Monday 6 January 2020

2010-1019 Wild Wonderful Inventive Street Art

As we slide through the holiday period, unsure of what day it is and absolutely no idea about the date, our only grasp on the sludge of events we are laying down and will call “history” is that something happened yesterday or 3 days ago, whatever day or date that was. The other evening we partied like it was 2019 and then suddenly, just like that, it was 2020 and that previous decade was done.

Graffoto has indulged in series of reminiscences over the past couple of weeks, whatever dates they were, looking at the stuff that blew our socks off over the past decade. Like the previous posts this one no particular order, no implied ranking and there certainly is no logic.

ALO
A Bun In Their Hair, ALO, Shoreditch 2014


Working on concrete is obviously rather common in street art and although the German artist EVOL isn’t actually a sculptor the scale distorting effect of his stencilled miniature ghetto installation in 2011 complete with cheeky references to some of his hosts in London was pretty unique and uniquely pretty.

Evol
Unsocial Housing, Evol, Smithfield Market 2012


Evol
Sink estate with mini Elk, Evol, Smithfield Market 2012


Evol
'ave a butchers, Evol, Smithfield Market 2012


Novelty makes strong memories, some street art we are reminded how great it was as they surface while flicking through the archives, others acts of genius like this next one spring to mind unprompted. Mustafa Halussi did a conceptual hijacking of the flyposting tradition by co-opting flyposters into a random artistic display titled “Flyposting – A retrospective”. In fact Halusi's actual physical contribution was just the title. This did tie in to his gallery exhibition of the same name and harked back to his career as an illegal flyposter, no flies on this guy when it comes to squeezing commercial value out of street art. The street display included an auto rehang mechanism which kicked in when the flyposters under Halussi’s exhibition label changed.

Mustafa Halusi
"Flyposting: A Retrospective", Mustafa Halusi, Shoreditch 2015


On the roof of the long lost Cordy House, Chu painted an extraordinary trick-of-the-eye piece where London’s underground system blasted straight into a scene out of China. The image fused visually with an actual building in the background whilst the bulk of the painting was on a rooftop house structure which Chu’s artistry totally flattened.

Chu
Chu, Shoreditch 2010


ROA painted a lot of “virgin” walls in Shoreditch in the first half of the decade and his bedraggled grubby animals always looked like they belonged exactly as and where he placed them.

Roa
Roa, Brick Lane2010. Also feat Stik and Illjoseph


Roa
Thirsty Rat, Roa, Whitchapel 2010


French stencilists brought beautiful multi layered stencil portraiture over to London, Jana and JS visited several times and created some beautiful pieces of art.

Jana & JS
Jana and JS, Brick Lane, 2012


Jana & JS
Jana and JS, Brick Lane, 2012


American artist Mando Marie also visited London a few times, her stencilled tension between a clichéd wholesome innocence pitted against threatening beasts always welcome, seen here over a background of Jana by Jana and JS.

Amanda Marie vs Jana & JS
Mando Marie, Jana and JS, Shoreditch 2013


One artist who spanned most of the decade with distinction in terms of the quantity, variety and quality of street art was German artist Mr.Farenheit. He incorporated many different art styles into his street art and left some of the best “found art” out there for fans to discover and take home. He is genuinely missed following his decision along with his partner Lovepiepenbrinck to quit street art a few years ago.


Mr Farenheit
Mr Farenheit, Spitalfields, 2015


Mr Farenheit
Free Art, Mr Farenheit, London 2013


London Street artist Stik demonstrated many times that great art need not be complex. From many candidate photos of lovely pieces produced over the years, this piece from Winter 2012 brings to mind the “Walking In The Air” song from The Snowman animation while making lovely use of the arched architectural features.

STIK
Stik, Hoxton 2012


Paolo Cirio had an interesting idea to populate the streets with blown up print outs of people captured on google street views, completing a circle bringing people back from the virtual world to the real world at the spots where they had originally been photographed. Not sure who had the idea first but we did see other artists running with similar concepts after that.

Paolo Cirio
Street view peoploids, Paolo Cirio, 2012


Another favourite artist who beautified London streets through the whole decade has been ALO, originally from Italy. He started with small paste ups but soon moved on to painting multi-layered tribal influenced portraits and figures, not to mention a couple of solo shows at the Saatchi Gallery.

ALO, Alex Senna and Cranio
“Wino”, ALO, alongside a lovely collab Brazilian street artists Alex Senna and Cranio, 2013


ALO
ALO, Shoreditch, 2018


French street artist Clet Abraham has been a regular visitor and has spread his traffic sign subversion far and wide across London. Size isn’t everything, it’s about clever interactions with the authority’s installations.

Clet Abraham
Clet Abraham, Putney, 2014


Clet Abraham
London Calling Clet Abraham, 2016


The artist 616 produced a stream of inventive fascinating street art artefacts from a tremendous variety of unconventional materials. He is one of those artists whose every new direction made you think “wow, that’s clever”.

616
616 hanging around, Shoreditch 2012


616 Space Hopper
Space hopper tree, 616, Shoreditch 2014


616
Plum Your Buttresses (every one else painted the wall panels!), 616, London 2016


In 2015 Victoria Villasana collaborated with photographer friends to install beautiful tinted photographs embroidered with colourful threads in a traditional Mexican style. Subjects ranged from celebrities to refugees and Villasana redefined yarnbombing.

Victoria Villasana
Celebrating empowered women, Villasana augmenting Betty Page phone box by D7606, 2015


Victoria Villasana
Victoria Villasana London 2015


Victoria Villasanna & Reuben Dangoor
Victoria Villasana & Reuben Dangoor, Shoreditch 2016


Adbusting is one of our favourite forms of street art. In 2012 a group of street artists hijacked a series of billboards around the world in a coordinated No-ad Brandalism campaign and over the decade we saw many examples of successful hijackings of illuminated street advertising frames

KennardPhillipps
Brandalism, KennardPhillipps, Kings Cross 2012


Vermibus
Vermibus, Shoreditch 2012


Vermibus
Vermibus, Shoreditch 2015


Advertising Shits In Your Head was ironically an advert for a book on the political tyranny of mass media advertising but Protest Stencil always produce very impressive bus stop takeovers
Advertising Shits In Your Head
Advertising Shits In Your Head, Protest Stencil, Islington 2016


For advert subversion, Art Is Trash completely destroyed these overtly and excessively exploitive adverts, the detail is just crazy!

Art Is Trash subverts illegal fly posters
Art Is Trash v Flyposters, Shoreditch 2013


If quixotic and unconventional floats your boat, how about artists placing genuine antique Victorian pennies out on the streets? Quiet British Accent are known for the colourful political angle they bring to prints of vintage pre decimal pennies but the first intriguing specimen of their art we found was an anonymous “Free Art” Victorian penny hiding behind a pipe on a back street in Shoreditch. The longevity of another quartet of Victorian pennies painted, coated in resin and still sticking in their original home on a wall in Shoreditch some 5 months on is only just a little short of miraculous.

Quiet British Accent
“Quiet But Angry” Victorian Penny, Quiet British Accent, Shoreditch 2018


Quiet British Accent
“Change Is Gonna Come”, Quiet British Accent, Shoreditch 2019


London based artist This1 first came to everyone’s attention in 2015 with what were little more than illustrations in architectural niches. Froms such small beginings he has gone on to produce some amazing large scale street art including the longest continuous shutter mural we have ever seen. Yes, This1 should certainly have been included in the Decade of Murals post a few days ago.

So 2016... ThisOne
Shutter Snake, ThisOne, Whitechapel, 2016


Dr D used many forms of street art across the decade to make witty political points, his subversion of London’s congestion charge zone as a social exclusion zone was clever but in particular the “cojones” involved in the daylight installation of a satellite dish on a building which until it housed a 3 story wrapround digital advert screen was known for its privacy, its high security fencing and a zero tolerance of street art was awesome.

Dr D
Social Cleansing Zone, Dr D, 2015, multiple London locations


Dr D
Sly TV, Dr D, Shoreditch 2016


The only way to bring to a close this dredging up of our favourite specimens of wild outdoor art is to look back at what Banksy has been up to. Although Banksy produced far less street art in the past decade than in the noughties, on almost all respects other than quantity he continues to be the most important, brilliant and relevant artist in whatever field he chooses.

Banksy’s Better In Than Out in New York saw a month long treasure hunt - "hide and seek" combo which cast Banksy as Bonnie And Clyde against the NY mayor, police and press and the world watched with glee but we already knew Banksy would never be caught.

the banksy spectacle
Better Out Than In, Banksy, New York October 2013. Photo by LunaPark


He also had a major art triumph staging a group shop with a conscience at Dismaland though we already knew Banksy did extraordinary/exhibition experience fusion.

Banksy in Dismaland
Dismaland, Weston Super Mare, 2015


He created a huge political mural in Dover in 2017 but we already knew Brexit was a stupid idea.

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EU Flag Update, Banksy, Dover 2017


My favourite Banksy of the decade however was his Les Miserables in Knightsbridge, London’s embassy land. It has the Banksy signature elements, it had the cleverness in repurposing the iconic image of Cosette, it had the impact in terms of global exposure, right opposite the French embassy it combined perfect placement with the “wow, how did he get away with that" element. We did not however know about the French police tear gassing migrant families in the camps in Calais and this was Banksy’s crowning achievement, bringing that shameful episode to wider international attention.

Banksy Les Miserables
CS gassed Cosette, Banksy, 2016


Banksy
Placement! Les Miserables v. French Embassy, Banksy, Knightsbridge 2016


Much as it has been a pleasure trawling back through the personal collection of photos and reminding ourselves what our memories should be, at some point a line has to be drawn. Or painted. Every time the photo collection is reopened something else on the screen screams for inclusion. Accidental omission or unavoidable exclusion is a shame and so Graffoto apologizes to all the other brilliant artists who made 2010 - 2019 a brilliant decade and ought to be here but sadly aren’t. 

You Have A New Memory - Dr D
You Have A New Memory, Dr D, Shoreditch 2018


LINKS

All photos Dave Stuart except LunaPark where noted

This series of reviews started with an examination of street art at the beginning of the decade: Graffoto 10 year Review Intro

Next came a review of 10 years of murals

On Christmas Day we slipped in an unscheduled flashback A Decade On - King Robbo

Then came Political Street Art of the 2010s Decade

Most recent, 2010-2019 A Decade of Street Art Sculpture


Also worth checking out are all the individual annual highlights of written (nearly) every year:

Graffoto's Roundup Of The Year Part 1 2011
 
London's Street Art 2013 - Nostalgia is so last year 

London Street Art Highlights 2014

2015 Street Art Flashbacks

So 2016

2017 - Bigger, Better, Banksyer!

Back In The Day 2018

Monday 30 December 2019

2010-2019 A Decade of Street Art Sculpture

At the beginning of the 2010 decade, a decade forever tainted by lack of a decent single word to define the period, the street art of Darius Downey, Ronzo and even the occasional Banksy sculpture (pickaxe phonebox) notwithstanding, there was not much sculptural street art to speak of. As a more benign accepting tolerance of street art developed in the 2010s we began to see a broader range of artists willing to put work on the streets and a growth in street art exploring the third dimension.

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Unknown Stainless Steel Bird On Perch, Brick Lane 2013
(edit: Brilliant reader Lucy identified artist as Metalbird, thanks Lucy)


Someone who frankly could have been included in several of these 2010s flashbacks is Ronzo. Ronzo did a variety of sculptures of various sizes including spoof coats of arms, weird cockroaches and fake fossils but what tickled people’s appreciation of naughtiness most was the time Ronzo went round drilling into pavements to install “Pity of London”, his own version of the City Of London’s guardian dragons. Its magnificence can be relived on the Graffoto post "Crunchy: the Ronzo Credit Crunch Monster

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Pity Of London, Ronzo, Aldegate 2010


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City Of Ronzo Coat Of Arms, 2011


Someone who has been in many of these decade reviews already is the brilliant, thoughtful, inspiring Jonesy.  These are the ultimate in unshouty sculptures and it was impossible to decide which ones to include in a list of favourites, so here are just a few:

Jonesy Hear No Evil 2019
Hear No Evil, Jonesy, Brick Lane 2019


Jonesy 2019
Radiation warning, Jonesy, Shoreditch, 2019


Jonesy 2014
Glitter bust, Jonesy, Seven Stars 2014


Jonesy Pesticide 2018
Pesticide, Jonesy, Old Truman Brewery 2018


Jonesy Griefing Oil 2012
Griefing Oil, Jonesy, Brick Lane 2012


Jonesy Methane Permafrost 2015
Methane Permafrost, Jonesy, Seven Stars 2015


Dan Witz was also mentioned in the review of political street art through the 2010s but his two campaigns in London had such a strong installation element it is a pleasure to feature him again here;

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Dan Witz, London West End, 2013


Spanish street artist Arte Es Basura / Art Is Trash visited London several times during the decade and his art embraced painting, sculpture, salvage, installation and performance. Art Is Trash is truly epic, outrageou, quick and one of the most inventive street artists of the decade.

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Robbo RIP tribute, Art Is Trash, Shoreditch 2014


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Art Is Trash


London has its own amazing trash sculpturist who spent most of the decade using the moniker Sell Out. Sell Outs trash installations typically followed a more political or contemporary news relevance such is this one shortly after Madonna fall off stage performing at an awards ceremony

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Madonna Stage Dive Malfunction, Sell Out, Brick Lane 2015


In 2017 The UK nearly buckled under the stress of shortage of broccoli but one man wasn’t going to give in to Spain’s attempt to bring the UK to its knees with a broccoli blockade. Broccoli man Adrian Boswell mocked the broccoli crisis with a series of broccoli street art installations.  Ongoing.

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Broccoli Man, Shoreditch 2017


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Broccoli Lane, Adrian Boswell, Spitalfields 2019


Goddess of the crochet art installation is New York based Polish artist Olek. Olek suffered outrageously at the hand of the British legal system after fending off unsolicited approaches from a Russian in a bar which under any interpretation today would be categorised as a sexual assault but unfortunately her assailant happened to have immense wealth and political connections. This sadly curtailed Olek’s appetite for visiting London but she did at least produce some great art during the year long period she was under curfew and prohibited from leaving London.

OLEK - Injustice “Injustice Anywhere”, Crochet panels, Olek, London 2012


OLEK - "We Love London"
Crochet clad bike, Olek, London 2011


Another artist who did some wonderful combined crochet and knitting was 8armstohug from Cologne, some of her charming octopi lasted several years. This octopus in its octopus tank just scream 9 on the cuteness scale,

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Stop Worrying, 8armstohug, Shoreditch 2018


Just as the decade counter was about to turn over another 10 years, Lost Hills came in with one of the most novel sculptures of the lot. It’s not just that these were large, lurid fluffy creatures but more that they had eyes that glowed in the dark, a genius bit of hacking of technology available at every garden centre.

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Day. Lost Hills, Brick lane, 2019


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Night. Lost Hills, Brick lane, 2019


You might not “Adam and Eve” this but the maligned and distressed life size (Italian) figures just off Brick Lane have been there for over two years, enduring on a wall that used to be regularly buffed but whose accretion of art possibly says something about the triumph of tolerance over scarce financial resources.

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Adam and Eve, UrbanSolid, Brick Lane May 2017


Elephants in many different guises have had representation on London streets throughout the decade including campaigns such as The Elephant Parade in 2010, Olek’s support of the Elephant Family in 2013. Perhaps the most curious is the Elephant Sculpture campaign to have elephants recognised as sentient beings and given equivalent legal rights to humans.

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We Are people, Elephant Man, Old Street 2017


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Elephant Man, Hackney Wick 2018 (eyeballs may or may not be a subsequent addition)


One of the most impressive perhaps even iconic sculptures in Shoreditch was "Portal",  CityzenKane's relief sculpture tribute to his son sadly departed very young, in certain conditions the sculpture actually wept.

CityzenKane
CityzenKane, Shoreditch 2014


CityzenKane
CityzenKane (detail), 2014


Skully’s art appeared infrequently, in part due to the act that skully is now based on the far side of the planet. The skulls were exciting anonymous artefacts in the noughties but some did appear during the early years of this decade and amazingly, some still survive.


Skully was the first street artist we spotted incorporating growing plants into their art, when these daffodils erupted from a skull in Spring 2015.

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Skully, Blackall Street Shoreditch, 2015


The abstract concrete castings of 3x3x3 first excited us back in 2011. These are usually buggers to find and usually just a few are added on the streets each year. 3x3x3 has also put up ironmongry tags which in their own crumbling oxidised way look as brutal as his concrete sculptures.

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Abstract concrete thing, 3x3x3, Buxton St, also feat Arrex Skulls and C3 (detail), 2018


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Iron tag, 3x3x3, Shoreditch 2013


Also working in concrete was Spanish artist Isaac Cordal. His figures perched on walls, poles and in puddles looking resigned, contemplative and generally accepting of their fate, apart from the bankers of course.

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Isaac Cordal, Brick Lane 2010


Lovepiepenbrinck spent a substantial part of the decade subverting the urban landscape with her small piggy sculptures. These kind of popped up and usually disappeared, a few survive though and I was utterly gobsmacked this autumn when a small child on a tour bent down and looked into a tiny knee high fissure in a posh Hoxton street and spotted a piggy, hidden for years and years and possibly never chanced upon by anyone else.

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Very Well Hidden Piggy, Lovepiepenbrink date unknown, discovered 2019


This is the ultimate in art that is not pandering to audience of fans, what were the chances of that one being discovered by the public, it is one of those artworks a street artist puts up and then smiles as it survives undetected for days/weeks/months/years (delete according to implausibility). Lovepiepenbrinck never gave exact locations, it was a treasure hunt but a piggy was never at the end of the rainbow.

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Lizard Piggy, Lovepiepenbrick, Shoreditch 2014


This compilation of favourite street art sculptures from the about to disappear decade is woefully inadequate is so many ways, the most frustrating perhaps being that it would possibly take another 10 years to sift through all the photos and produce comprehensive list of all the ones worthy of merit. For fear of blight through omission, this post will close with a volley of other wonderful sculptures which have been the source of immense delight over the past 10 years.

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Tribal Sculptures, LDashD, Brick Lane 2018


Jace, Stik 2017
Small faces in great places – Homage to Stik’s Brick Lane Couple, Jace, 2017 (this photo), 2018, 2019 (re-installations)


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3D D-Dog, D*Face, Shoreditch, 2016


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“He Left Me Hanging”, text based sculpture, Mobstr, Brick Lane 2016


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“Up Yours Sarkozy”, Gregos, London 2015


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Rae (NY), Shoreditch, 2013


616's dangly bits
Kinetic “running legs” sculpture, 616, Shoreditch 2013


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Concrete Cameras, Chinagirl Tile, Brick Lane


It would be remiss not follow up with another artist working in concrete, the east London genius of Floating Concrete, already featured in the decade 2010s review of political schizz.

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Egoman, Floating Concrete, Old Truman brewery 2018


All those other artists who put up busts, hands, penises, vaginas, angels, abstract mirror shards, gargoyles, insects, birds, trash sculptures, mosaics, luchadore masks etc etc – thank you for your erections.

Links:

This series of reviews started with street art at the beginning of the decade: Graffoto 10 year Review Intro

Next as a review of 10 years of murals

On Christmas Day we slipped in an unscheduled flashback A Decade On - King Robbo

Then came Political Street Art of the 2010s Decade

Other links:

3x3x3 Graffoto Blog: "To The Power Of Three"
616 Street Art Old and New
Show review Art Is Trash "Police and Horse"
Adrian Boswell Broccoli Man on Graffoto
CitizenKane "Portal" making of

 D*Face Autobiography Review "One Man and His Dog"
Graffoto Blog: Dan Witz - Empty The Cages
Gregos: A Street Art Face Off
Jace Small Face homage Stik In Time
Olek, Injustice, Anti Slavery International, Dirty White Cotton on Graffoto

Rae show review "Nocturnal Trips"
"Crunchy: the Ronzo Credit Crunch Monster” on Graffoto
Street Artist Sell Out installations

All photos: Dave Stuart