Graffiti—and its role in cities—has spawned countless movies, museum exhibits, books. But what about its scrappier cousin, sticker art? In the 1980s and ’90s, “sticker bombing,” also known as ...
“Slaps” are usually a notorious form of graffiti, with artists taking advantage of stickers distributed free at post offices to prepare tags in advance to slap on stop signs, lamp posts, subway cars ...
Starting in the early nineties, Michael Anderson, a Bronx-born artist, began to amass what has come to be regarded—unofficially, and mostly by Anderson himself—as the world’s largest collection of ...
Thirty years ago, Charleston emerged as a canvas for a new form of street art, thanks to an early local adopter. Shepard Fairey, a skateboarder and rogue artist who attended the Porter-Gaud School, ...
I've been practicing graffiti, mainly sketchbook orientated for the past 3 years.. my work's not linked to school in anyway, just one of my passions I suppose.The words (if you can't read them, are, ...
These aren't the scratch-and-sniffs or Lisa Franks you collected as a kid. This is sticker art, a subset of graffiti culture. Sticker art, also known as "slaps," is a quicker -- and therefore ...
A sticker found on a trash can at a Washington, D.C., airport last week depicting what appeared to be a suicide bomber is actually the logo of a popular graffiti artist. His fans have plastered his ...
"I don't think the Postal Service has caught on to this," photographer Martha Cooper says over the phone. That is: Officials haven't caught on to the fact that street artists are stealing postage ...
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese graffiti artist "281 Antinuke" says his latest street art - politically-charged stickers plastered around central Tokyo - takes aim at U.S. President Donald Trump. Amid the ...
If you thought stickers were just something scored after a successful visit to the pediatrician or a way to humble brag that you’ve voted, then the multifaceted underground sticker community may come ...
Spray paint cans are the latest unconventional objects in New York City to be arranged in the form of a Christmas tree. Standing in Freeman Alley at the UNTITLED Hotel on the Lower East Side, this ...
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