New York street art: Closer shot of the wheatepaste image of a woman's green face that at a distance looks like (1.) the work of Judith Supine (one of our favorite street artists), what with the green hue, but upon closer inspection is not; and (2.) the late actress Audrey Hepburn, but upon closer inspection is not.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Closer shot of the wheatepaste image of a woman's green face that at a distance looks like (1.) the work of Judith Supine (one of our favorite street artists), what with the green hue, but upon closer inspection is not; and (2.) the late actress Audrey Hepburn, but upon closer inspection is not.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Wheatepaste image of a woman's face that at a distance looks like (1.) the work of Judith Supine (one of our favorite street artists), what with the green hue, but upon closer inspection is not; and (2.) the late actress Audrey Hepburn, but upon closer inspection is not. In any case, we like it.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Another rectangular-tile mosaic of 1980s retro-videogame imagery by French street artist Invader. This artwork is on Spring Street in Nolita, near SoHo. Unlike in many of Invader's work, this mosaic establishes a context for the videogame image: an all-in-one '80s Apple Mac computer.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Detail of the mosaic by French street artist Invader on Spring Street in Nolita.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Fresh wheatpaste artwork ("Don't live to me") by Haculla in SoHo.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Detail from the fresh wheatpaste artwork by Haculla in SoHo.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: More fresh wheatpaste artwork by Haculla in SoHo. The kid has been mighty prolific downtown lately. Loving this stuff.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York graffiti: Political expression at street level in the heart of SoHo, on Broome St. between Broadway and Crosby Street.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York graffiti: Political expression at street level in the heart of SoHo, on Broome St. between Broadway and Crosby Street.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Love this wheatpaste in SoHo. The image is suggestive and mildly disturbing, yet beautiful and vibrant. The woman in profile has her hand to her mouth with reddish, blood-like coloring. Is there the hint of bulimia or anorexia? We would like to know who the artist is. (Anybody know? Email us. Thanks in advance!)
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Love this wheatpaste in SoHo. The image is suggestive and mildly disturbing, yet beautiful and vibrant. The woman in profile has her hand to her mouth with reddish, blood-like coloring. Is there the hint of bulimia or anorexia? We would like to know who the artist is. (Anybody know? Email us. Thanks in advance!)
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Love this wheatpaste in SoHo. The image is suggestive and mildly disturbing, yet beautiful and vibrant. The woman in profile has her hand to her mouth with reddish, blood-like coloring. Is there the hint of bulimia or anorexia? We would like to know who the artist is. (Anybody know? Email us. Thanks in advance!)
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Love this wheatpaste in SoHo. The image is suggestive and mildly disturbing, yet beautiful and vibrant. The woman in profile has her hand to her mouth with reddish, blood-like coloring. Is there the hint of bulimia or anorexia? We would like to know who the artist is. (Anybody know? Email us. Thanks in advance!)
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Looking north across Houston Street from SoHo, sky graff (big "Lansky" tag near the top of the tenement building) in the heart of Greenwich Village. Lansky, BTW, is also the name of a famous Lower East Side gangster of yesteryear.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Looking north across Houston Street from SoHo, sky graff (big "Lansky" tag near the top of the tenement building) in the heart of Greenwich Village. Lansky, BTW, is also the name of a famous Lower East Side gangster of yesteryear.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Looking north across Houston Street from SoHo, sky graff (big "Lansky" tag near the top of the tenement building) in the heart of Greenwich Village. Lansky, BTW, is also the name of a famous Lower East Side gangster of yesteryear.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
New York street art: Sky graff (big "Lansky" tag near the top of the tenement building) in the heart of Greenwich Village. Lansky, BTW, is also the name of a famous Lower East Side gangster of yesteryear.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
Adam Neate is a British artist who places his paintings discretely in public spaces for anyone to take as he or she pleases and keep as their own. (For real, we had a similar idea a long time ago.) He's been doing this for years and as his profile as an artist has grown, so have the prices for his paintings, bringing small and easy fortunes to those to have noticed and picked up his free work off the street. The following BBC News article has all the deets on Adam Neate and the rising prices of his artwork.
New York street art: And one more shot of the closed, covered-up store front for the recent Banksy "Pet Shop" exhibition in the West Village. More about the exhibition in this recent New York Times article.
© Ivan Corsa Photo - Street Art Images
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What is Street Art?
Many people know street art when they see it. But what it is and what it isn't sometimes is unclear and often debatable at best. A definition of street art may be helpful. According to the Wikipedia's entry on the subject as of July 11, 2008, Street Art is defined as follows:
Street art is any art developed in public spaces — that is, "in the streets" — though the term usually refers to art of an illicit nature, as opposed to government sponsored initiatives. The term can include traditional graffiti artwork, stencil graffiti, sticker art, wheatpasting and street poster art, video projection, art intervention, guerrilla art, flash mobbing and street installations. Typically, the term Street Art or the more specific Post-Graffiti is used to distinguish contemporary public-space artwork from territorial graffiti, vandalism, and corporate art.
Contact
Send your picture submissions and inquiries to Global Graphica at streetartnyc@gmail.com
About Global Graphica
Global Graphica is a personally curated website devoted to photographically documenting the street art we see in daily walks in and around downtown New York City and in cities we travel to around the world. Images of other ephemeral art forms and visual culture are also posted to our site, as is information and commentary about exhibitions, events and media. Global Graphica was launched in 2004 as a spin-off web project of the pop-culture web magazine Air Massive. The site was set up to create a personal photo record of the ever-changing street art we encountered daily in our downtown New York City neighborhood and beyond. Global Graphica welcomes inquiries and submissions of images from readers and artists.
落書き写真リンク
Street Art / Graffiti Websites
Artkrimes
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Ekosystem***
Fat Cap
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G.R.L.***
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Streetsy***
The Street Art Locator
Street Art - Antville
Stencil Revolution
Visual Resistance
Wooster Collective***
Street Artist Websites
Bansky
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Bast
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Buff Monster
Claw Money
Faile
Flower Guy
Kaws 1
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Mark Jenkins
Momo
Neckface
Os Gemeos
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Space Invader
Swoon
WK Interact
Cool Website Links
MoCoLoco
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Design Observer
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The Sartorialist
Design Sponge
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Global Graphica Fam
Supercore Interactive
Air Massive
Bathing Ape Massive
Soccer Football Massive - Videos
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Contact
Send your picture submissions and inquiries to Global Graphica at streetartnyc@gmail.com
Credits
Produced by Air Massive,
New York City
Production
Producer + Editor: Ivan Corsa
Photos Editor: Reiko Oishi
Images + Words
Jess Eddy
Charlie Shipman
Monica M
Michel Monferrato
Richard Gregg
D. Carter Witt
Typhoon
Masumi Hawkins
Rob Samra
Reiko Oishi
Ivan Corsa
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© Copyright 2004-2008 Global Graphica. © Copyright 2004-2008 Ivan Corsa. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright for individual images is that of the photographer.
Produced by Air Massive New York.
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