ST: How can we say it is graffiti and not mural painting?
LS: The border between the two is very thin actually. I think graffiti in itself also comes from the tradition of mural painting. But of course, there is a difference between pure mural and pure graffiti. For Vitché, he’s working in the street and also includes lettering in his work, there is definitely an influence of graffiti in his work.
ST: One of the definitions of graffiti is that it’s illicit.
LS: Yes, graffiti is basically illicit writings in the streets. One of the key ideas is illegal. Yes.
ST: Are there any artists that you are showing here had been caught by the police?
LS: Yes, for example, Nug, he is a Swedish graffiti artist. He actually went to art school in Sweden and for his diploma, he did a film called Territorial Pissing, which caused a scandal. In the film, we saw him spraying paint in the interior of the train, basically vandalizing the train. At the end of the film, he jumped out of the window. This film created a scandal for him in the press and legal problems for him. It is interesting because in the film you would never know if the whole thing is real or is staged.
ST: How was it be institutionalized in the last 40 years?
LS: Well, from very early on, there was a graffiti writer called Coco144 who collaborated with other graffiti artist, and their goal was to work in the studio and have this form of expression be recognized as an art form. So as early as 1972, there were gallery exhibitions. And then in early 80s, it became fashionable, it became part of the whole art scene in the lower east side of New York and many galleries were created, such as the Fashion Gallery Fashion Moda in 1978 in the Bronx, and later on Patti Astor created the Fun Gallery, so there were galleries completely devoted to graffiti as early as the late 70s. There were collectors, very important collectors who were interested in graffiti as art, so these all began quite early. In Europe as well, in the 1980s there were exhibitions in important museums and there were people began collecting, in Holland, in particular. And now, there are many graffiti artists crossing over into the art world, having gallery exhibitions and there are galleries specialize on street art and graffiti. The artists are working in many different ways, not just traditionally paint spraying but also branching into sculpture, installation, etc. working with different materials and support. It’s very diverse, very complex.
ST: Is collecting the major reason of bringing graffiti from street painting to studio painting on canvas? I have in mind for example, Jean-Michel Basquiat.
LS: Well, for the purest graffiti writers, Basquiat was not a graffiti artist. The art world considered him graffiti artist because he really was inspired by the energy of the city at this time and he started writing his poetic statements in the streets, but for the purest graffiti artists, you have to do the train and Basquiat was never doing a train. He was doing his poetry in the streets and he was very inspired by this energy that was in New York at that time and began to use the street as the place for his work. Indeed his works became extremely… you know many galleries began interested in his work, and they sold his work and promoted him as an artist. And he’s a very great artist.
ST: Can you explain a bit the idea of the train in graffiti?
LS: For a purest graffiti writer, there are two things. One, is the lettering, the tag, the signature. There is the idea of style, of motif, to make it unique. This was not Basquiat’s primary focus. His focus was writing on the street his poems, his poetic statements and then later doing his drawings, his sketches, his paintings. But a graffiti writer start working on the tag, then he moves on to the trains and to become king, meaning you have done many trains that have crossed the city, that you are a city writer, that your works are visible throughout the city, you have gone up on many trains. These were originally what graffiti was all about.
ST: What about today? How is graffiti perceived today?
LS: Today, graffiti is entering the gallery, the art world. There are auctions devoted entirely to graffiti. There are lots of collectors interested in this art form. So I think it’s a very dynamic force in today’s art world. It is also influencing fashion. It’s very much into the world of fashion, the world of design. On the other hand, there are many artists, studio artists, who are interested in graffiti, in the colours and forms of graffiti and they have taken these forms, transform them and use them in their own work. So I think it’s a very dynamic and powerful force.
ST: Are you a specialist in graffiti?
LS: I am art historian, but not specialized in Graffiti
ST: What are the difficulties for you to curate an exhibition on graffiti?
LS: There are many difficulties. I think it’s another world. It’s world that has different kind of model, different interests from the world of contemporary art. So you have to understand that world and entering to it. It’s a world that can sometimes, for outsiders who haven’t pay their due, we can say, difficult to enter.
ST: What about working with the graffiti artists?
LS: It’s very different to work with graffiti artists. Their work is outside, it’s done in a spontaneous way; there is the idea of pseudo name, certain anonymity. Some of the artists can be very exclusive, mysterious and difficult to get into touch with. There are many artists, everyone is different. But in general, I think there is sort of mysterious side, even the idea of animosity. But at the same time, they want to be seen. With graffiti artists, sometimes it is very difficult to get into with them. And to on the organization, you know, an institution has to organize things precisely and graffiti artists do the work when and where they please. |