pavement art

Colombian American artist Felix Morelo is increasingly engaging and provoking passersby with his intriguing ephemeral chalk spots that surface in some of New York City’s most trafficked sites. We were delighted to recently have the opportunity to pose a few questions to the artist.

When and where did you first hit NYC streets with your spirited chalk spots?

I began in the summer of 2009 with a “Good Luck Spot” in Union Square.

What spurred you to do so?

I was originally painting thousands of faces – mostly of children — on the city’s sidewalks. I thought of these faces as a community of spiritual seeds. An artist friend suggested that I take my concept further. I then came up with the idea of chalk spots that would directly engage the community.

And why did you continue working with this concept?

I felt that what I was doing was unique. I loved that people began interacting with my public art and with each other. And I liked the recognition I was getting!

Were there any responses to your street art that particularly stand out?

For the most part, people embraced and enjoyed the “Good Luck Spots.” I began experiencing negative feedback after I started drawing “Bad Luck Spots.” What stood out were the threatening email messages that I received from people who wanted to harm me.

Yes. We are curious about both your “Bad Luck Spots” and your “Suicide Spots.” What prompted you to create your first “Bad Luck Spot?”

At the time I was drawing “Good Luck Spots,” I myself was having a lot of bad luck. I was dealing with homelessness, joblessness and the loss of a partner. Creating “Bad Luck Spots” was cathartic for me, as it helped me get these bad feelings out of my system. Drawing both “Good Luck Spots” and “Bad Luck” ones reflect life itself – its yin and yang.

What about your “Suicide Spots?” They seem to have spurred quite a bit of controversy.

It’s a matter of free speech. Chalk isn’t permanent. I like the way these controversial spots stir debate and reflection. People’s reactions to them give me insight into human psychology.

Have you ever felt unsafe while drawing your spots on the streets?

I sometimes feel unsafe when I’m looking down. The worst thing that happened, though, was when someone threw water on me and then got in my face.

Besides the wide variety of spots you presently create, do you do anything differently now from when you first started using the street as a canvas?

When I began, I worked only with skinny white chalk. Three years ago, I tried drawing with thick colored chalk, and I liked the results. The colors spice up the message and more readily capture people’s attention.

How do you choose the sites for your spots?

I look for places where I can attract the most people and a certain type of people — those who are eager to engage and are open to new experiences.

Where else – besides New York City – have you drawn your spots?

I’ve drawn these spots in many places. Among them Colombia, Ecuador, Miami, Indianapolis. Cincinnati and Kentucky. I’d like to bring them to London.

What’s ahead?

I’ve participated in dozens of group exhibitions in a wide range of spaces, but I’m ready now for a solo exhibition in a gallery setting. I’m also in the process of collaborating with 10 different artists, and I would like to see those pieces exhibited together. And, of course, I’ll still be active on the streets conjuring new “spots,” to be drawn alongside the original “Good Luck Spots.”

Good luck with it all! We are looking forward to seeing your artwork both on the streets and in galleries. We love viewing it here on East 23 Street — both inside and outside Epiphany Library NYPL.

Interview conducted by Lois Stavsky and Tara Murray

Photo credits: 1-3, 5 & 6 Lois Stavsky and 4 Tara Murray

{ 0 comments }

PAUL-RICHARD-GENTLEMAN (1)

Opening this evening at 212 ARTS is DRIP, a solo exhibit by the iconic NYC-based artist Paul Richard. An outstanding representational painter, Paul Richard is best known to us street art aficionados for his drip paintings that surface on NYC sidewalks. While visiting the exhibit yesterday, I had the opportunity to speak to 212 ARTS gallerist, Marc Leader.

This is such an elegantly handsome show! What spurred you to feature an exhibit of Paul Richard‘s works?

Paul has been an iconic figure in NYC culture for over 20 years. Although low-key, he is also subtly prolific. And this is his first NYC exhibit in five years.

paul-richard-art-on-door

How did you decide which artworks to include in the exhibit?

About one year ago, Paul and I began discussing the concept of an exhibit featuring his work at 212 ARTS. Then Paul ran with it. He created a few dozen new works, and together we decided which ones to feature.

paul-richard-urban-tank

How many are included in DRIP?

There are two dozen works of varying sizes.

paul-richard-commuter

It is always a thrill to glance down to the pavement and come upon one of Paul Richard‘s iconic faces!

Yes! Even before he first moved to New York in 1997, Paul Richard recognized that people constantly scan the ground in front of them — making it the perfect place to find an audience.

Paul-Richard-pavement-art

It’s great to see your gallery continue to bring a diverse range of first-rate artists — who remain active on our streets — to its East Village home. To what do you attribute its success?

It’s the passion we bring to our projects.

Paul-richard-opening-212-arts

Photos of artworks and interview by Lois Stavsky

{ 0 comments }

Even the pavement speaks here in NYC — with everything from intriguing images to poetic prose to political messages. Here’s a sampling:

Hunt Rodriguez in Bushwick

"Hunt Rodriguez"

stikman in Chelsea

stikman

A political statement in Williamsburg

save-syria-now

Chris and Veng RWK in the East Village

Chris-and-Veng-RWK-pavement-street-art

An excerpt from The Bell Jar, the only novel penned by the acclaimed American poet and writer Sylvia Plath

sylvia-plath-poem-on-pavement

Anthony Lister in Bushwick

Anthony-lister-pavement-street-art-nyc

Unidentified stencil art on Chelsea sidewalk

stencil-pavement-street-art-NYC

A reference to Gaza on the Upper West Side

political-art-on-nyc-pavement-street-art

And a political statement in Bushwick

NYC-political-street-art-pavement

Photos — 1, 2, 6-9 by Lois Stavsky; 3 – 5 by Dani Reyes Mozeson

{ 0 comments }

NYC’s Dashing Pavement Art

January 21, 2013

Paul Richard

From Paul Richard’s elegant gentlemen to Dceve’s stylish tags, the images that surface on NYC’s pavement intrigue:

Another one by Paul Richard

Paul Richard

The itinerant Swamp Donkey aka Swampy

Swampy

Meres at 5Pointz

Meres

Close-up of extraordinary piece by the wonderfully talented David Ellis

David Ellis

The iconic UFO

UFO

The elusive stikman

stikman-street-art-on-NYC-pavement

And stylish writing by Dceve of the legendary Smart Crew

DCEVE

 Photos by Dani Mozeson, Tara Murray & Lois Stavsky

{ 2 comments }