Showing posts with label cleaning graffiti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cleaning graffiti. Show all posts

GRAFFITIdawg has joined the FatCap community

FatCap is an interestingly GLOBAL group of artists, photographers, commentators that have joined together to share their interest in all forms of GRAFFITI.  Just recently GRAFFITIdawg joined the throng to share the love. I am a novice in their group so the dawg has joined as a photographer (which is what dawg does, happy snapping all the graffiti, paste ups, throw ups, walls.... etc, spray spray spray).

dawg has joined their blogging throng, and asked a pertinent question.. (WHAT ABOUT US HOBART!) ................................well not so bluntly put and with a few more big words thrown in... as the FatCap community is a "closed" blog, you may not be able to see the post....and if you can - IGNORE the photo because realistically online 'nobody knows your a dog', yup.. one of those photos.. if not,, keep reading because...TA DAAAAAAA.... their blog and mine..

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THE FATCAP BLOG POST by Lindsay T

It’s been a while since we posted on the FatCap blog, so we decided to give you an update on the changes that have been going on over on our side. Since we launched the new FatCap, we have been managing both English and French content. With the addition of a few key players in the US we’re going to be better able to bring you content from the French site in English and visa versa. If you didn’t catch them, we’ve published a whole bunch of articles that were both originally written in French, now published in English for you to read.
Actually being in America has made a difference for our site, but do not fret, we keep our focus on covering artists and crews worldwide.  In addition to expanding in the US, we have also reached out to writers from Latin America to start bringing us more than stories on Chilean Miners. Not that those men didn’t give us all an epic tale to recount, but we preferred El Mural Ferroviario that Denegro1 reported on from Santiago.

The FatCap team has also been hard at work forming key partnerships with teams of photographers and artists that are making paramount contributions to the graffiti and street-art scenes. This means more coverage, shared news and exclusive content. For instance, you may have noticed that we ran an article from The Street Spot, the home to photographer’s Becki Fuller and Luna Park.

And so I can tell you a story about how this all came about. Our first encounter with Becki was for an afternoon as she gave us a tour of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Syd was in New York from Barcelona, and I trained up from Philly to meet this dedicated, quirky and prolific package of a person. On a rainy, but perfectly NY fall afternoon, we walked the streets, past abandoned buildings, art galleries, and workshops. Though the entire FatCap team has been in NY plenty of times, it was exciting to see her pages and pages of photos on Flickr coming alive. We even happened upon Julius from Laid Back. After that choice afternoon, the ladies of The Street Spot have lent us their photos for our article on The Underbelly Project and for Community Serviced, and put us in contact with Sina from Papergirl NYC. If you haven’t checked out these articles, you’re really missing out.

The team is also hard at work to bring more artist interviews to your eyes and ears. We listen to our readers, and those of you that have reached out have told us that these interviews are what you like the most. This fall we’ve given you the juice on M-City, Mark Bode, Mr Puppet, Sea and Roa. We couldn’t have asked for a better lineup, but you’ll want to stay tuned through the winter, because we got it!
Things did not slow down from there because, if you didn’t catch it, we were let in to a world of artist residencies by following AM & DCAP on their own in Paris. Documenting the real experience of American and French artists as they collide, and from a female perspective, brought a whole new twist to what FatCap is trying to bring to you on the daily. This is a community that we’re all a part of if you haven’t noticed, and it seemed to come full circle that AM would sync up with Banga, and eventually Vince when he returned to Paris from Casablanca.
We’re on the move, but always thinking of you dear. Promise to keep you posted more often.

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dawgs words..


Behind the scenes: What an amazing journey you are undertaking within the world of graffiti, through the brightly sprayed spaces of France to the techno coloured iconic imagery of America. The intertextuality/hypertextuality of your post has allowed my Internet graffiti journey to be all that more exciting and allows others and myself to feel included within an online community. 

I am interested to know if you will be relating a few more of your blog posts to the graffiti communities within the boundaries of Oceania and in particular Australia?  I live within a little melting pot island, Tasmania (known as the Apple Isle) but still considered a state of Australia, isolated and unique with our own versions of graffiti, highly prolific with our urge to be known for our own take on the side of art.

I am also interested in photographing the work of others, there are many nooks and crannies where I am that seem to be prolific in paint, and documenting that work is of great interest to me, I blog.. I am a student; I am a blogging student interested in your work. 


 (⊙‿☉)‎(≧∇≦)(⊙‿☉)



HEY READERS..yeah you.. dawg-blog readers.. if you have any comments.. photos etc.. places for the GRAFFITIdawg to visit to photograph, events and stuff..COMMENT ...email me.. ALWAYS interested, need fodder for blog and I will always give credit where credit is due.. leave a comment and don't forget to tick ✓  the email box


GRAFFITIdawg looks into the results of getting caught tagging....

Caught!
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Recent television and Internet news that tagger Sean Robert Taylor (pictured) walked away from a Western Australian court with a 12 months sentence (suspended for 18 months) has made headlines across Australia and Internet news services. The twenty-year-old tagger narrowly avoided prison for causing approximately $23, 000 worth of damage to a Perth council property. Taylor was instead fined $500 and 100 hours of community service because of previous vandalism (most probably tagging) related offenses. Perth Magistrate Stephen Malley stated that his main concern while sentencing was that a stay in prison could damage Taylor’s emotional and maturity development.

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  Magistrate Malley noted that even though Sean Taylor’s offences were serious and should warrant a stay in prison, placing him in a facility that was full of convicted criminals with harsher crimes may leave 20-year-old Taylor at the beck-and-call of inmates that could possibly use him for interesting prison sporting activities. 

The Cleaning Bill:


Western Australia in 2002 had an expensive hard slog with the combined graffiti clean-up bill for a number of councils revealed as nearly $1.7 million. The Hobart City Council in 2009, reported annual  tag cleaning cost in excess of $70 000. Interesting fodder for thought, GRAFFITIdawg lives in Hobart and current Tasmanian legislation does not provide specific laws on offences related to the acts of graffiti and tagging as vandalism but refer to them as Marking Graffiti, anyone caught carrying or using Graffiti Implements (spray-cans, stencils and so on) without a lawful excuse can be prosecuted .


Side effects and Considerations: 


Understandably, with this current sentencing, how would you define graffiti? What factors would make you think it was vandalism? Which factors would make you think it was art or social comment or social destructive behaviour? These are just some of the questions that the Magistrate may have considered when deciding the sentence of Taylor. In the state of NewSouth Wales, graffiti is considered a crime (considered vandalism) punishable by fines, community service orders or even imprisonment. In August 2011, NSW Premier Barry O’Farrell stated that he would apply a blowtorch to upper house Members of Parliament to get harsher new anti graffiti legislation passed.  

Personal Consideration and The Fear Effect:

If you consider graffiti and tagging vandalism then vandalism can cost some communities many things in many ways, not just in the financial outlay to fix or prevent tagging and some forms of graffiti but also in creating the emotional fear of crime associated with the supposed destructive nature of young people who participate in the activity. Some people see graffiti as just another form of vandalism. For others, graffiti is self-expression, art, political comment or within a peer group: socially provoked action. 

Reference.