Monday, April 25, 2011

Is Graffiti Art?

Read the small print


Is graffiti art or vandalism?
I look at it this way . . . for me, graffiti is art . . . the graffiti I see, that I like, is decorative, colorful and fun. It's great design . . . I am not talking about tagging, which to me, isn't so much decorative or pretty, it's usually ugly lettering, sprayed onto freeway overpasses and marks the gang territory.
The graffiti I like is found on buildings that have commissioned it. I like it on canvases and in galleries, like those of artist, Gajin Fujita.

Gajin Fujita’s was born in 1972 to Japanese parents but grew up in Los Angeles. Fujita blends Eastern techniques such as anime and old school elements like geishas, warriors and demons with Western, urban imagery to create his unique style – (hip-hop, urban graffiti meets traditional Japanese painting.) His works embody the cultural and class contradictions
that are an integral part of our global village. To see more of Gajin Fujita, go to his gallery at LA Louver in Venice or to lalouver.com

A few years ago when my son wanted me to take pictures of him for his hip hop / rap album cover, we looked for a great backdrop around town and found exactly what we were looking for at The Boys and Girls Club of Venice on Lincoln Blvd. Again, this graffiti was painted probably by someone at the Club.



We did another photo shoot about a year later, when he got a band together and he asked me if we could find some good graffiti. It wasn't difficult This art was commissioned as well . . .



My personal favorite . . .


On the corner of Broadway and Cloverfield in Santa Monica, is a building completely painted in graffiti. It is the Cinergi building, painted in 1992. I was blown away the first time I saw it. It was new and exciting and as a designer I loved the use of graffiti as a creative expression of the uniqueness of what goes on inside!! I had never seen graffiti used like this before.



Today, graffiti has really gone mainstream, from the film by Banksy called "Exit Through the Gift Shop", and nominated for an Oscar, to "Art in the Streets", the current exhibition at the Geffen Contemporary Museum in downtown LA.


Banksy art on a wall . . . looks like fun, not vandalism . . . but then . . . it isn't MY wall either!! Although I think it would be kind of cool if it were . . .

The Geffen Contemporary show has created all kinds of backlash, from the director, Jeffrey Deitch, who commissioned a mural by artist Blu, for an exterior wall of the museum, but didn't see a sample before it was painted on the wall. Once it was completed and he saw it, he didn't approve of it and had it painted over...(It was a mural of coffins draped in dollar bills)
. . . to taggers spraying their way into history by painting their masterpieces all over Little Tokyo.

Blu's mural that Deitch had painted over . . .
The Veteran's administration building is across the street and he thought this was 'insensitive'


"A tagger vandalized the Little Tokyo Gold Line station across from the "Art in the Streets" exhibit, while workers quickly painted over it and which investigators suspect was related to the Geffen's graffiti exhibit."
Dozens of tags, including monikers and larger "bombs" turned up on several commercial buildings behind 1st Street, as well as on dumpsters and light poles within a stone's throw of the museum's entrance.

"These artists are good enough for the city to put their work in one of its major cultural institutions. But if they do it on the streets, where the art is meant to be seen, the city will have them arrested," Sebastian Buck, who writes the blog Unurth, said.

But remember, this is "street art" . . . it belongs in the street . . . and it IS in the mainstream now.
. . . and I love it!!


A piece of art in the exhibit



Art in the Streets . . .




We've come a long way, Baby and so has graffiti!

Is it art? You tell me . . .



Tuesday, April 12, 2011

French Government Bans the Burka


I am very surprised at my reaction to banning the burka. On one hand, after majoring in Women's Issues, I have always been sensitive to how women are treated or mistreated throughout the world. How different cultures treat women and behave towards women today, in the so-called "modern age". The burka, to me, smacks of women's rights being violated, women becoming invisible, women being controlled by the patriarchy, women remaining in the background, literally. For me it was sexual . . . if women don't hide their body and faces behind a robe and a veil, men will get excited looking at them and want them sexually. We don't mask the men, we hide the women from their view. As if men can't control themselves, so women must remove their suggestive bodies and faces from the lascivious leer of men.

Is a burka required garb? Are we talking required by law, by the Koran, by their husbands, by their God? Or do some women wear it because they feel more comfortable not being leered at by men . . . because it is a religious belief that they must remain modest? . . . because it is their culture? I always believed that the burka was a way of male domination over women. I was so opposed . . . I, of course, believe that women everywhere should be free. Free to do as they please, free to be educated, free to pick their own mate, free to not get married, free to have a child or not, free to drive, free to be outside their home without a male escort, free to make their own decisions. Whatever those decisions are.

To that degree, I have not changed. I believe that women should be free to make their own choices (this applies to their bodies too, i.e. abortion rights, contraceptive rights etc.).

So why am I so opposed to the French law that bans the burka? I surprised even myself . . .
not to mention my French husband!

Women's rights. That is what this law is about . . . to me . . . in my opinion . . .

Men still telling women what they can and can't do, can't wear, can't can't can't . . .

It is not that I am for the burka or against it . . . it is merely that women should be able to make that choice.


What do you think? Tell me your opinion . . .