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Graffitecture - Chicago Graffiti Artists Attack Photographic Spaces (Paperback)
Loot Price: R458
Discovery Miles 4 580
You Save: R78
(15%)
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Graffitecture - Chicago Graffiti Artists Attack Photographic Spaces (Paperback)
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List price R536
Loot Price R458
Discovery Miles 4 580
You Save R78 (15%)
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Graffitecture is an exploration of what happens when graffiti, a
highly innovative, wholly original art form rooted in urban
culture, both clashes and commingles with the built environment. It
is an essential publication for anyone interested in learning more
about graffiti and its influence on art, graphic design,
typography, popular culture, and communication.
Photographer and Graffitecture editor Doug Fogelson invited more
than 40 prolific Chicago graffiti artists to manipulate over 60 of
his photographs. The images depict interiors and exteriors of
diverse, high-end spaces such as homes, hotels, office buildings,
and stores (as well some of the more traditional places where
graffiti occurs). In doing so artists were asked, What would YOU do
here?
The Chicago based artists (include provocative figures such as the
X-Men, Jeff Zimmerman, Chris Silva, Fact, Gusher, Michael Genovese,
Sketcherone, Merdok and many others) manipulated the prints any way
they saw fit. The results range from a pen-and-ink subway train
riding through an office building lobby to a colorful, futuristic
mural splashed on the screen at an empty home movie theater.
Graffitecture also examines graffiti's artistic and cultural
significance through four essays written by Illinois-based
professors and artists. John Jennings, a graphic design and urban
studies professor at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
ponders mainstream society's appropriation of graffiti's unique
typography. Bridgette R. McCullough, an art historian, Manet
scholar, and professor at the School of the Art Institute of
Chicago, compares modern-day graffiti to abstract art. Another Art
Institute professor, furniture designer/artist/curator Bridgette
Buckley, examines the symbiotic relationship between architecture
and illicit painting. Tim Hartford, president of Hartford Design,
ponders the very meaning of graffiti and its place in history.
The collaborative images are presented in a full-color gallery
while the essays are presented with Fogelson's black-and-white
aerial panoramas of Chicago's landmarks and skyline. Designed by
Dan De Los Monteros and David Castillo
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