What is street art? Who is the street artist? Why is street art
a crime?
Since the late 1990s, a distinctive cultural practice has
emerged in many cities: street art, involving the placement of
uncommissioned artworks in public places. Sometimes regarded as a
variant of graffiti, sometimes called a new art movement, its
practitioners engage in illicit activities while at the same time
the resulting artworks can command high prices at auction and have
become collectable aesthetic commodities. Such paradoxical
responses show that street art challenges conventional
understandings of culture, law, crime and art.
Street Art, Public City: Law, Crime and the Urban Imagination
engages with those paradoxes in order to understand how street art
reveals new modes of citizenship in the contemporary city. It
examines the histories of street art and the motivations of street
artists, and the experiences both of making street art and looking
at street art in public space. It considers the ways in which
street art has become an integral part of the identity of cities
such as London, New York, Berlin, and Melbourne, at the same time
as street art has become increasingly criminalised. It investigates
the implications of street art for conceptions of property and
authority, and suggests that street art and the urban imagination
can point us towards a different kind of city: the public city.
"Street Art, Public City "will be of interest to readers
concerned with art, culture, law, cities and urban space, and also
to readers in the fields of legal studies, cultural criminology,
urban geography, cultural studies and art more generally.
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