Graffiti

This is the fourth in a series of ongoing posts featuring the diverse range of stylish trucks and vans that strike NYC streets:

Noxer and 3ess in Bushwick, Brooklyn

"Noxer and 3ess graffiti"

Gano in Manhattan

"Gano graffiti"

Wen One in Manhattan

"Wen One graffiti"

 Deceve of Smart Crew

"Deceve graffiti"

Sebs in Bushwick, Brooklyn

"Sebs graffiti"

ND’A and See One in Bushwick, Brooklyn

"ND'A and See One"

See One close-up

"See One graffiti"

 Stem in Manhattan

"Stem graffiti"

Photos of Noxer & 3ess and ND’A close-up by Lois Stavsky; Gano, Wen One, NDA & See One by Dani Mozeson; Deceve by Lenny Collado; Sebs by City-as-School intern Damien Kelly and Stem by Sara Mozeson

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"cortes graffiti"

NYC-based painter and illustrator Christian Cortes has been increasingly exploring combinations of graffiti typography with surrealism, abstraction, South American iconography and New York City culture. 

Your extraordinary artwork has graced the walls of 5Pointz for years. Where else have you gotten up?

I’ve painted in France, Germany, Spain, Japan, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and in Puerto Rico. I’ve also gotten up in Seattle, Miami and Fort Lauderdale. And here in NYC, I’ve recently painted in the Bronx.
  
Any favorite place?
 
Probably Puerto Rico. I had many Puerto Rican friends as a teenager, and I feel a strong connection between NYC and Puerto Rico.
  
When did you first start getting up in public spaces?
 
I was in 7th grade when I began paying close attention to what was happening on the 7 train, on rooftops and along the 59th Street Bridge. Soon afterwards I was bombing those surfaces. I was most active on the streets – as Waqs A3crew– between 1990 -1995 piecing. But then I took a ten-year break.
 
Do you have a formal art education?
 
I attended the High School of Art and Design and I began fine art studies at three different colleges. But I dropped out of all of them, as I became increasingly involved in my own work.
 
 
What kind of work were you doing?
 
I was doing lots of commercial work such as record covers, backdrops for videos and steady commissions for rap groups. Among my projects was a video for Jeru the Damaja. This was ideal work for me, as I’ve always felt strongly connected to musicians. When I hit a wall with other artists, it’s like we’re all making music!
 
What got you back into painting on the streets?
 
5Pointz – for sure! Also traveling and the Internet. I share much of what I do on YouTube these days. I feel a responsibility towards the younger writers, and I love the interaction with them.
 
Have you any advice for young artists?
 
Aspiring artists need to learn the value of discipline. Art doesn’t happen quickly or easily.
 
Who inspires you?
 
Mode 2 from France and I’ve developed a new appreciation for Seen. I’m also inspired by musicians – such as Sadat X of Brand Nubian and Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam.
 
"Cortes graffiti"
 
Tell us something about your skulls. They surface in so many of your pieces.
 
Skulls have forever been a theme in all genres of art. When I first started painting skulls – while still in high school — I was suggesting that graffiti is dead. But now I think of skulls as a celebration of life through acknowledging death. And in relation to graffiti, the skulls have come to imply rebirth, as graff has been reborn.
 
What do you see as the future of graffiti?
 
I see it developing into more of a grass-roots movement. I see us developing our own events, along with smaller brands, as the huge brands have been dictating what kids see.
 
How do you feel about the street art vs. graffiti divide?
I don’t see them in conflict with one another. I see them simply as two separate genres. But I have difficulty understanding, for example, the Banksy phenomenon.
 
"Cortes graffiti"
 
What’s next?
 
More traveling, more black book videos, more tutorial videos and more walls. I’m planning to paint next in Brooklyn and I’m starting something new at 5Pointz. Next month I will be heading down to Miami for Art Basel.
 
Good luck! ‘sounds great!
 
Photos of Cortes at 5Pointz by Dani Mozeson;  in the Bronx by Lois Stavsky and painting in the Bronx by Lenny Collado

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Within the last few weeks over a dozen first-rate pieces have surfaced on and off Bushwick’s Morgan Avenue.  Here are a few images we’ve captured:

Phetus and Such

"Phetus and Such"

Yes1 at work

Pase

"Pase graffiti"

Bekit

Jew

D-Virus from Holland

Jem

Wane aka Knows

"Wane graffiti"

Vein

Clark Fly ID

Shank aka Demote and Dero

Photos by Lenny Collado and Dani Mozeson

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Speaking with KR.ONE

October 4, 2012

As passionate today as he was back in the 70’s when he was making his mark on a range of public surfaces, Louie Gasparro aka KR.ONE recently shared some of his experiences and impressions of the ever-evolving graffiti culture with us.

"KR.ONE graffiti"

When and where did you start getting up?

I started getting up in 1977 in Astoria, Queens. I was part of what is considered the third wave of original NYC graffiti writers.

Why did you begin writing?

We were trying to be somebodies in a world of nobodies. There was no money. It was our way of advertising ourselves…of getting our names out in a big way.  The pieces and tags we did were essentially ads that we didn’t have to pay for. And we loved that it was so underground. We had our own way of saying things that outsiders didn’t understand. It was cool.

"KR.ONE graffiti"

 Any formal training?

Nothing formal. I was inspired by comics, some how-to-books, hard rock album covers and television cartoons.  And I used to cut out of my school and hang out at the High School of Art and Design. Through Fome 1, I met writers such as Erni (Paze), Doze Green, Lady Pink, Daze and Seen TC5. But I’ve been drawing since I was a little kid – everything from hot rods to the members of the band Kiss. Once, the principal walked into my classroom when I was drawing a caricature of Gene Simmons with his tongue out spitting blood.  He looked at the piece, and I thought, “Oh my God!”  But he said he liked it and decided to hang it up in the hallway. I was amazed at his response.

"KR.ONE graffiti on canvas"

With whom did you write? Any influences?

TSS (The Super Squad), TKC (The Killer Crew), RTW (Rolling Thunder Writers),  IRT (Invading Rapid Transit) and  NWA (New Wave Artists) . I wrote with KB, Fome1, Erni,  Sick Nick, Mace, Robert 78 and RCA (Reckless Car Artist). I was influenced by Don1, Dean, KB, Son1, Roto1 and Zephyr.

Have you any particular memory from back in the days?  

I was almost killed in the M yard in 1980. There is a bus depot nearby, and there were always bus drivers hanging out. They would usually just chill, but one time as I was writing and piecing with Fome1, they began throwing bottles in our direction. The glass was shattering around us as they laughed. We took cover under the trains. Suddenly the train began to move, and I was almost hit by an oncoming motor.

"KR.ONE graffiti"

 Wow! What were your preferred surfaces back then?

I liked painting on everything. I started on paper, then walls, then trains. And when that era was over for me in 1983, it was back to walls and paper and then canvasses.

How do you feel about graffiti’s evolution? Do you follow the current scene? Any favorites?

It was all about New York City. And then it was the whole world. It went from dudes writing their names in simplistic plain letters through a metamorphosis of styles and a global expansion. It’s truly amazing.  Favorites?  Some of my favorites from today are actually European-based artists such as Swet from Denmark, Daim from Germany, Mode2 from Paris and Uor and Rife from Italy.  I still really dig what Daze, Part, Ces, Kaves and Whisper are still doing, as well.

 How do you feel about the so-called street-art and graffiti divide?

Those are just categories that do just that — they divide. It serves as a way to market both.  Street artists and graff writers have their distinct styles and mindsets. Sometimes their differences are subtle; sometimes they’re not. But both come from the streets.

What do you see as the future of graffiti? How do you feel about the movement of graffiti and street art into galleries and museums?

Graffiti and street art deserve to be in galleries and museums. There should be entire museums dedicated to urban arts.  Scholars realize what’s going on and can see that this movement  — that began largely by children — has become a true phenomena.  What essentially started in the streets has become the biggest movement in art history.

"KR.ONE graffiti"

What are you up to these days?

Since my last show, Bringer Of The Kolorstorm, this past March, I’ve been creating new works for my new solo show this coming Saturday, October 6th.  This latest offering, A Fistful of Stars, is a selection of illustrations, mixed media pieces and canvas work. I return to my old stomping ground in Long Island City at a place called C.A.W.S. (Cause Art Will Survive).

"KR.One exhibit"

How do you feel about the role of the Internet in all this?

The Internet is the cyber bench to the graffiti world…the window to the whole world.  You can be sitting in a place like Milwaukee and see a piece that was just painted in Scandinavia. It’s an instant get-up — a world-wide instant get-up. I remember when we would wait all day just to see a certain piece pass by on a train. I remember waiting on a train station for a Dondi and Lee piece to roll by, so that I could just look at it and absorb it. I don’t have to do that today.

"KR.ONE Close-up"

 What’s ahead?

I plan to stay as creative as possible and continue to share my work with others.

 Interview by Lenny Collado; Photos by Tara Murray, Lois Stavsky and courtesy of the artist

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