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graffiti: discontents under pressure
by roy christopher (royc@frontwheeldrive.com) - October 18, 2000
One of the major things that differentiates the human species from all other species on Earth is our ability to externalize subjective memory. To write things down. To store and exchange ideas outside of our brains. This all started with cave paintings and etchings. Graffiti, if you will, was the beginning of man's written history.

Graffiti proper, in the modern sense of the term, started in the late 1960s in New York City when a kid from the Washington Heights section of Manhattan known as Taki 183 ('Taki' being his tag name and '183' being the street he lived on) emblazoned his tag all over NYC. He worked as a messenger and traveled all five boroughs via the subways. As such, he was the first 'All-City' tagger. Impressed by his ubiquity and subsequent notoriety, many kids followed suit and graffiti eventually became a widespread renegade art form. Graff writers embellished their names with colors, arrows, 3-D effects and mad lettering styles.

By the mid-to-late 1970s, New York - especially its subway system - was literally covered with brightly colored murals with not only tag names, but holiday messages, anti-establishment slogans and full-on art works known as 'pieces' (short for 'masterpieces'). The world of graff preceded the rest of Hip-Hop culture, but became an integral part during hip hop's early-1980s boom, joining Breakdancing, emceeing and DJing as Hip-Hop's four elements.

Replacing the drab city walls and boring metal subway trains with greetings and flashy colors, most graffiti artists honestly saw themselves as doing a service to the city. City officials and stuffy citizens hardly agreed. Massive anti-graffiti campaigns grew right along with the artform itself and are still in effect today in most major metropolitan areas. These specialized anti-graffiti forces only added to the artform's already outlawed status. The ability to pull off a hype piece under such increasing pressure only made great writers more revered for their skills.

Graffiti still thrives in the jungles of our inner cities. It has survived as what Jello Biafra recently mentioned as "the last bastion of free speech", and Abbie Hoffman called wall painting "one of the best forms of free communication." Anyone can grab a can of spray paint or a fat marker and make their thoughts known to the passing population. You can buff graffiti, you can paint over it and you can arrest its practitioners, but as long as someone feels that their voice isn't being heard, you can't make it go away.

 
 
more information  
 

An Anti-Graffiti Web Page: The Internet Voice For The Graffiti Victim
Scary anti-graffiti website.

Graffiti Lexicon
Check it: "THE ANARCHIC ASPECT IN GRAFFITI: Anarchy does not mean without order, but it does mean without rule - except one that you would like voluntarily. Colloquially used it means that any person may do, at any time and any place, messages (graffiti) to any subject in mind. So here we have - for nothing (except tension at moment of doing and need of empty streets...) - BASIC DEMOCRATIC way of communication."

Mickey's Place In The Sun: Gang And Graffiti Resources
More misinformed anti-graff propaganda.

Art Crimes: Best Graffiti Sites
HUGE list of graffiti sites on the web from one of the best graff sites out there.

Anti-Graffiti Network
The Official site of the Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network (PAGN): "The Philadelphia Anti-Graffiti Network (PAGN) is dedicated to the eradication of graffiti vandalism through the coordinated efforts of city agencies, business organizations and community groups."

Art Crimes: The Writing On The Wall
The Internet's premiere graff site. Excellent world-wide coverage.

Futura 2000
Futura 2000 is one of the O.G.s of the New York City scene during hip-hop's original hey day. He's since moved on to album covers (for the likes of MoWax Records - U.N.K.L.E., DJ Krush, etc.) and digital design. As seen on his personal site. Get lost here!

Tag Magazine
The supercool magazine for Tag subcultures, featuring informative articles on underground hip-hop music, film, personals, chat-rooms, and more. Features one of the largest Tag pages in graffiti history, and RealVideo footage of Tag legends being busted by the police.

 
 


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