Posts Tagged ‘Swampy’

SWAMPY, NITE OWL Stickers – Tokyo, Japan

Friday, April 21st, 2017

SWAMPY – Japan

Friday, October 14th, 2016

img_7517

SWAMPY Scribe – Oakland, CA

Thursday, October 16th, 2014

ENDLESS_SwampyScribe
Photographer: Madeleine Tonzi

SWAMPY, CLAM NATION, AMUSEY – Chicago, IL

Friday, October 25th, 2013

SWAMPY-ChicagoIL

SWAMPY “Oogle Field Trip” – Bay Area, CA

Saturday, October 5th, 2013

SWAMPYOogleFieldTrip-BayAreaCA

SWAMPY’S DIARY – New Video

Saturday, September 14th, 2013

SWAMPY “All My Friends Are in Jail” – Brooklyn, NY

Sunday, June 16th, 2013

SWAMPYMural-BrooklynNYC

SWAMPY Tattoo – Berkeley, CA

Saturday, December 8th, 2012

Swampy Tattoo.

SWAMPY “Sharpie Taggin” – SPECIAL DELIVERY Bay Area 2012

Friday, November 30th, 2012

Swampy Sharpie Taggin.
“Nah Ima Stay”

SWAMPY at Endless Canvas’s SPECIAL DELIVERY Bay Area 2012 Mural Exhibit

Saturday, September 29th, 2012

Last chance to see the Special Delivery 2012 Exhibit is Sunday September 30th, 2012 from Noon till 6pm.

The documentary VIGILANTE VIGILANTE will be showing during the exhibit at 2pm and 5pm.

LOCATION: The Carbon Warehouse – 1350 4th Street, Berkeley, California

Camera Friendly – No Alcohol, No Bags – Donations Appreciated

Endless Canvas’s Official SPECIAL DELIVERY 2012 Video by Mapache Films

Friday, September 21st, 2012

Special Delivery 2012 from Mapache Films on Vimeo.

Video: Mapache Films
Audio: Todd Sykes

Description by Babak:

On Saturday night, September 8, 2012, I and thousands of others witnessed the concrete and steel ruin that is Carbon Warehouse in the old Flint Ink building at 1350 Fourth Street, Berkeley return to technicolor life as a free, underground art gallery.
For hours, we gawked at the fabulous graffiti that covered close to every inch of the building, with music, beer and wine, and an electric atmosphere that should make world art hubs like London, Berlin and Venice blush.

The floor, the walls, the ceiling and sundry nooks and crannies were painted with explosive colors, designs and styles. Many works displayed wit, wildness and undeniable artistry. We gazed upwards to espy the livid ceiling of this crazy, cement Sistine, then we gazed down to follow the lushly sprays of color at our feet. Meanwhile, the building and its inhabitants trembled as the freight trains–many adorned by the same art sheltered now inside the building–roared by below.

This once-abandoned trilevel factory seemed happy to be hosting thousands of equally colorful guests busy drinking in the art in 3D, dancing, flirting, posing, snap-shooting and juggling, all self-regulated, well-behaved and paying close attention to what they saw.

From where I stand, the project as a whole suggests a rare mindfulness and was executed expertly and with foresight. The City of Berkeley and the police seems to have played a welcome role in facilitating this art event by keeping a very low profile and just letting folks do their stuff.

Neither was this an LA-style, Eli Broadish splash for the rich and pretentious, or some rarified and ultimately impotent extravaganza. This was a grassroots, super-collaborative public tryst between artists and their audience, a rare bird in a cynical, corporate art world that should be nurtured.

Sadly, after the event, a tiny handful of uninspired, vandalous fools are reported to have tagged a few buildings in West Berkeley, leaving an unfortunate hair in the mouth of a community that had so enjoyed an otherwise delicious art feast.
Yet, none were among the artists that awed us that night. And none have the right to distract us from thanking everyone that helped artwork blossom before our eyes in this enjoyable, provocative way.

Because, on that night, Berkeley appeared talented, fearless and exciting, and in a humble, inclusive way, a bastion of public art.

mapachefilms.com
dirtycleanpnw.com
wearecityhall.com

BOOK RELEASE / Benefit Art Show for SPECIAL DELIVERY – Saturday July 28th, 2012

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012
New Special Delivery Portland 2011 Book Release Party.

WHAT:

Release Event for the SPECIAL DELIVERY Portland 2011 Book,
as well as an Art Show Benefiting the artists participating in this year’s SPECIAL DELIVERY Bay Area 2012 Mural Exhibit (which will open September 8th 2012).

WHEN:

Saturday July 28th, 2012 (Last Saturday) at 7pm

WHERE:

Famous Four Colors Gallery
1525 Webster Street
Oakland, CA 94612

FREE EVENT! All Ages!

ABOUT THE 2011 BOOK:

Full Color, 64 Pages, $16
Special Delivery 2011 was a mural exhibit that filled a 6,000 square foot warehouse in South East Portland. It showcased over 40 artists who have put in a lot of work on the streets of Oakland, San Francisco and the greater Bay Area of California.

Read more about the book…
www.EndlessCanvas.BigCartel.com/product/special-delivery-portland-2011-book

ABOUT THE BENEFIT ART SHOW:

Many of the artists whom will be participating in this years Special Delivery Mural Exhibit (Optimist, GATS, Upfuk, Attica, Broke, Nart, Dead Eyes, etc.) will be showcasing prints and works on canvas at F4C Gallery (Famous Four Colors) for ONE NIGHT ONLY to raise funds for paint.

Read more about SPECIAL DELIVERY Bay Area 2012…
www.EndlessCanvas.com/specialdelivery2012

Invite your friends to the Special Delivery Bay Area 2012 facebook event page…
www.facebook.com/events/127714507368174

DON’T BLOW UP THE SPOT
Please don’t tag the venue or the immediate surroundings the night of the event.
Thank you to all the writers that always show respect and help us socially enforce this guideline so that we can keep getting invited back to throw awesome events for you guys.

PRETTY BOY SWAMPY – East Bay, CA

Thursday, June 21st, 2012

Pretty Boy Swampy Graffiti Bay Area California.

SWAMPY, YOU GO GIRL – Oakland, CA

Friday, April 6th, 2012

Swampy You Go Girl Graffiti Oakland CA.
New YOU GO GIRL graffiti along side a SWAMPY roller that’s been running for a couple years now.

THE TRUCK SHOW Video – San Francisco, CA

Monday, February 27th, 2012

The Truck Show – San Francisco, CA from Endless Canvas on Vimeo.
1AM Gallery
Friday February 10th, 2012
San Francisco
6th & Howard St

http://thetruckshowsf.tumblr.com

Home

Donating all artists profits to:
Eastside Arts Alliance / Visual Element
http://www.eastsideartsalliance.com

The modern box-style delivery truck lives in the inner cities all across America. For the modern day graffiti writer it is a contemporary relative to the subway cars of the 70’s and 80’s which helped spark the explosion of graffiti. In a state of eminent relocation, they assemble a disjointed gallery of ceaseless unrest, a perfect canvas for any opportunistic writer. Pristine new clean white box trucks not only invite as they call it “the application of a medium” to their surface, but beg for it. In the streets delivery trucks fit best after being worn and weathered as a pair of old shoes with scuff marks and layers of historical remnants. In an attempt to keep their property looking new, many truck owners will opt to give a graffiti writer permission to assume control over these plots of valuable real estate in the urban landscape. The Truck Show SF is an homage to this modern Icon of Graffiti, displaying these moving masterpieces to the public through the filter of 1AM Gallery in San Francisco (opening Saturday, February 10th).

The Truck Show SF is seeking to be a leader in Bay Area street art gallery shows by dedicating all of the profits for the artists to the non-profit organization Visual Element, which is the public arts component of the EastSide Arts Alliance. Visual Element is a visual arts and graffiti mural training program for high school youth. Because it is the only intensive “Urban Graffiti Arts” program in East Oakland serving high school youth, Visual Element attracts young aspiring artists and graffiti writers, usually ages 15-20. The class facilitates the production of walls through their engagement with local property owners and the community. Students are trained as responsible artists and contribute their skills to not only walls but, political banners for a number of social justice causes. The participants of Visual Element learn a variety of visual arts skills including spray can techniques, “graffiti” writing, mural brush painting, computer experience, digital photography and graphic design. They learn these skills through actual project based work, building a portfolio of work as they undergo their training. As they get more and more proficient they then are able to “shop” their skills back to the neighborhood. This sustainable cycle and the public art projects Visual Element creates, sends the message that productive and self-sufficient youth can contribute positive change to their neighborhoods. Murals educate, motivate to action, and inspire more creations of beauty and for that the organizers of The Truck Show SF are excited for their partnership with Visual Element. They look

forward to seeing the passion for graffiti go full circle to help teach and empower as all too often graffiti is deemed to be something that only takes from society. In these times of ultimate corporate greed and complete abandonment of government support for the arts, the organizers of The Truck Show SF hope to show that the graffiti writer does it for the love and that alone is powerful enough to help fuel and positively influence the next generation. With a wide price range of pieces everyone interested will be able to support the cause and take home a piece of graffiti history.