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Borders Interviews
28 May 2008 by GW
If you go into Borders go and have a look through the new Issue of Hip Hop Magazine, skip to page 90 something and you'll find a good interview with Ian Lynam about his book Parallel Strokes and why its better than most other "coffee table" graff books out today.



Also look through the new issue of Swindle while youre there for an interview with Cept and Eine.


Puzle Interview
19 May 2008 by GW
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SPONE aka Greg Lamarche Interview
17 Apr 2008 by GW
By Zio


by Judd Katz  Photos by Dorothy Hong

Greg Lamarche, also known as SP.ONE, is an artist living and working in New York City. A highly respected graffiti writer since the early ‘80s, his precise letter structure and attention to detail has influenced generations of graffiti and street artists around the world.

In 1992, Greg started Skills Magazine as a collection of color and black-and-white Xeroxed graffiti images. Skills grew in popularity and eventually became a reflection of early hip-hop culture, featuring interviews with pioneers of the movement, including Mobb Deep, Black Moon and Masta Ace.

Since that time, his status as a graffiti icon has continued to grow, while he’s simultaneously carved out a successful career for himself as an artist. His gallery work, comprised largely of intricate collages informed by typography, has been featured in galleries, magazines and as part of commercial projects.

In a society where graffiti writers often have a difficult time gaining legitimacy and acknowledgement from the art establishment, Greg is the rare exception. Typography enthusiasts, graffiti writers, artists and designers alike respect his work. Greg’s upcoming show, “Things I Picked Up Along The Way,” highlights his progression from the street to the gallery, and reinforces his unique appeal.



As a graffiti writer, there was a point when you started to paint futuristic, sharp pieces that became one of your signature styles. What made you move beyond traditional letters and begin experimenting with new typographies?

Experimenting with new typographies is the essence of graffiti. I grew up in Queens and started writing in 1981. So I was a big fan of the letter lines. The E, F, J, M and GG were all trains I rode and benched on the regular. The letter lines had a different style than the numbers trains. These trains were dirtier and weren’t covered with elaborate wild styles. There were crews like RTW, TKC, and TPA doing thick, chunky letters that were legible and had loads of style. I also love curvy letters but there was something about what these guys were doing that really influenced my piecing style and the way I saw letters. Over the years I have added the hard lines and developed my own recognizable style that is very graphic in nature but definitely born out of many hours watching the trains go by.

Skills Magazine, which you started in 1992, was very collage heavy, with lots of pictures of graffiti from different artists. Did the process of creating Skills at that time effect the collage-heavy work you produce now?

It didn’t affect my work at the time, but doing the magazine cut-and-paste style was an extension of my interest in collage. Even though I didn’t know it at the time, it was the start of the connection between my collage work and graffiti writing. I was doing collage work many years before I started Skills, but that was the first time I merged the two.



Your collages that feature cut out letters and phrases—when did you make your first one? Was it a progression from another style you were doing before?

Letters were always part of my work. In a way, everything I do builds upon the work that came before it. I started doing more of the word and phrase pieces in 2000-02, when my collage and graffiti styles really began to gel.

You have a solo show coming up in April at White Walls in San Francisco. Will you be introducing new work for this show and will there be any surprises in store for your fans?

Surprises for sure… The majority of the collages were done this year so no one has seen any of the work yet.  The show will have a slight autobiographical feel to it that loosely tracks my progression from graffiti writer to now, and how it’s all linked together.

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Vulcan Interview
26 Mar 2008 by Country Bomber


Thirty years ago, when graffiti was withheld the respect of the subtitle "Art Form," a twelve year-old Vulcan hit the subway cars of New York with his collection of wildly colored paintcans. Over thirty years — and countless walls, trains, and buses — later, the now San Francisco-based graffiti legend has made a smooth transition from street to START SOMA, where the artist-in-residence uses his decades of experience to continue doing what he's done all along — create some of the most significant works of art, both street and otherwise, this side of 1973.

We chatted with Vulcan about his graffiti past and his gallery present, and came out the other side in agreement with the artist: Corporate or communal, gallery or ‘getting up'; art is art, and making it is what truly matters...

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW HERE
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Londonist Sickboy Interview
22 Jan 2008 by Country Bomber


You’d be forgiven for thinking that artist Sickboy had lived in London for several years. His temple icons are hard to miss on even the shortest stroll down the obscurest of Shoreditch or Tower Hamlets streets. However, he’s lived here for less than a year. And as busy as he’s been since his moving to London, he still made the time to sit down and answer a few questions about his art for us.

- So, how long have you been a graffiti artist?
It’s going on 13 years now.

- How long have you been in London and what were you doing before you came here?
I have only been here six months, before that I was living in Bristol. It’s a great city. I have a lot of great friends and creative acquaintances there, but after eight years you run out of places to paint … and the city is or was lacking in art space. So a move to London seemed logical.

- What do the temples in your paintings symbolize?
The temple icon has become what people know me best for. It is meant to represent love and positivity in the shape of a building. The colours are there to make you happy, and my graffiti is not supposed to push you away or make you feel isolated. I want everyone to be in on the party.

- Word is that you're branching out and working on some three-dimensional versions of your temples. Care to elaborate and tell us how this project came about?
I have always imagined my temple icon as a 3-D building that until now has only ever been realised in the form of a 2-D image on various surfaces etc. Like most artists, I’m always trying to push my work on to the next level, and the obvious progression is 3-D representation. It was important for me not to mass produce these. I wanted to do it all "in house" so only two of us were involved in the project and I limited the run to 250 all signed and numbered.

- How can readers get their hands on your temple models?
They are only available through my website www.thesickboy.com

- Anything else you'd like to add in closing?
Keep your eyes peeled for a solo show in April. I'll be putting details on my site soon! Thanks.
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UKHH Cornbread Interview
19 Dec 2007 by Country Bomber


Darryl McCray, better known as Cornbread, is one of the unsung pioneers of Hip Hop culture. He started daubing his name on the streets of Philadelphia back in 1967. Little did he know that what he started would become a cultural phenomenon and spread to every corner of the world. It's difficult to understate the influence this man had on the world of graffiti. He is widely considered one of, if not the, first true graffiti writer. A legend that never got his dues and who's personal journey has taken him to hell and back.......

READ THE FULL INTERVIEW HERE
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Revs Interview
23 Oct 2007 by Country Bomber
Another Link from Hurtyoubad, this time an interview with Revs from NY.


READ THE INTERVIEW HERE
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Welcome To The Ghost Yard!
07 Oct 2007 by Country Bomber
I skateboarded down the steep San Francico-like hill on 187th street going down Broadway. A feat considered “psycho” by the guys in my neighborhood, but to me it was only a matter of timing the traffic lights and flowing in with the cars at the bottom.

I had a lot of changes going on in my life and felt nostalgic to see some of my elementary school friends. I skated to Benette Avenue to see my friend Elliot Silver. Elliot was a chubby, smart Jewish kid who wore cheap slacks and dress shirts. If it wasn’t for his love of sports, he would have been lumped in with the nerds or maybe not...Elliot was a very likeable kid.

I skated onto Elliot’s block intime to catch him coming out with some other friends. At first I wasn’t sure if he was Elliot or not. Hemust have lost at least 40 pounds but besides that, he dressed differently. He now wore burgandy Lee twill jeans, shelltop Adidas and nylon a BVD top. He no longer had a haircut that was parted in the middle. His hair was pushed back with a bleach blond tail hanging in the back. His ear was prieced with a feather earring. For the time, he looked cool. very cool.

“Hey Elliot, what’s up? I can hardly recognize you.”

“Vinny, what’s up bro? Good to see you.”

He introduced me to his friends Isha, Anthony and a tall, skinny lanky kid named Raymond. I knew who Raymond was because his cousin Maria was my cousin/sister’s patrica’s best friend was was a constant presence in my house. Raymond was a dick. He liked to diss people at every opportunity. He write Sir and claimed that Tracey 168 had put him down with Wild Style. I doubted that though.......READ THE FULL STORY HERE
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Massive KR Interview
28 Sep 2007 by Country Bomber
READ THE REST OF THE INTERVIEW HERE

BYN: how is Krink ?

Krink is great! Thanks for asking.

BYN: when and how and where did krink started ?

Krink started in San Francisco California. 1993.
Started by experimenting to find the best way to get nice ink tags on the streets.

BYN: what got u into graffiti ?


Being a bad kid that doesn’t care. Punk rock, hip hop, bad kid friends, skating, NYC.

BYN: can u tell us some graffiti stories ?


I’m not good at telling stories via email. I prefer campfires.

BYN: got anther crazy story ....


I once did a fill in on a truck while a prostitute was giving a crack head a blowjob right next to me.
I was filling in and outlining. I could hear her sucking his dick!
I caught a flick too. If you look close you can see the chicks arm. That fool is cracked out, getting his dick sucked!



READ THE REST OF THE INTERVIEW HERE
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Jens Gehlhaar Interview
23 Sep 2007 by Country Bomber
Jens Gehlhaar

Good interview over at Neojaponisme with the type designer Jens Gehlhaar.

READ INTERVIEW
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NY Writer Interviews
31 Aug 2007 by Country Bomber


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Rain Interview
19 Aug 2007 by Country Bomber
THE ONE THAT DID'NT GET AWAY 
An Interview By Graffwars


Who are you?
Rainah.

Crews?

2B1 is my main posse but I've got a few side projects like TRB ATM REC.

Where are you from?
Sunderland but I represent the newcastle scene.

OK, Tell us a bit about you're life as a writer so far?
Well over the past six years I got my self into a lot of trouble for bombing even though I have not been charged for most of it. I started as a nobody but soon got to know a lot of well respected writers and a lot of hardcore up and coming such as the RSP
lads even though they let there fame get to there heads.

What happened when you got caught?
I have had a 7 year reprimand, a final warning, a 6 month referal order and numerous fines and conditional discharges. I am currently serving a 2 year conditional discharge and paying a £240 fine for metro window scribes. I get no further action for most Things beacuse I choose to no comment every question in every interview, then it makes the police's job twice as hard because they have to fully prove my guilt. I am currently
on bail for metro pieces.

Why do you keep getting caught? When will you learn you're lesson?
I cant see me ever stopping I got to feed an addiction.

Fair enough, so where are you gonna take it then? What are your plans for future years?
If any just to travel a bit and keep getting my name out there.

Yeah, I travel a bit, Prague has a good scene and the beer's fucking cheap!
I suppose ill have to go check it out.

So you mentioned Graffiti as an addiction, what part of it do you most enjoy and why?
Im into panels and street bombing the most at the minute. But i have had fun out of all the different aspects of graffiti.

Do you prefer to bomb alone or with your crew, and why?

I prefer bombing alone, although with people there is more sets of eyes to see whats going on around you, but I bomb anytime whether im alone or with the crew.


Okay, So being a bomber what do you think of the so called "writers"
who hop from one legal wall to the next and never hit the streets, do
you think there missing out or what?

I think they are missing the whole aim in Graffiti
, which is to get up. I dont think half as much of them as I do the real
bombers.

Any good yard stories?

A few years back, when I was still struggling to make a name for myself, I smashed a full metro inside with stainer tags, police got on and I was sitting there all cool, and they asked what the bag was sticking out my pocket, I just said "oh its a bottle of leather die for my shoes" they said "yes son you certainly have got it all over ya shoes", cos my trainers were covered in purple dots. Any ways I got arrested and one of the officers sat with me while the other went to tell the driver the situation, and the dumb fuck openedthe door to go tell the driver, but once a metro door is open it's open till the driver shuts it, so I pulled free

from the officer and made a dash for it.
T
he officer who
went to tell the driver tried to chase me, but I ran straight off pelaw platform and legged it about a mile to the nearest station Felgate, I was lucky enough to catch the last metro, and lucky enough to have the exact money for my taxi home from town.


Ok then , thanks for your time Rain, Go ahead with
the obligatory shoutouts and anything else you wanna say.

Props to skum, doms, infoe, booze, orek, intro, shonone, otick, foren, chuf and the rest of the 2b1 crew im too stoned to remember.










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