THE LAW IS THE LAW IS THE LAW
So many can't decide whether graffiti is art or a colourful mess that mars the senses of daily folks. but in essences, graffiti artists are allowed to colour the urban jungle, should they wish to. Only difference now is that that they need written permission to do so. I have a niggly feeling that this does not sit well with graffiti artists. Because isn't the unconventional and daring methods of painting in the dead of night, spraying dark corners of a subway and peppering unmarked walls with slogans, a sign of one's radicalism...of being some sort of revolutionary?
Sure, if done legally the artists will have more time to perfect their work but will it not lose some of its purity? Will the message not lose its essence? Will graffiti still have punch and spike or will it conform to the ideas of the ruling class, instead of speaking for those who are maimed by mainstream society ?
Just a thought...
e
Saturday, 28 October 2017
Charactery Conversions
The first source I chose was a magazine article on graffiti from the New York Times:
https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/07/11/when-does-graffiti-become-art/legal-venues-celebrate-graffiti-as-an-art-form
This source I changed to a blog format and can be found:https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=2718028827034264432#editor/target=post;postID=7890677869264114960;onPublishedMenu=allposts;onClosedMenu=allposts;postNum=0;src=postname
Reflection:
I had to ensure that I did not use the certain phrases as one is at times accustomed to doing. I also had to be cognizant of the message so that it remained sincere to the article.
The second source I chose was a blog on a famous graffiti photographer:
http://www.mtn-world.com/en/blog/2017/10/25/graffiti-here-was-just-a-game-for-kids-jeosm-interview-to-henry-chalfant/
This source I changed into a powerpoint presentation:
https://www.slideshare.net/secret/7gz5T60xgYqWWV
Rflection: The powerpoint was easy todo, but the uploading gave some issues as it failed a few times.
My third source is a youtube video that shows the viewer that graffiti artists are not just lazy kids with time on their hands but real thinkers who ponder ways to change space figuratively:
https://youtu.be/1lMcq0UdgJw
This source I changed into a tweet:
https://twitter.com/estdale/status/924273720046342144
Reflection: I found the youtube video refreshing and enlightening as graffiti artists are always regarded in a negative light. The tweet was easy to do and I chose to copy the link in my tweet so that people can go directly to the link and find the video themselves.
The other formats are:
Movie: Exit Through the Gift Shop: A Banksy Film is a 2010 British documentary film, directed by street artists. It tells the story of Thierry Guetta, a French immigrant in Los Angeles, and his obsession with street art.
Find out more: http://www.banksyfilm.com/
e-book: A photographic collection of underground works specifically located in Southern California
http://www.ebook777.com/graffiti-art-underground/
https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/07/11/when-does-graffiti-become-art/legal-venues-celebrate-graffiti-as-an-art-form
This source I changed to a blog format and can be found:https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=2718028827034264432#editor/target=post;postID=7890677869264114960;onPublishedMenu=allposts;onClosedMenu=allposts;postNum=0;src=postname
Reflection:
I had to ensure that I did not use the certain phrases as one is at times accustomed to doing. I also had to be cognizant of the message so that it remained sincere to the article.
The second source I chose was a blog on a famous graffiti photographer:
http://www.mtn-world.com/en/blog/2017/10/25/graffiti-here-was-just-a-game-for-kids-jeosm-interview-to-henry-chalfant/
This source I changed into a powerpoint presentation:
https://www.slideshare.net/secret/7gz5T60xgYqWWV
Rflection: The powerpoint was easy todo, but the uploading gave some issues as it failed a few times.
My third source is a youtube video that shows the viewer that graffiti artists are not just lazy kids with time on their hands but real thinkers who ponder ways to change space figuratively:
https://youtu.be/1lMcq0UdgJw
This source I changed into a tweet:
https://twitter.com/estdale/status/924273720046342144
Reflection: I found the youtube video refreshing and enlightening as graffiti artists are always regarded in a negative light. The tweet was easy to do and I chose to copy the link in my tweet so that people can go directly to the link and find the video themselves.
The other formats are:
Movie: Exit Through the Gift Shop: A Banksy Film is a 2010 British documentary film, directed by street artists. It tells the story of Thierry Guetta, a French immigrant in Los Angeles, and his obsession with street art.
Find out more: http://www.banksyfilm.com/
e-book: A photographic collection of underground works specifically located in Southern California
http://www.ebook777.com/graffiti-art-underground/
Sunday, 22 October 2017
The Value of Doodling
Graffiti has essentially been given a bad rap over the years. For too long people regarded graffiti has an eyesore on a many a building and that the artists should be locked away without any grub or bathwater until they learn their lesson! Hold thine horses for a New York minute and lets debate graffiti on African time. For if we do, we will find that graffiti has been with us since our forefathers wore loincloths...notwithstanding that it gets up the noses of some hoity-toities who are chained to their archaic ideas of art.
This is a Nswatugi Cave ensconced with rock paintings. This image was taken by Mikeflickr.com. Attribution: 2.0 Generic (cc by 2.0) This image is free to share (copy, redistribute) and adapt (remix and transform for any purpose)
People have become way too judgemental about graffiti, and why its that when churches have embraced it for the longest of times. In the middle ages graffiti was deemed acceptable.
This image was taken for as book called Medieval Graffiti of England's Churches. This artist is unknown and is said to be a commoner to depict Mary and Child. It can be found on arches in a Suffolk church.
Image found on Google and is free to share .
But not all graffiti of the past has real meaning. Some common folk just scratched their names on walls to solidify their existence, especially since they were without rights or power. In essence the image below is of someone writing today on the back of a toilet door: 'so-and-so was here'
Graffiti carved into one of the walls of Bayeux Cathedral, France
Image taken by Max-12
Attribution: 2.0 Generic (cc by 2.0)This image is free to share (copy, redistribute) and adapt (remix and transform for any purpose)
Of course, one's beliefs are also exemplified, shared, so that people can gawk and think there is something wrong with you. All gods were not made equal, some are just funkier than others:
Artist: Pshycox20 (mmmmm)
Some Rights Reserved
Attribution: Non Commercia Share Alike 2.0 Generic (CC
by NC-SA 2.0
This can be shared and distributed.
It cannot be used for commercial purposes.
If remixed or transformed, contribution must be distributed under the original license.
Some graffiti speaks specifically to a culture. This image below was photographed in Frankfurt
and Mr Pharoah has gone through a transformation of sorts. Arrrggghh!!
Artist: Wolgang Sterneck
Art for Change - Arabic Graffiti and Egyptian Street Art in Frankfurt
Attribution: Non Commercial Share Alike 2.0 Generic (CC
by NC-SA 2.0
Some Rights Resrved
This can be shared and distributed.
It cannot be used for commercial purposes.
If remixed or transformed, contribution must be distributed under the original license.
MEDIA
Graffiti is one of the four elements of the hip-hop movement. It is an art on its own and works seamlessly with the other genres of hip-hop.
Title : Wire FatCap
Posted by : Vincent Morgan
Copyright © 1998-2011 Fatcap - All rights reserved
Top Ten Graffiti Artists
The Artists Block
YouTube allows users to mark their videos with a Creative Commons CC BY licence.
Attribution is automatic under the CC BY licence, meaning that any video you create using Creative Commons content will automatically show the source video titles underneath the video player. You retain your copyright and other users get to reuse your work subject to the terms of the licence.
Blogs also prove to be popular amongst the graffiti crew. From finding the tools, to how to make their own tool (read spray) there is a large following of bloggers who make it their mission to paint the internet with their thoughts as if it were walls.
Founding Father: JonONe
http://156worldwide.blogspot.co.za/
In the United States, all creative works automatically fall under copyright law. Even if you make no assertions of copyright, your posts on Blogger belong to you exclusively. You hold the copyright on the text of your blog, but some parts of your content cannot be copyrighted. These include titles, phrases, ideas, methods, lists, facts and common phrases.
#thegraffitipodcast
The Graffiti Podcast is the first ever podcast of its kind. they talk all things Graffiti and Hip Hop, bringing you exclusive interviews with people who are making waves wherever they go.
OPEN EDUCATION RESOURCES
Graffiti has been used as a tool for educating the young. Because it is seen as funky and a trendy way to express oneself, they youth have taken to it easily. Documents implemented aspects of graffiti to educate. Dropping some heavy flavour, here are a coupla sources for you to peruse
Conditions of Use:
Creative Commons Attribution, non Commercial- No Derve.3.0 unsupported
The interactive activity below uses the graffiti idea and merges it with doodling. It helps kids t visualise, thus helping with their reading.
Copyrighted materials, available under Fair Use and the TEACH Act for US-based educators, or other custom arrangements.
Graffiti artist Danny 'Dan-One' Polonco, a self-described "Alphabetical Engineer," talks about graffiti art form as a means for self-expression.
Copyrighted materials, available under Fair Use and the TEACH Act for US-based educators, or other custom arrangements.
Below deals with the legitimacy of graffiti and the artist. Lectures are interactive as student will be asked to find solutions to defining urban space.
Remix and Share: Remixing, redistributing, or making derivatives works comes with some restrictions, including how it is shared. The artist below shows that graffiti artists determine their realms and that there are many directions in which to take graffiti art.
Copyrighted materials, available under Fair Use and the TEACH Act for US-based educators, or other custom arrangements.
Go to the resource provider to see their individual restrictions.
I hope this helps in terms understanding graffiti and the artists.
Know that art comes in all forms and cannot be boxed or framed to make you feel comfortable.
|
Wednesday, 4 October 2017
Dont Be Conned by Authority
Researching the life of Wolfie Kodesh
Background:
He was a long-time South African Communist Party member and a prominent
figure in the liberation struggle who died at age 84 in Cape Town on 2 October 2002.
Kodesh was one of the stalwarts of the liberation movement. He was
described by those who knew him as a soldier, a patriot, an African
Nationalist, a communist, a man of laughter and a father figure.
Discipline:
Third-Year information and library science students at UWC
researching archive management.
Learning Outcomes:
1
Define different types of authority, such as
subject expertise (scholarship), society position (public office or title), or
special experience (participating in an historic event).
2
Use markers of authority to determine the
credibility of sources.
3
Recognise that authoritative content may be
packaged formally or informally and may include audio, visual and non-print
sources.
Materials Needed:
A internet
B hardware: desktop/tablet/smartphone
Activities:
1 To prepare for their practical
lesson on archiving the personal
contents of Wolfie Kodesh, the background and his activities during the
apartheid struggle has to be researched so that the collection can be filed in a manner that is
user friendly and sensible.
2 Students will need to access to
the archives of Mail and Guardian and
The Guardian newspapers to thread
Wolfie Kodesh’s activities and what else has be noted of him. They have to question the validity of the
newspaper, the journalist who wrote the piece on Wolfie Kodesh and under which
circumstances it was written.
Interviews with and about Wolfie Kodesh completed by Julie
Frederickse for her book The Unbreakable
Thread must be analysed and her credibility verified. In addition the students must be observant of
the light in which Wolfie Kodesh was regarded
by his peers and others whom he encountered by paying close attention to tone
and register while interviews were conducted.
3
Students will need to register and access the
visual contents that SAHA (South African History Archives) has on Wolfie Kodesh
and relationships that he nurtured to validate the printed documents that they encounter in the collection that
they are busy with.
Disposition:
Throughout this process students must cognizant of the
voice of authority and the role it plays in the providing the information about
Wolfie Kodesh so that, as far as possible, a true reflection may be displayed
of such a great man.
Throughout the process, they must maintain an open mind
and continuously address their bias as well as those authorities they are
trying question/validate.
They must realise the importance of assessing information
and validating it so that they can remain sincere to the process of archiving
and as well as trying to do justice to the subject.
To complete the task at hand, they must realise the
importance of questioning authority and being open to varying opinions and
views.
E
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