Thursday, 26 December 2019

Political Street Art of the 2010s Decade

The second decade of the 21st century witnessed tumultuous political events. A web of local and international issues emerging from recent and historical influences with consequences for individuals and societal groupings have echoed in the street art spotted by Graffoto. Austerity, migration, foodbank poverty, ethnic oppression, democracy, corruption, patriarchy, nepotism, cronyism have all been the subject of barbed political street art around London.

Good writing practice is to start off with an idea, develop a plan then fill in the content; Graffoto finds that approach way too systematic and normally has no idea at the beginning what the content will be at the end. An attempt to structure this post into a series of political themes was immediately frustrated by Donald Trump going pan-issue. There is hardly a niche in the political agenda where Trump has not been demonised as a pariah to street artists and for most, simply being anti Trump says it all.

K-Guy
K-Guy Top Trumps, Jan 2017


How many pieces of pro Trump street art do you think we have observed in London? Brace yourselves for a shock, the answer is none.  Not fake news.

Uberfubs
Uberfubs, Dump Trump August 2017


Kennard Phillipps produced what was either a Trump faced drone or a drone arsed Trump, either way, “not here” thanks.

Kennard Phillips
Kennard Phillipps courtesy Flying Leaps, July 2018


A glorious piece of Bambi stencilism meant we will never forget that cringey moment when Donald grabbed Theresa by the hand and flaunted the first international visitor of his presidency in front of the press.

Bambi
Bambi, Islington, Feb 2017


Fanakapan used his amazing painting skills to link Trump’s German origins with certain political tendencies

Fanakapan
Fanakapan, Mein Trumpf, Dec 2017


The artist then known as Sell Out saw a similar connection in a fascist nightmare of Hitler, Trump and May as winos.

Sell Out

Sell Out
Sell Out


The recent British general election confirmed something that politicians first understood from the American presidential election in 2016, what you said in the past or what skeletons you might have in the closet no longer matters. A point satirised nicely by Rider and in this instance conspiring with an adjacent Subdude label for neat emphasis.

Rider
Grab This, Rider, Shoreditch 2018


Street art’s political output is huge, street art can respond incredibly quickly to contemporary events and it comes from activists and ordinary citizens who otherwise might not have a platform for political wisdom and calling out power on its frequent aberrations and abuses. Simple strong emotion doesn’t always need complex imagery.

Fuck Trump
Fuck Trump – artist unknown, many suspects


Loretto got a lot of exposure for his beautifully executed band of despots

Loretto
“The Psychos”, London 2018, Loretto


Climate and environmental concerns escalated through the decade as leaders signed up to up to the Paris COP 15 agreement, only for the “It’s a hoax” leader of the western world to withdraw America in 2018.

Jonesy
Tar Sand Nightmare, Jonesy, Shoreditch 2012


Banksy started the decade with art reflecting concerns on climate issues and it ended with his Venice refugee child unintentionally becoming a siren call illuminating forthcoming climate disaster as Venice floods immersed the child up to her waist.

Banksy
“I Don’t Believe In Global Warming”, Banksy, Camden London Dec 2009


Banksy
Refugee Child, Banksy, Venice 2019


Banksy Venice Refugee Child photo Banksy Instagram Dec 2019
Refugee Child Not Waving But Drowning, Banksy, Venice 2019. Photo courtesy Banksy Instagram


Extinction Rebellion took a much more radical approach to forcing climate action up the political agenda and in doing so inspired a very decentralised and usually anonymous art culture.

Extnction Rebellion
Extinction Rebellion, Oxford St / Regent St intersection closed 5 days, April 2019


Extinction rebellion
Extinction Rebellion, Shoreditch 2019, Artist Unknown


Jane Mutiny executed a stunning medley of endangered species literally disappearing right before our very eyes.

Extinction Rebellion - Jane Mutiny
Jane Mutiny, Shoreditch 2019


The Extinction Symbol itself was designed by an East London street artist right back at the beginning of the decade

Extinction Symbol
Extinction Symbol, Brick Lane, 2011


Greenpeace initiated a three pronged campaign to raise awareness of the destruction of rainforests in Papua New Guinea by commissioning legal murals around the world; having activists paste up colourful images of Birds of Paradise and encouraging other artists to join in putting up their own versions. More details on Graffoto here. The coordinated global pursuit of political objectives for a specific geographic issue using a combination of commissioned and illegal street art was pretty punchy.

#Wings Of paradise
Non permissioned paste up, Shoreditch 2018


#Wings Of paradise - Matt Sewell
Matt Sewell, permissioned mural, Shoreditch 2018


The politics of overseas countries, like those Papua New Guinea rainforest concerns, is often the subject of art on London’s streets. Visiting artists and activists and also the local ex pat communities all use our outdoor gallery for protest signalling and awareness enhancement.

HKG
Turkish Murderer, HKG, London 2014


In 2019, Subdude produced art supporting the Hong Kong pro democracy movement whilst at the same time making fun of Chinese imperialism, art which usually was disfigured by parties opposed to those sentiments. The great Unknown Street Artist placed up a flowing illustration supporting the pro democracy side featuring the umbrella symbol of the movement.

Subdude
Subdude


Subdde
Subdude opposed


Artist Unknown
Artist unknown


Greece subcontracted the economic management of its economy to Germany in return receiving multiple debt bailouts.

artst unknown
Greek Flag Sold, artist unknown, Shoreditch 2015


Regional political stress has resulted in humanitarian crisis in many parts in the past decade leading to migrations fraught with danger, uncertain outcomes and inhospitable receptions en route. Immigration has been a key issue in recent Australian elections and Adelaide artist Peter Drew made a huge impact with his “Real Australians Say Welcome” campaign against treating refugees like criminals. When he was living in London he produced satirical paste ups riffing on issues of immigration and colonialism, highlighting with some humour the fact that the majority of non aboriginal Aussies hostile to immigration owed their prescence to an earlier wave piece of social engineering.

Peter Drew - Stop The Boats
“Stop The Boats”, Shoreditch 2013, Peter Drew


The situation in Syria since 2011 led to civil war by 2013 and massive displacement and a humanitarian crisis, an issue not missed by street artists in London

DON
“ Syria You Are In Our Thoughts”, DON, (Jan 2014)


Denial of basic human right to education featured a couple of times in large murals in London.

Dave The Chimp - Education Is not A Crime
“Education Is Not A Crime”, Dave The Chimp, London 2016


Wasp Elder
“Education Is Not A Crime”, Wasp Elder, London 2018


No other artist in the world has the power to illuminate a political cause with quite the effect that Banksy achieves. How many of us would not have seen the footage of French police tear gassing refugees in the Calais camps otherwise? Empirically my gut feel is not many of us.

So 2016... Banksy
Tear Gassed Cozette, Banksy, London 2016


The slaughter of Charlie Hebdo cartoonists and writers in their office in Paris was perceived both as an assault of freedoms of the press and an attack on artistic expression, consequently #JeSuisCharlie got major support from street artists.

Tom Blackford
Tom Blackford, Camden, 2015


Cept #JeSuisCharlie
Cept, Shoreditch 2015


Je Suis Charlie
Artist(s) unknown, Brick Lane, 2015


Intense single issue focus can lead to street art spots seeing large volumes of campaigning street art, such as the cause to end knife crime, of which there is a crazy amount in London.

Knife Crime
Artist/activist(s) unknown


Eine
Stop Knife Crime, EINE, Clerkenwell London, 2018


Expanded Eye produced infrequent but impressive political street art such as this composite figure symbolising the toxic combination of oil, money, guns and politics and least there be any doubt, which UK party wears blue ties? How impressive is it to drive-by stick half an oil drum to a wall?

Expanded Eye
Expanded Eye sculpture, Shoreditch, 2013


Aida was a one woman guerrilla girl engine staging art and events addressing many issues. Concern for the plight of artists in rapidly gentrifying Hackney Wick led to a mass art takeover of the disused Lord Napier pub. Among the artists participating were Himbad, Mighty Mo, Donk, Edwin, Dscreet, Aida, Goldpeg, Mobstr, Type (RIP), Rider, Malarky, Goodchild(with apologies to anyone omitted). Notice also a pre Extinction Rebellion appearance of the Extinction Symbol.
So 2016... Save Our Selves...Hackney Wick
Shithole To Penthouse, Hackney Wick 2016


Painter extraordinaire and street artist Dan Witz twice executed brilliant political campaigns in London, highlighting brutal treatment of prisoners held at Guantanamo and then "Empty The Cages" in support of PETA

Dan Witz
Dan Witz, Soho London, 2012


Dan Witz - Empty The Cages
Empty The Cages, Dan Witz, London 2014


On the theme of animal welfare, the government sponsored badger cull flared as political hotcake of the day in the rolling agenda leading up to the UK’s 2015 general election, artist Clancy came up with a whole host of clever badger awareness puns all curiously executed on what looked like freezer room insulation and installed up high.  TB or not TB is based on the political argument that culling was necessary to prevent cross species spread of TB.

Clancy
TB or Not TB, Clancy, Brick Lane 2015


Poverty, inequality and abuse of privilege lead to the global Occupy movement and as usual activism resulted in art, if actually very little else.

Occupy
We Will Take – OCCUPY, London 2011, artist unknown


The best and the worst has been kept until last, mainly because the issue now at this precise moment in time leads to nothing more than a sense of flat despair and helplessness. Fucking Brexit. Fucking Brexit will take every other serious problem the UK faces and make it twice as bad which is ironic as the country voted for it twice. In the lead up to the 2016 referendum the issue got almost no attention from British street artists. And why would it, at the time who imagined that anyone would seriously contemplate cutting the ties to the rest of humanity, to trade, even to the relative peace which had prevailed since two huge wars devastated Europe in the first half of the 20th Century. Well, only about 16.2 million people saw it that way, 17 million thought this would be a good thing. Street artists have got on the case for the three years since.

CodeFC
Brexit Through The Chip Shop, CodeFC, Shoreditch 2017


The most impressive Brexit artwork unsurprisingly came from the genius of Banksy, a monumental brilliant piece in Dover seen from every vehicle entering the most important sea link to the continent. http://bit.ly/2plxH4w

Banksy
Brexit, Banksy, Dover 2017 


Quiet British Accent
Bugger Brexit – George Vth paraphrased by Quiet British Accent


Floating Concrete
“Better Together”, cast concrete figures by Floating Concrete, Brick Lane 2019


In December 2018 then Primte Minsiter Theresa May faced a vote of no confidence in her leadership brought by her own party. She survived the debate but within 2 days Joe Bloggs had put up this brilliant satirical product design.

Joe Bloggs - Maygo
Maygo, Joe Bloggs, Brick Lane, 2018


Benjamin Irritant’s rabbit interrogates Donald on his achievements but it will also continue to question the Brexiteers about the state of Britain for many years to come.

Benjamin Irritant - Is It Great Again Yet?
“Is It Great Again Yet?” Benjamin Irritiant, London 2019


All illegal street art is political to some extent by virtue of its unauthorised hijacking of the public visual realm. No one is saying street art has changed the political landscape or achieved tremendous change, what street art does is provide oxygen, it breathes life into truth. If you do nothing you are complicit. This post features a small sample of artists Graffoto saw do something in the second decade of the century.

Banksy: If Graffiti Changed Anything...
If Graffiti Changed Anything It Would Be Illegal, Banksy, London 2011


Links:

Graffoto Blog: Brexit Street Art
Graffoto Blog: Take Back Control - Group Exhibition
Graffoto Blog: Banksy on Brexit - About Time
Shoreditch Street Art Tours Blog: 2015 How Do Street Artists Vote?
Shoreditch Street Art Tours Blog: 2017 General Election Street Art


All photos: Dave Stuart except courtesy Banksy where stated

Wednesday, 25 December 2019

A Decade On - King Robbo

Christmas Day 10 years ago the notorious Robbo vs Banksy spat went to another level. Robbo, RIP, headed out very early Christmas morning, crossed the Regents Canal at Camden directly under British Transport Police HQ and painted the perfect riposte to Banksy’s Wallpaperer.

Robbo WD, WRH vs Banksy
25th December 2019 KING ROBBO!


Early that Christmas morning I noticed a photograph on Flickr of Robbo’s new iteration of this piece posted by Robbo’s WRH crew mate Doze. The genius was immediately apparent from that photo. I whizzed straight down to the canal, took some photos and wrote “Banksy vs Robbo WRH, WD – Checkmate” which was up online before Christmas lunch was served. It remains to this day the most read post on Graffoto.

Before Robbo’s Christmas morning adventure, the art on the wall consisted of a workman by Banksy wallpapering over some graffiti, which was actually an ancient Robbo piece.

Banksy wallpaper graffiti
Banksy Wallpaperer, 19th December 2019


For context, Banksy vs Robbo was an intense feud with ancient origins but for roughly a 6 month period it raged spectacularly at several locations along Regents Canal in Camden as each artist attacked the other's art with a succession of insults.

It’s tongue in cheek, it’s all a laugh, it’s a giggle” Robbo told Graffoto about 10 months later when we met for a beery one on one unpublished interview in his local near Kings Cross.  Robbo also said in reference to the art Banksy was producing at the time "A couple of things I like, the graffiti wallpaper, that was a good piece, so was the global warming, that was a good piece. I appreciate art, I’m an artist. I’m a graffiti artist that’s my main flag but I am an artist".

Robbo, Pure Evil Gallery Sep 2010
Robbo exhibition opening night, Pure Evil Gallery, Sep 2010


Robbo, Pure Evil Gallery Sep 2010
Robbo exhibition, Pure Evil Gallery, Sep 2010


Robbo mentioned how he didn’t have much to do with social media so his mate put up the photo on Flickr, then early afternoon called Robbo to tell him the piece had already been picked up by a blog. Robbo said some kind and appreciative things about the Graffoto coverage so on the 10th anniversary of that event it is a pleasure to remember that exciting piece of art.

The word "Checkmate" in the title of that Christmas Day blog post was a bit presumptuous, Banksy didn't let things lie there and neither did Robbo.  Follow the full sequence of evens in the spat below:

Update - check Robbo's flick, in particular go down to Keen-one's comments, here.

Old news: Banksy hits Camden

Robbo Trumped Banksy: Banksy vs Robbo WRH, WD - checkmate

Banksy vs Robbo...Did You Think It Was Over?


And The Beef Goes On


Banksy v Robbo: War Continues

Banksy Reparations


2014, sadly..  Robbo RIP


Robbo tribute by Adnate (Mel)

Robbo RIP, Tribute by Adnate (Aus) in Shoreditch. Sep 2014

All photos: Dave Stuart

Thursday, 19 December 2019

2010s A Decade Of Murals

Muralism is the painting of astounding pieces of street art on buildings, these days usually with permission. We're talking daylight painting, accomplished artists and permission but not direct municipal involvement. In Shoreditch that’s generally how it operates. We are not talking about civic murals where artists pitch for council approval, arts council funding and perpetual legacy.

Although this is not intended to be about any kind of order or preference of ranking, let’s begin at the end, or perhaps the top, the one single mural in Shoreditch compared to which all others are fussy little miniatures, the Connectivity Mural painted in 2018 and partly repainted in 2019. This took muralism in Shoreditch to a level of complexity, coherence and (unimportantly) a size which we had not previously seen.

Busk and Oliver Switch, flanked by Ninth Seal and Best Ever to left, Ed Hicks and Dr Zadok to right
Busk and Oliver Switch, flanked to left by Ninth Seal, Nomad Clan and (just visible) Lovepusher and Mr Cenz; Ed Hicks and Dr Zadok to right, 2018


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Mr Thoms, Hunto, Captain Kris, Tizer, 2018


Autone Neist Connectivity Mural
Connectivity Matters - 2019 Pride update by Autone and Neist


Curiously, the very end of the decade saw an unexpected change to Shoreditch’s oldest mural as EINE updated SCARY in support of the mental health charity Movember

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EINE, Really Scary October 2007 - 2019


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Movember Scary, December 2019


At the start of the 2010s street art muralism was in its infancy. Typically artists were on their own if they wanted to sort out a permissioned wall or if they were lucky there might be a gallerist sorting out a few spots to paint in conjunction with a major exhibition.

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Mode 2, Wenlock Rd Laundry, 2010


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Gaia, Hackney Road, 2011 (who says murals have to be painted?)


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Phlegm, 2011


Mural walls with frequent updating were few and far between and were typically in the management of well organised, knowledgeable, skilled but otherwise busy spraycan artists.

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EINE, 2010


Muralism changed dramatically when Lee Bofkin, a man with a vision, set up Global Street Art and delivered a different model for mural organisation.

Spore, Macism
Spore, Macism, 2013 – support by Global Street Art


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Cyrcle, Cept, Run, Faith47, Mysterious Al, Rone


Soon muralism was on steroids, exactly the way you all love it now.   These days photo journals from certain street art and gallery websites pantingly announce “the world's best murals this month” and it is clear that what appeals most to them and by inference you, is SCALE. Things ain’t worth shit unless two hoists, a photographer and a drone were involved. We don’t have so much of that in Shoreditch thankfully.

ROA and buffed EINE
ROA permission mural work in progress; buffed non permissioned EINE above, Tizer below; 2014


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D*Face 2011


Jim Vision has been a key organiser of festivals, group shows and murals in Shoreditch but as also an awesome spraycan artist his own right produced a stream of belters throughout the decade.

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Jim Vision, Hanbury St, 2017


Jim has organised Meeting Of Styles in London since 2008 and in consequence the Nomadic Community Gardens housed a series of spectacular signature murals.

Twesh VIbers Odisy Gent 48 Ders Sokem Meeting Of Styles 2014
Twesh Vibes Odisy Gent 48 Ders Sokem Meeting Of Styles 2014


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Meeting Of Styles 2015 feat Zadok, Wisher, Tyme, Kak, Jim Vision, Ekto, Anone, ADNO


Meeting Of Styles 2017 feat Zadok, Xenx, Jim Vision, Balstroem, Neist & Twesh
Meeting Of Styles 2017 feat Zadok, Xenx, Jim Vision, Balstroem, Neist & Twesh


tn_IMG_8184 copy Meeting of Styles 2018
Meeting Of Styles 2018 feat Voyder, Samer, kaes, Jim Vision, Jeba, Irony, Fanakapan, Core & Aches


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Graffestival 2019 feat Jim Vision, Trafik, Balstroem, Cazer, Planet Rick, 2Rise, Vile, Lifer, Tizer


Graffoto is allowed to pick favourites so it’s a pleasure to include this 2018 Xenz mural which was just beautiful. The young man in the photo potentially has a great career as an art curator.

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Xenz, MOS 2018


Many home based artists made the transition from graffiti to non permissioned street art and then on to legal murals. At the start of the decade our favourite local muralists were the guys and girls making up the Burning Candy and The Rolling People crews.

CEPT Love Will Tear Us Apart
“Love Will tear us Apart” CEPT TRP, 2014



D*Face got a double points score with Guilty Pleasures as both a mural AND rooftop!

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“Guilty Pleasures”, D*Face, 2013


Murals don’t have to be huge. This stunning confection by meme Martinez was painstakingly painted and looked incredibly photogenic, something which Graffoto is always biased towards

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Meme Martinez, Argentina, 2018


Shok 1 consistently produced virtuoso spray painted Xray imagery and successions of interesting thematic projects including the spectacular Rainbow XRay series.

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Shok 1, Seven Stars Yard, August 2013


A real challenge in assembling a selection of favourite murals and finishing before the following decade ends is the painful process of deciding what to leave out. The same applies to Mr Cenz’s oeuvre, over the decade Mr Cenz has produced a solid stream of stunning futurist inspired portraits.

Mr Cenz
Mr Cenz, Fashion St 2018


In 2012 Sheffield’s Jo Peel managed to find a rain free 3 week period in April to paint and repaint a mural which was photographed to make the amazing “Things Change” award winning animation . Planning, execution and grinding hard work was required for this majestic achievement, a mural who fulfilment really unfolded in the virtual space with the street art element being a step in the process.

Jo Peel: Things Change
Jo Peel - Things Change (end piece)


Things Change animation - Jo Peel



Portuguese artist Vhils drilled and chiselled this amazing portrait out of the plaster on a wall on Hewitt Street on a vanished building which for a while provided a home for the End Of The Line crew. This portrait was significantly different in the way pretty much that no one really works quite like Vhils.

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Vhils, Rockwell Studios, 2013


Behind the Vhils in that photo you can see a mural depicting intertwined stiletto wearing legs by the immensely talented INSA. INSA developed his giffiti™ concept using an augmented reality phone app. The “Cycle Of Futility” was a standard waypoint for street art tours for a number of years until the wall was taken over by spraypainted adverts. You can simulate the effect INSA achieved on the street by downloading the free "Insa giffiti Viewer" app and displaying this next “work in progress” shot on a screen or another phone and viewing it through the app, available here.

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INSA, Cycle Of Futility, 2014 – 2018


London artist Stik’s “Big Mother” mural in Chiswick was the largest mural in the UK, the one time I cycled over to look at it a rear derailleur malfunction (shit happens) meant I didn’t get there and never actually got to see it in person before the block of flats was torn down! Brick Lane Couple dating from 2010 made it onto a list of the UK’s favourite art of all time in 17th place and from 2016 the famous “Shoreditch Past, Present, Future” has ruled the Old Street landscape though appreciating it requires understanding the different aspects of Shoreditch that each of the three characters is contemplating. Context is critical.

Stik
Stik, 2016


Event driven and campaigning murals were common occurrences. The terrible tragedy/crime at Grenfell tower led to many murals, including this two storey blockbuster whose scale is not actually that obvious from the photo:

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"Dedicated to all those who lost their lives 14 June 2017" by NHS and CBM

Australian artist Jimmy C has made a huge contribution to London walls over the span of the decade, perhaps the one with the largest impact internationally was this amazing portrait of Usain Bolt which surveyed Sclater St market during London Olympics in 2012. Also features a stunning trackside image by Dank Kitchener.

Jimmy C "Usain Bolt"; Dan Kitchener (below)
Jimmy C "Usain Bolt"; Dan Kitchener (below) 2012


That sorely missed spot also hosted a mural which was one of the highlights of Borondo’s sojourn in London in the decade’s middle years. Borondo was one of the most talented painters we saw in London over the decade and we were very luck to enjoy his work over quite a prolonged explosion of creativity.

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Borondo, hackney Wick 2013


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Borondo, Shoreditch 2014 – also featuring Miss Van and Dede


In 2012 Shephard Fairey visited and for the first time put up some stunning painted murals as opposed to the huge paste ups which had previously been his calling card.


Shepard Fairey - It Takes A nations Of Millions To Hold Us Back
Shepard Fairey – It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back


Even master of miniature sculpture Jonesy got a little mural action going

Jonesy
Jonesy Missing Link, Seven Stars, 2014


Neoh and Sweet Toof get a big nod simply for being awesome painters in completely different ways and being smashing people

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Sweet Toof, 2012


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Neoh, 2017


It may not be possible to shoehorn a Banksy entry into each of the Review of The Decade posts so in the context of murals we can’t overlook the genius of Shop Till You Drop. Proximity to one of London’s most chichi shopping locations Bond Street lend this mural great context and it also is great to see a Banksy that survives without being under plastic.

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Shop Till You Drop, Banksy, 2011


Contemplating the impact of street art murals inevitably weighs in the balance some great aspects and some which are perhaps a bit unfortunate but this is a celebration of some the stunning murals we have enjoyed over the past decade so we're not going to get into “muralism good or bad thing?” here, that’s what academics are for.

This series of "That was the decade that was" blog posts started with a look at the state of the game as it was back in 2010. Not sure what's going to come next nor when all wthat is asked is that you just love, sign up, and follow.


Inkfetish, Poer, Jasik, Nemo, Corp, Stik
Inkfetish, Poer, Jasik, Nemo, Corp, Stik


Panic ATG
Panik ATG, 2010

All photos: Dave Stuart