Small, droll stencil of a chain of elephants on a stucco wall near the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in Providence, RI.


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Small, droll stencil of a chain of elephants on a stucco wall near the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in Providence, RI.


We found another stencil of downtown celebrity-fashion photographer Terry Richardson in the Meat Packing District. This one is on a concrete road barrier under the High Line at W. 14th Street, in New York City. More Terry Richardson stencil stuff was recently posted on the site and you can read more about him in this previous post.


Celebrated fashion photographer and New Yorker Terry Richardson has had his image created as stencil street art. These stencils of him in his signature “thumbs up” pose have been cropping up recently around downtown New York City (we don’t know who is creating the stencils). We found this one on a lamp post in the Meatpacking District. A few others have been spotted elsewhere in the same neighborhood. BTW, Richardson’s daily photo blog, Terry’s Diary, is full of awesome.


Stumbled upon (literally) this stencil street art of Darth Vader, the iconic villain of the George Lucas Star Wars films, at an inclined sidewalk corner in Pacific Beach, in San Diego.
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Multiple stencils of hip-hop supa-dupa-star producer and rapper Kanye West on the protective wood lamp post hoarding in Nolita, in downtown New York City. “Diddy Sucks” (a reference to music mogul P. Diddy, a.k.a. Puff Daddy, a.k.a. Sean Combs) and “You Would” are written next the image of Kanye. Too funny. The stencil looks great.






Speaking of Barcelona, here’ an awesome Catalan street art image posted by Gsz on Flickr. The stencil is of the late Chilean writer and poet Roberto Bolano, who made Catalonia his home and the setting for many scenes in his stories, notably in the much-acclaimed and brilliant novel “The Savage Detectives.” This book and another massive work titled “2666″ were published post-humously. The author died in 2003.

Attribution:
The “Stencialist” is a clever portmanteau of stencil and specialist. Here we see the stencialist stencil-paste-up mash-up in Harajuku, the trendy neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan.
The face of the mustached dude in the stencil looks a lot like Roman Milisic, one of the guys from the House of Diehl fashion team who do those brilliant Style Wars events. (Full disclosure: We once worked with Roman and HoD a long time ago — and they’re awesome!)

From the mysterious Parisian artist(s) that is PIMAX, here’s a color stencil of the Hollywood acting legend Marilyn Monroe and a banana in downtown New York City.




Stencil on a concrete-stucco building piller in Psyrri, in Athens, Greece.


Stencil art on Orchard Street in the Lower East Side, in New York City. The rabbit-like creature is throwing a molotov cocktail. An homage to a famous Banksy artwork, perhaps?

New York Street Art: Bomb stencil street art by Fitschen, downtown Manhattan.
© Ivan Corsa Photos – Street Art Images
New York street art: Stencil of acclaimed director Woody Allen on wall along Rivington Street, between Norfolk and Suffolk streets, on the Lower East Side, New York City.
© Ivan Corsa Photos – Street Art Images

New York Street Art: Stencil street art of Native-American imagery on a public phone in Gramercy Park.
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York Street Art: Another shot of the stylized stencil street art we found in Gramercy Park The stencil is of a crying Native-American on the side of a public phone.
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York Street Art: Stencil street art of crying Native American on the side of a public phone, NYC.
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York Street Art: Stylized stencil of Native American crying a single tear on the side of a public phone in Gramercy Park, NYC.
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York street art: Detail from stencil of a spray-paint can branded with a Campbell’s Soup can label is an homage to the late, great Andy Warhol, one of the most significant and influential 20th-century artists. Instead of “Soup,” the can reads “Spray.” This stencil can be found on the wall outside of Lasso restaurant, at the corner of Kenmare Street and Elizabeth Street. Let’s see more!!!
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York street art: This stencil of a spray-paint can branded with a Campbell’s Soup can label is an homage to the late, great Andy Warhol, one of the most significant and influential 20th-century artists. Instead of “Soup,” the can reads “Spray.” This stencil can be found on the wall outside of Lasso restaurant, at the corner of Kenmare Street and Elizabeth Street. Let’s see more!!!
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images

New York street art: This stencil of a spray-paint can branded with a Campbell’s Soup can label is an homage to the late, great Andy Warhol, one of the most significant and influential 20th-century artists. Instead of “Soup,” the can reads “Spray.” This stencil can be found on the wall outside of Lasso restaurant, at the corner of Kenmare Street and Elizabeth Street. Let’s see more!!!
© Ivan Corsa Photo – Street Art Images