Thursday, September 22, 2011

Bumped Into By the Paint Gun Again

Williams Street, Lowell
Whoa!

Hey buddy, almost didn't see ya there... lookin' down at me with your lens in my face.

Oh, you're paint. And also a stencil. College kids again? This would be a better story if it were a real security camera.

Let's break it down>>

Boston 2011. Courtesy of "Lucasone" All Rights Reserved.









>>Here's Boston, March 2011. The artist here is Lucasone. You can find him on Flickr, because he's smart enough to take pictures of his work as soon as daybreak hits. There's money to be made for Lucas. He's credited in my caption because the pic was listed "All Rights Reserved." Pictures protected means ++cash.

Here's work from the Plateau neighborhood of Montreal, uncredited.

>>My first blog post about the lack of graffiti in Lowell was really unintentional. As stated then, I simply ran into it, and it was less than glorious. Then I ran into the same situation this week with our stencil friend.

I won't focus on what Lowell is lacking this time--I think the juxtaposition does that all by itself. Instead of any more negativity, here's a post about what Lowell could be.

Last but not least. "Graffiti Row," Boston. 2011. Uncredited.

Get lost in those colors.

Strive, Lowell. Strive.

Monday, September 12, 2011

Picking up the Paintbrush--err, Spraycan--Once More.

Next time you're strolling toward downtown and hit Broadway Street and Fletcher, perhaps to do some grocery shopping at King Liquors, you may notice a PSA from Lowell's guerilla art squad.

Living in Lowell the past 3 years, I've never been one to doubt the city's thorough street cred. As far as gray little cities go, the city's got both the grit and the talent to be expected of the hustle and bustle.

There's dance studios downtown where an urban dance crew from Lowell made it to America's Best Dance Crew finals. Everyday, the skate park just past South Campus cradles some of the most skilled skateboarders outside of Boston. These hidden gems are the Lowellites I've met outside the school, and outside the ephemeral populating effect of those temporary kids at the University. One thing I had never given any attention to though...

There's little to no graffiti to be spoken of. Sure, there's tags, but in recent years it seems that the growing city of Lowell has always known its boundaries. The city's street art community hasn't quite arrived to the level of painting gleeful children and deceased musician murals on the walls.

Why now Lowell? Is this how we inaugurate ourselves into the sociopolitical guerrilla art community of the millennium?

Well I don't buy it. Lowell can do better. I believe somewhere downtown there is a town hall of citizens in uproar about this graffiti on the wall. "We weren't ready to go public yet!" "Who exposed us?!"

It was the blasted students at the University, not some disenfranchised diamond in the rough. They saw a documentary on Banksy and wanted to take their own stencils to the streets.


They'd rack their suburban brains for something profound until the divine idea comes to copy something out of the sociology textbook. Soon, black and red spraypaint is purchased from the 24-hour CVS just a hop away from South Campus, and then "Bling Bling Dollar Store" needs to repaint their walls. "TV Kills." Nah, Lowell's got bigger problems, dude.

Poor little dollar store. They can't afford that.

But maybe we can't afford to stay out of the graffiti game any longer. How else is this little soot city gonna grow big and strong again?