Showing posts with label Nylon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nylon. Show all posts

Monday, 29 October 2018

Dscreet Top 40 Covers

BSMT Space (see photo below)
5D STOKE NEWINGTON ROAD
LONDON N16 8BH

In December 2008 a parliament, for that is what a group of owls is called, assembled in the famous Pure Evil Gallery cellar for a solo show by Dscreet. Graffoto raved about Dscreet’s solo show in that famous cellar and indeed a pair of Owls has adorned NoLions Towers ever since.


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Words Up - 2008


Ten Years After we flock to BSMT Space, again a cellar, for Dscreet’s first London gig - sorry, show since then. Titled Top 40 Covers, Dscreet presented his painted homages to a variety of musical highlights in a show staged as a music gig and BSMT rocked that night!

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drunk girls


That opening Thursday was special for Dscreet on several levels; he appears to be One Hundred Years old and evidently has immense wisdom like his owls but opening night was DScreet’s 40th birthday. The choice of 40 as the key number in the show title will resonate with ancient music fans from the pre digital era for whom everything came to a Grinding Halt at 6pm on Sunday evenings as the Top 40 rundown aired on Radio 1. Claire Grogan was probably not available but a suitable rock ambience was brought to the venue by Brick Lane street musician Lewis Floyd Henry, opening for Dscreet.

Sadly the “phone in the crowd” recording makes this sound crap which completely undersells how hard this dude rocked but there was a lot of rocking going on that night.


Lewis Floyd Henry - Live at BSMT Space


Lewis also has old school pedigree as a proper graff writer, that's the kind of attention to detail DScreet has put into this show.

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Rockin All Over The World


Dscreet owls have perched on East London’s walls for years, normally Graffoto likes to pick a few pellets from the archives just to revel in the history and development of the subject artist out on the streets but with Dscreet did Too Much Too Young making such a selection an invidious task.

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Dubl Owl, Howl Owl, Owl and Pussycat (2015)


Of course, not to forget some Brilliant Compositions

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Sweet Toof, Cyclops, Dscreet 2007


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Cyclops, Sweet Toof, Dscreet, Kid Acne, Seks (TRP), also feat Toasters & Snoe (TRP) (photo 2008)


As his owls are so popular, the fact that Dscreet is a phenomenal graffiti writer is perhaps a little bit overlooked. The owls and the graffiti both featured in this combative collab with Conor Harrington, we loved the blood spurting everywhere and note also the musical reference in the tribute to Adam "MCA" Yauch of Beastie Boys.

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Dscreet v. Conor Harrington, feat RIP MCA (2012)


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Dscreeeeeet (2009)


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Dscreet (2008)


Although there is a neat link between age 40/top 40 for this gig, the theme isn’t a contrivance for the benefit of a show, musical references have featured frequently in Dscreet’s street art. The tribute to Lou Reed based on the Velvet Underground lyrics to I’ll be Your Mirror is cemented on a Shoreditch wall with a pair of mirror image owls, in the gallery the same song is executed on an actual mirror.

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I’ll Be Your Mirror – Top 40 Covers 2018


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I’ll Be Your Mirror/RIP Lou Reed (2013)


Similarly Dscreet has covered The Doors on the streets and in the show.

An American Prayer - The Doors
An American Prayer – The Doors


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Break On Through – The Doors (2015)


In recent months a demonic character has appeared in DScreet’s street art, generally the character, believed to be the artist’s alter ego, is up to no good, some kind of Devil In Disguise.

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Identified nutters: Dscreet, Pez, Nylon, (2018)


This demonic character appears in one of the shows highlight, the DScreet visual rendition of the Bob Marley tune Time Will Tell. Bob Marley has also featured in DScreet’s street art, Marley’s classic Three Little Birds become three lurid owls.

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Time Will Tell - Bob Marley


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Three Little Birds (2014)


The troublemaker is conjuring flames from the palm of his hands in the unmistakable Firestarter while Dscreet's friend and fellow writer Nylon makes an collaborative contribution.

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Firestarter - The Prodigy - Dscreet & Nylon


BSMT’s cellar space terminates in a pair of vaulted cells which lend themselves to something installational, DScreet blacks out the space and illuminates his characters with a phosphorescent glow evoking that thrill when auditorium lights go down and faint shadows stir indicating stars hefting guitars and adjusting codpieces, that point in a gig where anticipation ends and sonic delivery commences.  Mouseover this pic to see the effect.



Ceremony – Joy Division (guitar) c/w Reign In Blood - Slayer *Mouseover image*


The sexual murmurings on Aphex Twins’ “Windowlicker” translate on canvas into a curiously tilted owl, or at least that’s how it seemed at first glance until longer scrutiny revealed the secret duality in the image, perhaps I have had too sheltered an upbringing as it did take quite a while.

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Windowlicker - Aphex Twin


Talking Heads’ cinematic rock gig film Stop Making Sense (34 years ago? Really???) begins with lead singer David Byrne strolling onto an empty stage with just a guitar and a beatbox, things can hardly get more rock ‘n roll and it’s not a million miles from how Lewis Floyd Henry rocked BSMT. Hanging on the wall is a lone guitar, painted black with the lyrics to Psycho Killer penned on it.

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Psycho Killer - Talking Heads


Mother Sky by Can refers to a droning throb of krautrock sustained by a plodding riff and drug addled lyrics, neatly captured on canvas by an unending psychedelic flow of vaporous digits streaming out of a can, madness I say (as did Can).

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Mother Sky - Can (collab with Eoin)


These owls may have the serious stares of classical music geeks but their spiky hair do screams punk and they don’t get much more OG punk than The Clash.

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Guns Of Brixton (The Clash)


In a list of greatest hits it takes some doing to stand out but among the candidate gig highlights was Dscreet's imagining of Black Sabbath’s Planet Caravan. The Sabb have of course featured in Dscreet’s street art in his interpretation of Symptom Of The Universe.

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Planet Caravan - Black Sabbath


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Symptom Of The Universe - Black Sabbath (2012)


It was like spotting an old friend to spy an owl from the Words Up show perched in the BSMT Space rafters, which bring us right back where we started from.


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Top 40 Covers, BSMT 2018 - also feat The Look Of Love, I'll Be Your Mirror & Heart Of Glass


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Words Up, Pure Evil Gallery (2008)


The history of rock is often forged in grimy downstairs locations, think of the Cavern in Liverpool, the 100 Club in London. Dscreet’s opening was as much an event as it was the beginning of an exhibition of some painted art.  The show must go on (until 1st November). The blues that rocked BSMT Space’s subterranean cellar that night didn’t make anyone homesick.




Lewis Floyd Henry rocks BSMT


Links:
Dscreet Facebook
Floyd Lewis Henry website - check that out baby!
BSMT Space website

All photos/phone videos by Dave Stuart

As there is scarcely a more secretive hard to find gallery in London, this pic shows the door into the basement trumpeted by a Dscreet A-board

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Sunday, 8 September 2013

Hit Shot Walls - August 2013

All photos HowAboutNo except NoLionsInEngland where stated
Words NoLionsInEngland


August, a hot oppresive city, empty workspaces, charged tense atmosphere and tourists.  Yup, on the whole that pretty much sums up this month's Shoredtich Street Art scene except that wall space was actually pretty very full and in one controversial case, pretty badly buffed!

Above did a cool Pole Dancer which in daytime baffles but at night amazes.  Someone - presumably the building owner immediately took steps to "conserve" the work by covering it in pespex but....hang on mate.... you can't sell it, it requires the shadow of the lamp to make sense so it can't be moved, duh:



ABove Photos (kaboom tishhhh):NoLionsinEngland




Otto Schade did his thing with the nuclear sun background again, lushly blended paint work looks beautiful.  Nice to see how self effacing this one is compared to the Hanbury St one which has a tag and TWO osch weblinks:



Small pieces by Fred le Chevalier were in great abundance this month and looking very sweet too, such as this sprinting bearded lover:






Nylon:



The "hate Eine" still raises eyebrows - it's by Eine himself.



Not painted in August, just the first time this photographer found the doors shut!


Saki executed a trio of nicely sized Geishas on plywood, the first time we have seen action from her on the streets in quite a while, I wonder why that would be?....what?....you think there might be a show coming?





French Artist Tian came through and dropped almost 30 pieces on Shoreditch walls.  He loves his Japanese Shunga style, but they are a bit beyond risque so here are three carefully selected images that ARE fit for showing on a family rated blog!





MadC really laid down a maker in the largest Commissioned mural category, dwarfing the adjacent Reka and blinding many an un-prepared tourist not wearing sunglasses.  Not a single Shoreditch hipster was affected.


Alex Senna passed through on a Brazilian art trade mission of some sort painting many fey little murals in black and white.



Pegasus got a titilating multilayer stencil up in a doorway in plenty of time for the group show at Arch 402

Cenz


Spotted opposite swanky new bars opened under Hoxton overground station, not saying beer and weed is solely a Hoxton thing of course.  Artist unknown (MFI?)



Two long standing murals got taken out too this month along the stretch on Redchurch street, probably only a matter of time before this wall is made pretty once more by the hottest new artist wanting a legal wall sooner or later....until then a nice bit of Chrome will do.



So, the end of summer is upon us, traditionally we expect less activity as the weather cools down....but seasonally adjusted longer hours of darkness can lead to more opportunity for illicit decorative activities. Lets see what September has to offer!

Saturday, 30 June 2012

High Roller Society Teeshirt Printing with Copyem




10 Palmers Rd
London E2 0SY

Sat 30 June & Sun 1 Jul 2012, 1pm - 5 pm

Copyem: Facebook; Tumblr

All photos: NolionsInEngland


This Graffoto scribe has learned a bit about various forms of printing at workshops which run by High Rollers Society gallery in East London.  As the NoLions wardrobe is notably bereft of cool teeshirts, a teeshirt printing workshop looked like too good an opportunity to miss.

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Copyem, master of tee shirt printing, has been printing teeshirts, sweat shirts, hoodies, vests, tote bags as well as vinyl, paper and boxes for a couple of years out of his own  fully equipped studio.  High Rollers bumped into Copyem at Pick Me Up, the contemporary graphic art fair at Somerset House earlier this year and that chance encounter between kindred spirits led to this workshop this weekend.

Copyem brought some screens and some basic teeshirt printing equipment to the gallery.  Not to damn with faint praise but for multicolour printing and larger volumes Copyem uses 8 frame carousels which are not practical to schlep across London to the gallery, hence the basic gear in use today.

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Graffiti Is For Losers - Copyem12


The first step in the process is obviously, create your artwork, which leads onto the second step, burn your screen.   Step 1 was fulfilled by several notable artists and Copyem had already burned the screens back at base.

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Copyem screen


Handy tip alert - Copyem applies an abundance of tape to the screen outside the image area in case there are spots where the photosensitive chemical didn’t harden in the burning process, so the parcel tape prevents un-wanted ink leaking through those spots. The screens are clamped into the screenprinting press with the image centralised.  A light spray of adhesive to prevent the teeshirt from slipping around preceeds the stretching of a teeshirt over the wooden base.   

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Young Master NoLions - Scientists discover lack of can skills is hereditary


The screen is charged with screenprinter ink, though other forms of acrylic and water soluble ink can be used, and the squeegee is used to drag ink across to “flood” the screen.

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Flooding complete, the ace printer makes two or three passes across the screen with the squeegee to force the ink through onto the teeshirt.  We were all ace printers for one afternoon!

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When the image looks solidly printed, the screen is lifted and a heater element placed a couple of inches over the tee to dry the ink off.  Rumours abounded of people popping tees into the oven or under the grill to complete this stage.  

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Hey presto, super cool kid with the hottest teeshirt around.

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At the workshop we saw three different designs being printed , the purple Goldpeg above and  a black on white “Graffiti is for losers" and a pink (ok – fushia) coloured character by Copyem12.   Anyone could have a go at printing the Copyem designs which could be taken away for a fairly nominal donation to the costs.  The Goldpeg and couple of ultra cool multi colour Rowdy and Sweet Toof tees were available to buy from the gallery.   The Sweet Toof tees came with a special screen printed Toof image which looked to have uniquely varied backgrounds.


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Rowdy, Goldpeg, Sweet Toof


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Sweet Toof screenprints (inside the teeshirt packages)


The compact layout of the High Roller Society gallery makes for a very intimate workshop experience, participants not only get to see every aspect of the process close up, the “vibe” lends itself to informal discussion with the expert presented as the workshop progresses and everyone gets to have a crack as well.    If you are reading this on Sat 30 June 2012 or before 5 pm Sunday 1 July then there is  a chance tomorrow (Sunday) for people who couldn’t make today to have a go and (or) to pick up some of those cool teeshirts.  Well worth a quick visit.

Copyem: Facebook; Tumblr

PS - a tiny selection of the cool schiz from the Good Times Roll Show now on at High Rollers- another good reason for heading down to High Roller Society:


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Numskull (Aus)


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Rowdy


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Nylon


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Martin Lea-Brown


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Remi Rough


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Dark Clouds (NY)


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Milo Tchais


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Dark Clouds (NY)