Art Lovers discussion
Street Art
>
When does street art become ‘art’ art?
date
newest »


Perhaps it is merely money that turns some of this unimpressive stuff into that elevated thing called “street art”. Banksy is not just famous, but famous for being highly priced. When he arranged for one of his pieces to destroy itself at an art auction, many people assumed the stunt was intended to enhance his market value still further. Finding a Banksy stencilled on your house is like winning the lottery. If art is defined by value – and in the age of Damien Hirst who’s to say it isn’t? – that splat on the side of the Co-op deserves the respect due a potential million-quid investment.

It may seem irreverent to class ice-age art as graffiti, but before the true antiquity of such art was recognised in the 20th century, people who came across mammoths drawn in caves did actually dismiss them as crude graffiti. And there is no written evidence to prove who made cave paintings or why. Children as well as women and men left handprints in caves. Maybe it was surly stone-age teenagers who skulked underground drawing bison for a bit of a laugh.

So give those doodles by the railway a second look. It isn’t just an invention of the art market or media that street art is something special. It is a connection with our deepest creative roots: a connection that may be broken and intermittent, like a signal struggling through the white noise of modern life, but a signal from the ice age all the same. “Here I am. This is my mark. I’m human.”
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddes...

JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT
My Friend SAMO Late 1970-80s
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
Whether you think graffiti is a subversive, democratic art form or a public nuisance, it harks back to our cave-painting days
In the Guide’s weekly Solved! column, we look into a crucial pop-culture question you’ve been burning to know the answer to – and settle it, once and for all