enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rammellzee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rammellzee

    Rammellzee (stylized RAMM:ΣLL:ZΣΣ, pronounced "Ram: Ell: Zee"; December 15, 1960 – June 28, 2010) was a visual artist, gothic futurist graffiti writer, painter, performance artist, art theoretician, sculptor and a hip-hop musician from New York City, who has been cited as "instrumental in introducing elements of the avant-garde into hip-hop culture".

  3. Deadly Buda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadly_Buda

    Joel Bevacqua is an American rave DJ, music producer, promoter, and writer [1] known as DJ Deadly Buda.He is also known as the graffiti artist “Buda.” Originally from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he is credited by authors Roger Gastman and Caleb Neelon in their "The History of American Graffiti" as being "Pittsburgh’s first graffiti superstar" and inventor of the “monster rock style” of ...

  4. Mare139 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mare139

    Carlos Rodriguez, better known as Mare139, is a New York-based artist born in 1965 in Spanish Harlem, New York City.He was best known as the subway graffiti writer Mare 139, and has since adapted the graffiti lettering styles to metal sculpture in the fine art context, and is recognized as a media artist for his creation of graffiti-art-related websites.

  5. List of street artists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_street_artists

    Dare (graffiti artist) (1968-2010) real name Sigi (Siegfried) von Koeding, was a Swiss graffiti artist and curator Harald Naegeli (born December 4, 1939) – known as the "Sprayer of Zurich" after the graffiti he sprayed in the late 1970s

  6. JA One - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JA_One

    JA began painting graffiti in New York as a teenager, [2] and by 1985 was known for his work on the city's trains. [3] JA One took on his tag in 1986. [4] In response to the MTA's clamp down on train graffiti, initiated under the leadership of David L. Gunn, [5] JA One spearheaded the movement to take graffiti bombing onto the streets. [6]

  7. 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 one of the world's first modern graffiti artist. [1] [2] [3] McCray was raised in Brewerytown, a neighborhood of North Philadelphia.

  8. 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]

  9. Stefano Bloch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefano_Bloch

    As Cisco, Bloch is widely credited as an innovator of 1990s-era graffiti writing styles including "topless letters" and "top-to-bottom freeway silvers," [56] [62] and is known as "one of LA's most prolific (and, in some circles, legendary) graffiti writers" according to Times Higher Education.