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In 2012, she was the subject of the short documentary Claw by the digital channel WIGS. Doug Pray's graffiti documentary, "Infamy" from 2005 in part, is an homage to Claw. Her first book, Bombshell:The Life and Crimes of Claw Money was published in 2007 . Google is also putting the finishing touches on a short film about her that is going to ...
Focusing on the graffiti and skateboarding communities in the city, Schubert's images depict San Francisco skateboarding and graffiti of the 1990s and early 2000s. [3] [7] Throughout his life, Schubert maintained an interest in street and underground culture. [4] Schubert started and published an acclaimed graffiti zine called Graffiti Document.
Infamy (2007) – a feature-length documentary about graffiti culture as told through the experiences of six well-known graffiti writers and a graffiti buffer. New York, New York (1976) – an episode of the BBC documentary series Omnibus, telling the story of graffiti in New York, as told by New Yorkers themselves.
Doug Pray is an American documentary film director, producer, editor, and cinematographer who often explores subcultures in his films.. In January, 2024, Turner Classic Movies (TCM) released a 6-part series, “The Power of Film” [1] featuring Pray's former teacher and mentor, UCLA Professor Howard Suber.
Rolling Like Thunder, a documentary about freight train graffiti, directed by Roger Gastman, produced by Sacha Jenkins, Tim Conlon, and Mass Appeal, 2021 [21] Wall Writers: Graffiti in Its Innocence , a documentary film about 60s and 70s-era graffiti, narrated by John Waters , Director / Executive Producer, 2015 [ 22 ]
Beautiful Losers is a 2008 documentary filmed by director Aaron Rose and co-directed by Joshua Leonard.It was produced by Sidetrack Films in association with BlackLake Productions, and stars several artists including Harmony Korine (writer of independent cult films Kids (1995) and Gummo (1997), the latter directed by Korine himself) [1] and former graffiti artist Steve "ESPO" Powers.
In 2009, A. O. Scott of The New York Times examined the film: "Style Wars is a work of art in its own right too, because it doesn't just record what these artists are doing, it somehow absorbs their spirit and manages to communicate it across the decades so that we can find ourselves, so many years later, in the city, understanding what made it beautiful."
Stations of the Elevated is a 1981 documentary film by Manfred Kirchheimer about graffiti in New York City. [1] It debuted at the New York Film Festival.It was re-released June 27, 2014, and shown at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and was re-released throughout the United States in the fall of 2014.