Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu · 3 menit. waktu membaca · ~10 ·

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I Can Read The Writing On The Wall. Searching For The World's Best Street Art.

I Can Read The Writing On The Wall. Searching For The World's Best Street Art.

Today I find myself in Jogjakarta in central Java; My quest? To ferret out some of the vibrant street art that this city is famous for.

Most visitors to this, Indonesia’s cultural hub head straight for the attractions that ‘Jogja’ is famous for, the Batik markets, the numerous art galleries, the dancers at the Sultan's palace or any one of the prolific music venues that abound.


IF GRAFFIT!

CHANGED ANYTHING
IT WOULD 4
BE ILLEGAL

AA; a!

I, on the other hand have have an altogether different agenda.

Over the last decade I have become obsessed with the concept and execution of artists plying their craft in that most public of galleries – the street.

Graffiti can ‘litter’ most urban landscapes and sometimes even I have to agree that ‘tagging’ and random swirls on the sides of buildings can be a bit of blight but look a little deeper and in amid the clutter there will be one or two absolute gems that smack of artistic genius.


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“Public’ art has been with us since early homo sapiens first learned to pick up an instrument with which to draw and began illustrating daily life on the walls of caves and shelters which today, thousands of years later we refer to as primitive rock art.

Those early cave dwellers, as time went on began to use various coloured pigments to brighten their creations that often covered the cliff faces around their homesteads.

This early ‘graffiti’ has given modern anthropologists an insight into life, as it was in Neolithic times given there was no written word, only pictures depicting great hunting expeditions, ceremonies or great battles with neighboring tribes.


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Ever since I began taking an interest in the craft of street art I have amassed thousands of photographs from thirty odd cities around the globe where stencils and spray cans are the common currency amongst the urban street artists.

Here in Jogjakarta the ‘public’ walls are a perfect vehicle for political expression and consequently, huge murals spring up overnight that are all too often seen by the authorities as being seditious.  By day council workers set out with scrubbing brush and bucket and remove the piece only for another to appear in its place in the dead of night.

The political themes cover corruption, human rights and injustice in general with satirical images of the county’s leading politicians portrayed in the most unflattering of lights.

Under Suharto, images like these published in journals such as Tempo would get the magazine shut down in a flash but how do you ban a building covered in slogans and images condemning the government?


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In this age of mass social media it still amazes me that street art continues to flourish and creates urban guerrilla heroes like space invader, Banksy, Alice and a host of other artists who travel the world applying their own stamp to the urban landscape.

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Right here in Jogjakarta I came across a wee gem stenciled at ankle level on a side lane in the Kraton district of the city. Bending down to examine it closer and get a photograph, I saw…yes... Alice was here.

I have come across her work (I presume it’s a she as the works are always signed ‘Alice’) in obscure laneways in such cities as Vancouver, Seattle, Paris New York, London and Melbourne.

The statement," have spray can will travel," certainly applies to her.

The French based, Space Invader creates his pieces using small multi - coloured mosaic tiles, crafted into unusual shapes. His favourite tactic is to display Pac Man figures at the entrance to underground stations that seem to chase commuters up or down the escalators.


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Why he has come to be so well known is that many of his pieces are in some of the most inaccessible places possible high on the side of buildings in Paris and one can only ask oneself, ‘how on f#*% did he get up there?”

The mysterious and now infinitely famous Banksy has now become the darling of the art world. His fabulous creations 'go up' in the last slow hours of morning and within minutes of the sun coming up will have attracted huge crowds and is sure to make for an amusing article in newspapers around the globe.


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Street art or graffiti, call it what you will, will always be with us, be it a gang tagging out their territory or an artist whose work cannot get shown in a gallery and then suddenly, it simply appears as if by magic where thousands see it every day on their morning commute.

For me, I will simply follow the can’s nozzle where I can, photographing the creations before those pesky council workers arrive with their brushes and buckets.


Paul v Walters is a best selling novelist and when he is not cocooned in sloth and procrastination in his house in Bali he scribbles for several international travel and vox pop magazines. His latest novel Scimitar was released in September 2016.

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Komentar

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #6

#2
Dean Owen Its often the obscure towns that produce some of the most astonishing work. Nelson in New Zealand is one such town, melbourne would be another as is Tokyo . As for the royal crescent I remember an eccentric woman who painted her front door yellow and each time she did it the authorities would come round and re paint it black only for it to be yellow again by the following morning! loved that woman !

Paul Walters

7 tahun yang lalu #5

#6
Ken Boddie I simply 'found' the images on long ambling walks around the city. often think that we are sometimes 'blind' when wandering cities not seeing what is right in front of us. I have a large collection now and plan to soon put out a book on some of the startling stuff I have seen .

Ken Boddie

7 tahun yang lalu #4

I love to see large and interesting street art murals, Paul, and have many pics of beautiful works on building walls, mostly taken in the inner city suburbs of Sydney and Melbourne. I find it easy to differentiate, however, between this attractive and clever art form and the utterly defiling and desecrating graffiti, which often surrounds it, and in which I see neither art nor reason other than as a statement of barbarism and social disintegration. I love Yogya, have family there, and visit there often with my wife, but I must admit to never having seen street murals there. Perhaps I have been focusing too much on the traffic and the interesting way the motor bikes buzz around the cars without collision. Any chance you can be more specific where you found the first two murals?

Pascal Derrien

7 tahun yang lalu #3

fyi laurent jacquet if not seen elsewhere

CityVP Manjit

7 tahun yang lalu #2

One way of me looking at street art is amazing creative expression. The other way is the daily waste of creativity ignored by government and business and which is first slowly eradicated through the educational system. The message of the underlying human condition here isn't one of destruction but to say look at the flow and energy being ignored - a statement that we matter and that we want to make a difference. The great starting point of that isn't in the street art but the education system - as the graffiti says so well "if graffiti changed anything - it would be illegal".

Dean Owen

7 tahun yang lalu #1

That is quite a focused passion! I had no idea about this side of Jogjakarta, was always too busy haggling for Batik. Quick question - Of the thirty cities which single one stands out in terms of creative street art? One of my favourite artists is Jean-Michel Basquiat whose works you look at and just know it was him. Love a bit of graffiti in the right venues, but usual prefer it not to be in my neighbourhood. I am sure you would agree one would not like to see graffiti adorning The Royal Crescent in your hometown of Bath!

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