graffiti

How Bitter Racists Continue to Marginalize the Republican Party

Monday, November 17th, 2008
courtesy Staten Island Advance

courtesy Staten Island Advance

It’s been almost two weeks since Barack Obama was elected the first black U.S. president, and since then there have been “hundreds” of documented racial crimes across the country, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center, reported by the Associated Press.

Documented in the AP article are burned crosses in Apolacan Township, Pennsylvania and Hardwick, New Jersey; racist graffiti in Staten Island, Los Angeles and Kilgore, Texas; and a “Osama Obama” assassination prediction pool in Standish, Maine.

In Springfield, Massachusetts, a church under construction to house a black congregation was burned to the ground in the early morning after the election. While investigators have concluded the fire was caused by arsonists, they have no evidence it was racially motivated. The church’s leader has made up his own mind.

“I’ve seen segregation. I’ve seen Jim Crowism,” Bishop Bryant J. Robinson Jr. told the Boston Globe. “We’ve come quite a ways, but we’re not that perfect union yet. There’s obviously a remnant of that kind of behavior still being practiced, for whatever reason.”

Even more frightening, the splintered and ineffectual white supremacist movement has seen interest surge in the wake of the election. Two white nationalist Web sites have crashed because of heavy traffic, and a secessionist site has also had interest skyrocket.

These attacks follow on the heels of the racial epithets yelled at John McCain and Sarah Palin rallies during the waning days of the campaign.

Throughout the campaign, the Obama camp stayed away from discussing race, and the candidate had to convince his aides it was OK to give a major speech on race after the Reverend Jeremiah Wright issue came to a head. But while there may not have been a true dialogue between the candidates about race, some voters had to reconcile previously held beliefs.

In Levittown, Pennsylvania, and other cities in the western part of the state, voters overcame concerns about Obama’s race that had been present until the final days of the campaign. But in other counties that straddle the Appalachian Mountains, and down through the deep South, racial questions led to increases in support for John McCain. Voter analysis by the New York Times found that less than a third of white voters supported Obama in the South, compared to 43 percent of whites nationally. In Alabama, 18 percent of whites voted for John Kerry. Only nine percent voted for Obama.

If some upset voters have no trouble expressing their frustration by writing the N-word on parked cars, others don’t object to speaking their minds to a reporter. In the Times article, voters compete for the Most Racist Quote Award.

“I think there are going to be outbreaks from blacks. From where I’m from, this is going to give them the right to be more aggressive.” — Gail McDaniel

One white woman said she feared that blacks would now become more “aggressive,” while another volunteered that she was bothered by the idea of a black man “over me” in the White House.

Conservative commentators like Rush Limbaugh are crowing that the country is still more red than blue, ignoring the fact that the number of solidly conservative counties is steadily shrinking. And while Limbaugh says liberals “organize in little communes and cliques and cities and so forth and only want to hang around with each other and themselves,” he ignores places like Blount County in northern Alabama, where 84 percent of voters picked John McCain.

David Brooks, as moderate a Republican there is, worries the traditionalist arm of the GOP will cater to the base with more fear-mongering and suffer even more defeats on the national stage. An increased number of hate crimes can hardly be called a good start to rehabilitating the Republican image.

Banksy busted?

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Perhaps the most notoriously unidentified graffiti artist of all time has been photographed (or has he??).  At least that’s what a recent TIME article is reporting.  Known for his beautifully subversive works, Banksy has been compared to Andy Warhol for his consumerism and pop-culture shish-kebabbing.

From the TIME article:

Banksy’s art is frequently political, often funny and always outré. He has fashioned a replica of Stonehenge out of portable toilets, spray-painted animals and released an inflatable Guantanamo Bay prisoner doll at Disneyland. He has portrayed Queen Elizabeth II as a chimpanzee, rebranded Warhol’s iconic Campbell Soup can with a Tesco Value logo, and scrawled “Mind the Crap” on the steps of the Tate Britain museum. Banksy may be reclusive, but he’s not without a sense of humor.

He may also revile capitalism, but that hasn’t prevented his pieces for for selling for big bucks (over $1 million for a collection of ten pieces, according to TIME).  Yet no matter how many times he calls the kettle black, dude is scathing with a stencil and a can of spray paint.

TIME.com slideshow of Banksy’s work here.

Bombing to be heard

Thursday, June 5th, 2008

deeker
Image: Flickr

“People believe that they live in a kind of neutral public space.  What they don’t realize is that what is neutral to them, what’s a neutral, comfortable public space to them may actually be excluding a lot of people.”  — Susan A. Phillip,  author of “Wallbangin”

“This is me.  Hello world.  I’m fuckin here.”  –  Skuf, bomber

*****

There is a war being waged.  Bombers are coasting through the night, leaving the areas that they touch turned completely upside-down.  Unrecognizable.  The war has been raging for over 40 years across multiple continents and you probably didn’t even realize it was happening.

The battleground is not Basra, or Kabul, or Kosovo.  It is set against the urban backdrop of any city you live in, and probably any city you have ever been to.

The bombers are not planes.  They are graffiti artists and taggers, throwing up pieces on any space that will hold marker ink or spay paint.  “Bombers,” of course, being the name they called themselves before everyone else started calling them “graffiti artists.”

“The city was in such ugly condition and they’re not doing nothing…I’ll give you something to do.  Write write write, get up get up get up, bomb bomb bomb.  That’s why they say bomb the system.”   — Stay High 149 / Brooklyn

“Bombing is just all out destruction.”  — Pose II / San Diego

“There was an explosion of graffiti in Paris to the point where the people didn’t understand what was happening.  We all came from the outskirts to tear up Paris.”   — Shuck 2 / Paris

“I bomb because I want to, because I am sick of Germany, because the current social system is fucked up.”  — CBK Crew / Berlin

“We use the written word – typographic terrorism.”  — Wagi / Sao Paolo

“Japan is controlled, but that doesn’t mean there’s no resistance.”  — Very One / Tokyo

One thing (among many) the new documentary Bomb It accomplishes magnificently is lending a human element to the faceless graffiti anyone walking down the street has seen in any of the cities on the five continents visited by filmmaker Jon Reiss (Better Living Through Circuitry) and his crew.

What the film reveals is that graffiti is a form of expression for the voices that feel they cannot be heard otherwise.  Whether it’s the residents of dilapidated Brooklyn in the 1970’s, mixed race teenagers in South Africa struggling to find identity during Apartheid in the late 1980’s, or any number of youths existing on the fringes of society today, feeling shunned by what is considered “normal” civilization, Bomb It managed to uncover it all.

For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.  As people are marginalized, they find new ways to attack the institution that sent them to the outskirts of society, regardless of whether the root is poverty, neglect, fear, or the sterile cityscape of gentrification.

As the film gives a brief history of graffiti and gradually lays bare each of the underpinnings for the movement in America, France, England, Spain, Holland, Germany, South Africa, Brazil, and Japan, it works its way toward a final discussion of public space.

“Well you can’t have a democracy without public space,” said billboard subverter Ron English.  “There’s no point in having a voice or a concept or an idea if you can’t disseminate it.”

Areas not privately owned and paid for, at least in part, by tax dollars are designated public spaces.  Should these be forums for artists when gaining pleasure from viewing art is just as subjective as finding peace in a neutral blank space?

“Are we supposed to only go to art school and only hang our artwork in these designated spots,” asks artist Pink. “If there was no rebellion in our society, we would be stagnant.”

The film balances the opinions of the artists with community members and activists, with one citing ties between urban decay, gang activity and graffiti.  Another calls it “anarchy” when taggers and bombers think they can throw up anywhere they please.

But as many of the artists point out in the film, is their work really more offensive than a giant, 10-story picture of some guy in his underwear, “visually raping you,” as they say, while hawking a product?  The capitalistic favoritism seems to disturb them.  The city cracks down mightily on graffiti artists, but allows Clear Channel to buy up all the billboard and building facade space it wants.

It is not a struggle exclusive to graffiti artists either.  Islands of LA is an organization increasingly at odds with the city for turning traffic islands — deemed public space — into “territories of art.”  The group Coalition to Ban Billboard Blight was formed to combat the city of LA’s leniency on billboard advertisers violating size guidelines (around 4,000 currently in violation).  An LA public high school blogged about a “Graffiti 101” assignment for students “to record the ways you are confronted by messages as you travel to and from school on a daily basis,” including billboard art and city signage.

And these are just Los Angeles based issues concerning public space.  Where graffiti is concerned, city officials have been trying to slow it down for over 30 years now.  Coincidentally, the aesthetic has permeated many of the mainstream marketing campaigns that are then defaced by bombers who are still holding it down on the streets.

And no matter what you take away from those who simply get juiced from getting out there and dangling from an overpass to get their artwork seen, there will always be a blank space somewhere, tucked away in the urban jungle, waiting to get bombed.

*****

Bomb It is premiering in Los Angeles on Friday, June 6, 2008 at the Sunset Laemmle 5.