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CORRECTION: Neckface Twerps! "Lobster Roll" Sticker, NYC - Context

neckface_context.jpg

CORRECTION: The artist who created this sticker was misidentified in our original post below. The work featured in the image above is a "Lobster Roll" sticker by "Twerps!" We apologize to the artist and our readers for the error. (Props to Mikhail in NYC for setting us straight.)

2006-04-24

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Here's the wider, contextual shot of a recent Neckface sticker in Soho, NYC.

Background Note
The work of Neckface is among the most familiar array of street-art images in lower Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York City. Neckface works in several mediums and is known for stickers and wall pieces featuring creepy characters who have little if any neck (hence the apt name "Neckface"). Neckface also often simply scrawls his name in large child-like lettering on the sides of buildings and other urban surfaces. But it is for his stickers that he is probably best known. These can be found in many major cities, including NYC, San Francisco and Tokyo. The Brooklyn-based artist is originally from California. He has exhibited his work in galleries throughout the world and has had his art (and himself) featured in magazines and newspapers.

Gear: Nikon Coolpix 3600 Digital Camera

Ivan Corsa Photo

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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

Credits
Produced by Air Massive,
New York City

Production
Producer + Editor: Ivan Corsa
Photo 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

Original Site V 2.0

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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.