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  2. Graffiti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti

    Modern graffiti style has been heavily influenced by hip hop culture [27] and started with young people in 1960s and 70s in New York City and Philadelphia. Tags were the first form of stylised contemporary graffiti, starting with artists like TAKI 183 and Cornbread. Later, artists began to paint throw-ups and pieces on trains on the sides ...

  3. Graffiti in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti_in_the_United_States

    A heavily tagged subway car in New York City in 1973. By the mid-1970s, most standards had been set in graffiti writing and culture. The heaviest "bombing" in U.S. history took place in this period, partially because of the economic restraints on New York City, which limited its ability to combat this art form with graffiti removal programs or transit maintenance.

  4. Graffiti in New York City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graffiti_in_New_York_City

    Growth of graffiti culture in New York. Graffiti began appearing around New York City with the words "Bird Lives" [1] but after that, it took about a decade and a half for graffiti to become noticeable in NYC. So, around 1970 or 1971, TAKI 183 and Tracy 168 started to gain notoriety for their frequent vandalism. [2]

  5. A graffiti ‘takeover’ roils downtown Los Angeles - AOL

    www.aol.com/graffiti-takeover-roils-downtown-los...

    Climbing up abandoned, unfinished floors and tightrope walking across balcony ledges, backpacks clanging with cans of alkyd and acrylic, a collective of Los Angeles graffiti artists have moved ...

  6. Urban art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_art

    Urban art represents a broader cross-section of artists that, in addition to covering traditional street artists working in formal gallery spaces, also cover artists using more traditional media but with a subject matter that deals with contemporary urban culture and political issues. In Paris, Le Mur is a public museum of urban art.

  7. Al Diaz (artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Diaz_(artist)

    In 1971, Diaz was first introduced to the burgeoning graffiti culture by his older cousin Gilberto "SIETE" Diaz when he was just 12 years old. [4] His cousin lived in Washington Heights, which was a locus of graffiti production at the time, and taught Diaz about the traditional style of writing graffiti: combining a moniker, or nickname, with a number. [6]

  8. Jean-Michel Basquiat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Michel_Basquiat

    —Franklin Sirmans, In the Cipher: Basquiat and Hip Hop Culture In May 1978, Basquiat and Diaz began spray painting graffiti on buildings in Lower Manhattan. Working under the pseudonym SAMO, they inscribed poetic and satirical advertising slogans such as "SAMO© AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO GOD." In June 1978, Basquiat was expelled from City-As-School for pieing the principal. At 17, his father ...

  9. Cornbread (graffiti artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornbread_(graffiti_artist)

    Darryl McCray (born 1953), better known by his tagging name Cornbread, is an American graffiti writer from Philadelphia. He is widely considered the world's first modern graffiti artist. [1][2][3] McCray was raised in Brewerytown, a neighborhood of North Philadelphia. During the late 1960s, he and a group of friends started doing graffiti in ...