooo – I made some sculptures with Martin Root, the cubes that we showed in Tokyo. They were probably the first sculpture-esquy things I did. I did two sculptures with Flourescent Smog, an E and a W and then I did this massive S at StolenSpace. I would kind of like my street art to become a bit more sculptural and less “painty”. Paint fades, sculptures stand the test of time. And it’s about doing other things.


Graffoto: Why did it start with the letter S?

EINE: So, for quite a while I’ve wanted to do a sculpture and to me S is the sexiest letter, it’s one of the more challenging letters and if you get it right it just goes “ahhhhhhh”. So I had the opportunity to make a big letter sculpture for this show so decision was to do the letter S. And the gallery is called StolenSpace

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Through the S Hole


Graffoto: When did you design your first piece of clothing?

EINE: When I started to break away from graffiti I was doing stickers and hand made posters and flyposting posters around Shoreditch and this Japanese dude saw my posters and he was like “Do you want to do some of those on teeshirts?” and I was like “Sweet!”.

I was a kid in London, I was always going out to nightclubs, I was interested in fashion, I like clothes you know, representing something, I like the way you can dress in a certain look and portray a certain attitude or image, I like fucking with people’s stereotypes, you know face tattoos and dressed like a skinhead and you’re the first person to give up your seat on the tube!

Graffoto: When did you first design a handbag?

EINE: I have never designed a handbag [chuckles], I was approached by a posh handbag lady called Anya Hindmarch, she had done a tote bag and on the front it said “I’m not a plastic bag” and it fucking blew up and went mental for her. Then the next time she wanted to redesign the tote bag she approached me and I did 4 different designs for her. Anya Hindmarch was very good friends with…Samantha Cameron.. [this led to Prime Minster David Cameron giving Obahma an Eine canvas as a pressie, Graffoto scooped the world on that story back in 2010, covered in detail HERE]


TWENTYFIRSTCENTURYCITY (photo nicked from Eine’s website)

I painted the outside of Anya Hindmarch’s windows to launch the bag.

EINE v. Anya Hindmarch
EINE v. Anya Hindmarch


Graffoto: When did you design your first bunting?

EINE: [chuckles] I haven’t! At StolenSpace you walk into the backspace of the gallery and its beautiful and it has these fucking beams and it has this crazy roof but every show that you have ever been to at StolenSpace always looks exactly the same, nobody ever does anything with the roof and I was like “Let’s get some bunting made, find someone that makes bunting”. So they sent me over the graphics for the bunting and I’m like “I’ll just stick a letter on all of it”, they said “what colours?” and I’m like “choose the colours from the canvas”.

I was so close to fucking the W off, just cos I started designing the letters to go on the bunting and my letters were all like circular and spinning round, rotating to fit them on and I was going to sack the W, W is THE most annoying letter in the world but the graphic designer managed to do it, it works, they did a better job than I would have done.

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You know, either you get a load of helium filled balloons and I think Fanakapan has nailed that or, now, I’ve got the bunting, no one else can do bunting!


Graffoto: What was your first gig?

EINE: The first gig I can remember, definitely not my first gig, would have been the Town and Country Club (now The Forum, Kentish Town) with The Beastie Boys with License To Ill. Me and my friend Michael were huge Beastie Boy fans, every time Beastie Boys played in London we’d get tickets to see them twice, cos we’d get so fucked one night like literally, in the queue going up to Brixton Academy double tying our shoelaces cos we are crowd surfing at Beastie Boys. Me and my friend Michael we did every Beastie Boy album whole car top to bottom on the side of trains, photos no one has ever ever seen. Yeah, we were massive Beastie Boy fans, then Wu Tang, then blah blah blah.


Graffoto: (Its a rule, when " Blah blah blah" starts, the interview has run its course!!) "Cheers and thanks"


To summarize, this show recaptures some of the raw and brutal impact which familiarity with EINE’s studio art may have lessened in recent years. Some shows roll out mere evolution but the sculptural developments suggest a possibility of revolution, definitely this show marks a progression. Don’t miss, runs till 18th.

Eine - Everything Starts Somewhere


For shits 'n giggles Graffoto focussed on the letter S in the photos in this post, here are some of the full canvasses the S details were lifted from.

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Sexy, 2018


EINE I Stand For All The Right Reasons
I Stand Here For All The Right Reasons


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Why Waste Tears On Someone Who Makes You Cry


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Love Will Tear Us Apart


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Love Will Keep Us Together


EINE - Its the Little Things That Hurt
Its the Little Things That Hurt


Eine - Supreme Sympathy
Supreme Sympathy


EINE Sexy; Love
Sexy; Love


EINE - Its the Little Things That Hurt
Its the Little Things That Hurt


LINKS

EINE Instagram
StolenSpace website
All photos Dave Stuart (instagram)