At the risk (perhaps very high) of sounding dickish, it's good to know that folks in this sitch have long-term options even if their recovery stalls somewhere well short of 100%.
Wait, that picture is supposed to be of "art"? It's a giant scribble on a rock, is what it is. Something tells me the art world will survive without this "street artist".
I agree with #2, and I'm adding, "He spraypainted every word of a Haruki Murakami novel onto a white van, until the words were unreadably thick (while DK Pan and another artist read and typed the novel aloud; this happened in Occidental Park). Then he drove the story around town, nobody knowing it wasn't just a black van."
This is just the kind of bullshit I'm on about. It WAS just a black van. They painted it black. It doesn't matter HOW they did it. Whether they dunked it whole into a tank of paint, or scribbled on it until it was black, it wasn't making a secret profound journey through the streets, it was just a fucking black van at that point. It's this kind of vanity masturbation that is getting arts budgets mercilessly slashed around the world.
So how is this van art but a 1938 Alfa Romeo 8c 2900MM isn't? Or a Stutz Black Hawk? Do they become art once you spray paint them black? It seems like the line that you are drawing around art and not art is intent, but how do you know the honest intent of the maybe artist? What if they change their mind? Or what if maybe we all just agree that art is different things to different people and really subjective and it's okay if maybe our views of art don't overlap? To me, tagging isn't a fraction of the creative accomplishment of the Maserati A6GCS Berlinetta.
I'm appalled at the ignorance present in comments 1, 2, and 7. And # 5...your an idiot. The work on the bank that was demolished is definitely thought out. However only an egotistic and jealous scenster would call it contrived.
NKO's work is about impermanence, the nuances that go unnoticed and much more. It's about intention (which idiots call contrived), association, and so much more.
If you want to comment on someones art than take the time to have an educated response. As a teacher I make sure my students always look for 'what works and what doesn't' and if nothing works than I ask that they find a way to make their critique constructive still and not personal.
2,5,7 - your all lame. Jen, I wish you would just erase their ugliness for good.
I'm appalled at the ignorance present in comments 1, 2, and 7. And # 5...your an idiot. The work on the bank that was demolished is definitely thought out. However only an egotistic and jealous scenster would call it contrived.
NKO's work is about impermanence, the nuances that go unnoticed and much more. It's about intention (which idiots call contrived), association, and so much more.
If you want to comment on someones art than take the time to have an educated response. As a teacher I make sure my students always look for 'what works and what doesn't' and if nothing works than I ask that they find a way to make their critique constructive still and not personal.
2,5,7 - your all lame. Jen, I wish you would just erase their ugliness for good.
This is just the kind of bullshit I'm on about. It WAS just a black van. They painted it black. It doesn't matter HOW they did it. Whether they dunked it whole into a tank of paint, or scribbled on it until it was black, it wasn't making a secret profound journey through the streets, it was just a fucking black van at that point. It's this kind of vanity masturbation that is getting arts budgets mercilessly slashed around the world.
@2: Kind of like how this blog will survive without your "comments"?
@7: Maybe you should delve a little deeper into the motivations behind the work before making such harsh and sweeping statements.
NKO's work is about impermanence, the nuances that go unnoticed and much more. It's about intention (which idiots call contrived), association, and so much more.
If you want to comment on someones art than take the time to have an educated response. As a teacher I make sure my students always look for 'what works and what doesn't' and if nothing works than I ask that they find a way to make their critique constructive still and not personal.
2,5,7 - your all lame. Jen, I wish you would just erase their ugliness for good.
NKO's work is about impermanence, the nuances that go unnoticed and much more. It's about intention (which idiots call contrived), association, and so much more.
If you want to comment on someones art than take the time to have an educated response. As a teacher I make sure my students always look for 'what works and what doesn't' and if nothing works than I ask that they find a way to make their critique constructive still and not personal.
2,5,7 - your all lame. Jen, I wish you would just erase their ugliness for good.