Tuesday, 8 June 2021

Shoreditch Street Art Collaborations

Planet Selfie & Hello The Mushroom

As we enjoyed a rare hot late May bank holiday in the UK, the Bank holiday Monday Shoreditch Street Art Tour discovered a fascinating range of new street art that had been put up since just the day before.  One curious aspect was the number of gorgeous collaborations, in fact just for fun we could link the artist combinations in a street art “degrees of separation” web of connectivity.   The main image at the top of the post features Planet Selfie & Hello The Mushroom.
Hello The Mushroom & So Schoen Immer Weider
Hello The Mushroom in collaboration with So.Schoen.Immer.Wieder

Paste up artist Hello The Mushroom, previously of London now based in Oslo, has collaborated creatively with many street artists from other countries and it was a pleasure to find eye catching art works with So.Schoen.Immer.Wieder, Planet Selfie, both of Cologne, Jens Regler from Sweden and Eraquario of Brazil.
Hello The Mushroom & Eraquario
Hello The Mushroom in collab with Eraquario

Hello The Mushroom & Jens Regler
Hello The Mushroom and Jens Regler

Planet Selfie & Hello The Mushroom
Hello The Mushroom in collab with Planet Selfie

Planet Selfie in turn has a collaboration up with Dacarter
Planet Selfie & DaCarter
Planet Selfie, Dacarter

The above photo features also Fanakapan's anamorphic balloon at the entrance to that alley, meanwhile also in that alley is another Planet Selfie, this time with Rad aka Raddington Falls
Planet Selfie and Rad aka  Raddington Falls
Planet Selfie, Rad aka Raddington Falls

Here for good measure is a small sample of the many collaborations that have delighted and inspired us in the past year starting with a couple of my favourite street artists, Smiler and Face The Strange.
Smiler & Face The Strange
Smiler & Face The Strange

Coloquix & UltraMarineDream
UltramarineDream & Coloquix

City Kitty, Mowcka, Neon Savage & Sketch Rat

Neon Savage, City Kitty, Sketch Rat, Mowcka – March 2021

Mowcka revisited this collaboration and added a new hair piece to it, Mowcka told us

“ I put a new paste ups on the previous one because it had been broken and I wanted to keep the collaboration”

Check out the fading of the original colours since the photo below was taken in its infancy.
Neon Savage, City Kitty, Sketch Rat, Mowcka June 2020
Neon Savage, City Kitty, Sketch Rat, Mowcka – June 2020

City Kitty has a podcast in which he chats with fellow street artist Lunge Box about this very subject, collaborations, check that out HERE

All photos Dave Stuart except where noted

Tuesday, 25 May 2021

Jano RIP - Graffiti Tributes At Feltham Circles

Shrine sacred to Jano's memory, RIP 

The graffiti scene recently lost a true virtuoso with the passing at a very young age of Jano. Jano was a master of style. He pulled off the almost impossible feat of constantly innovating and developing new directions while always remaining distinctive and instantly recognisable.
Jano - Sclater St London 2009 Jano - Sclater St London 2009

 Jano writing "Human", Leake St London 2009 Jano writing "Human", Leake St London 2009

Jano Shoreditch 2017 Jano Shoreditch 2017

Jano Shoreditch 2017 Jano Shoreditch 2017

 Jano, Bishopsgate 2017
Jano, Bishopsgate 2017 

Whenever you came across a Jano piece or saw his latest upload there was always a kaleidescope of geometry and colour that made the letter form almost redundant yet on close inspection Jano’s very inventive and unconventional take on letter shapes would be revealed to the patient and curious eye. You did not need to be a graff obsessive to see the beauty in Jano’s style and this cross-over appeal may explain a lot about the esteem in which Jano was held as well as something about the growing general appreciation of graffiti as a significant, valid culture.

  Jano, Exor Shoreditch 2018 Jano, Exor Shoreditch 2018

Jano, Leake St 2020 Jano, Leake St 2020 

Jano frequently painted concrete structures at the former sewage works in south west London now known as the Feltham Circles and it is at this location that a large number of tributes to Jano, by fellow writers have appeared – hat tip to Romanwg who messaged me to draw my attention to this.
  Feltham Circles Hall Of Fame, 21 May 2021 Feltham Circles Hall Of Fame, 21 May 2021 

Thanks also to local boy Art Of The State who pointed out that Feltham Circles is next to the crematorium where Jano’s funeral service was held. After the service and the next day friends, relatives and writers gathered at Jano’s favourite location to celebrate his life and pay tribute.
Vicious Circle by Gems VCS Vicious Circle by Gems vcs

RIP Jano, by Exor vcs RIP Jano, by Exor vcs

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Jano tribute by Gasp, background MrMeana
RIP Jano by Gasp, background MrMeana

Jano tribute by Paul Don Smith UA
Jano tribute by Paul "Don" Smith UA

Jano tribute by Sky High
Jano tribute by Sky High

Some graffiti writers, a talented few, develop a character which becomes as much a signature for their identity as their handstyle, the character is so distinctive and recognisable you are in no doubt who the creator was. Zomby has it, Tizer has it. Jano had it too. “The Boy” as the character is known, a seated character based essentially on a circle, was often found close to Jano’s graffiti and all around his usual writing haunts.
  The Boy - Jano, Sclater St 2009
The Boy - Jano, Sclater St 2009

The Boy is replicated in homage in many of the tributes.
  The Boy character homage by Chum
The Boy character homage by Chum

  The Boy, homage to Jano RIP
Jano Rest In Piece

The Boy, homage by Gem vcs 
The Boy, homage by Gem vcs

  The Boy, homage to Jano RIP

The Boy, homage by Dice 
The Boy, homage by Dice

  The Boy character by Sky High The Boy character by Sky High 

 Among the many character tributes was this particularly poignant shrine, also seen closer up in the feature image at the top of this post. It is possible that this version of the character may be protected under plastic as a genuine Jano relic, comments seen online from writers paying tribute to Jano suggest this may be the case.
  Shrine sacred to Jano's memory, RIP 

I met Jano on just a few occasions many years apart and found him courteous and tolerant of my intrusion on his painting. RIP Jano, not forgotten.
  Jano work in progress, Shoreditch 2017
Jano work in progress, Shoreditch 2017 

With apologies to all those writers and friends of Jano whose art features in this post but who through my ignorance I can't credit. If you know who any of the uncredited pieces are by, just drop me an email: nolionsinengland at gmail or insta DM  @dave_stuart_ldn, all polite messages most appreciated!

  RIP Jano: Gasp, Dice and MrMeana RIP Jano: Gasp, Dice and MrMeana

  Tribute to Jano RIP Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP

Tribute to Jano RIP 

All photos: Dave Stuart

Friday, 5 March 2021

Banksy's Wilde Time in Reading Prison

A street art stencil has appeared on the wall of the former Reading nick and after making us wait a little while, Banksy has just this afternoon confirmed it as his, the tease. Banksy, Reading Prison  


 As usual the confirmation comes simultaneously via his website and his Instagram and for the second time in less than a year it is in the form of a video showing in gripping detail an unidentified person spraying a stencil. A well sorted stencilling strategy is so important to a successful outcome and the video contains many fascinating details about the order of operations for this particular artwork.

  tn_Banksy video screen capture 
screengrab from "The Joy Of Painting With Bob Ross...and Banksy", Copyright Banksy 


The artwork depicts old fashioned “over the wall” flit by a prisoner and the presence of the typewriter suggests the escapee is a writer. All the coverage has inferred the art is related to Oscar Wilde’s incarceration in Reading and that seems reasonable. Lots of references to Oscar Wilde’s last published work “The Ballad of Reading Gaol” abound though many contend that the piece was written while Wilde was in Reading while literary historians say it was written post release.Banksy Reading Prison Escape 


Plenty of local coverage draws attention to a campaign to turn the now closed prison into an arts centre so there could be a political aspect with Banksy possibly offering support, though this would be the exact opposite of his intervention in 2010 which condemned the use of his street art as the centrepiece of a new “art-hotel”. 

Three elements really raise this seemingly modest artwork quite high in the Banksy cannon. Its placement is stunning, it is by the give way lines at a major roundabout in inner Reading so the chances of the artist being spotted were very high and indeed there are reports and photographs of work in progress last Sunday.

  tn_Reading Prison getreading news banksy-reading-prison-gaol-scaffold-19949321 Anonymous photographer, Reading and Berkshire News 


Secondly, it has context. There is the physical context which is why you need to see the prison in the backdrop, not for nothing does Banksy’s video includes a rising birdseye view over the wall. If you don’t see the prison buildings well, it’s just a high wall isn’t it. The historical context too is important, this being where Oscar Wilde did time and so the prisoner has the old school (non graff) writer’s tools of the trade, the typewriter. The weirdly downward pointing CCTV almost directly over the spot supplements the giggles nicely. 

Most importantly, while politically it is relatively mute although some are contorting themselves to see it as Banksy support for a Reading art centre, it is a brilliant cartoon. It ranks alongside the Simple Intelligence Test In Dumb Animals cartoon from Banksy’s 2001 book “Banging Your Head Against A Brick Wall"



Banksy Cartoon


Banksy Cartoon


Banksy Cartoon
"Simple Intelligence Test In Dumb Animals", reproduced from Banging Your Head Against A Brick Wall, copyright Banksy 2001 


There is a key aspect which the media hive seems to have collectively missed. The prisoner has been almost universally described as escaping from the prison using knotted blankets, even this afternoon in its umpteenth repost on the piece the BBC is STILL adhering to the idea they are bedsheets yet that is clearly not the case (Juxtapoz weirdly sees the typewriter as attached to the prisoner's leg).

Banksy Reading Prison Escape


Someone has given the wily prisoner a typewriter and under the guise of a major lengthy literary masterpiece, the prisoner has surreptitiously typed an escape rope on continuous paper.  This is about outsmarting your captors, just like the monkey in the intelligence test. Or, as Banksy himself put it in his punchline to that cartoon “A lot of people never use their initiative, because no-one told them to”.
 
Awesome.


  Banksy Reading Prison Escape 


 Photos: Dave Stuart except where stated otherwise