RMB (
changeling67) wrote2014-08-11 08:58 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
OakOak’s Street Art Interventions
Amazing artist OakOak creates hilarious, imaginative, irreverent and sometimes a little macabre street work that has filled column inches from BBC Brazil to Beijing’s biggest daily newspaper. Daubing simple graffiti and paintings on urban features – often the broken ones – OakOak tries to do what street artists do best: amuse and inspire people of all ages and demographics by appropriating the city’s less appealing elements.




I think people who dislike graffiti are more likely to respond well to incidental or micro-graffiti because it is well-executed or well thought-out. I do however, love the 'Sideshow Bob' piece.
Link --------------------------> http://www.daily-art.com/oakoaks-street-art-interventions/




I think people who dislike graffiti are more likely to respond well to incidental or micro-graffiti because it is well-executed or well thought-out. I do however, love the 'Sideshow Bob' piece.
Link --------------------------> http://www.daily-art.com/oakoaks-street-art-interventions/
no subject
I changed my mind about graffiti at a young age when I read a book about late 70's-early 80's graffiti on the NYC transit system from the school library and was mesmerised by the reasons for the creation of art just as much as the bold designs themselves. My favourite story was a guy who spray painted his and his girlfriend's name over an entire subway car so that his declaration of love would travel all around the state.
no subject
I know that hastily scribbled tags are an eyesore, but the artwork of graffiti can be amazing. I find it interesting that as soon as the artwork becomes 'photo-realistic,' people are far more relaxed with it.