An elaborately knitted installation on Darling Street, Balmain. Does anyone know of any more of these works in Sydney?
Monday, January 31, 2011
Friday, January 21, 2011
URBAN INTERVENTIONS - CONSPICUOUS CONCEALMENT
The knitting graffiti phenomenon achieved international notoriety in the latter-half of the noughties, spear-headed by an aptly-named art group from Houston, Texas known simply as 'Knitta'. By 2009 the movement had well and truly arrived in Sydney and knitted urban interventions began attracting the attention of tabloids, broadsheets, blogs and councils alike. A relic of this (not-too-distant) bygone era may be found, though faded by the sun and worn at the seams, on Crown Street in Darlinghurst. For want of a better description it is a painstakingly stitched Tree Blanket in various shades of wool, conspicuously concealing the fork of a street-side tree. An intervention of this order achieves so much with so little. It speaks of feminist theory, of the resurrection and reinterpretation of traditional handcrafts, of grassroots movements, and of globalisation and the exploitation of the Internet as a means of spreading what may have started as a small-scale artistic prank in Houston, to Sydney and Copenhagen and beyond. It conspicuously sheds light on all that it conceals, transforming a generic, though nonetheless delightful tree into a beacon for philosophical, artistic and social discourse.
Tree Blanket on Crown Street
Conspicuously concealing a fork in the tree
The following links explore the emergence of knitting graffiti as an artistic movement:
Knitta at Wikipedia
Urban Knitting: the world's most inoffensive graffiti
Sydney Morning Herald: Graffiti artist spins a new kind of yarn
Tree Blanket on Crown Street
Conspicuously concealing a fork in the tree
The following links explore the emergence of knitting graffiti as an artistic movement:
Knitta at Wikipedia
Urban Knitting: the world's most inoffensive graffiti
Sydney Morning Herald: Graffiti artist spins a new kind of yarn
Monday, January 10, 2011
URBAN INTERVENTIONS - APPROPRIATION AND SUBVERSION
Urban interventions often alter our experience of an environment on an unconscious level or in a fashion that is indiscernible or indescribable. The blue cast of a crushed soft drink can bearing illegible branding attached to a brick ledge on Oxford Street, Sydney is one such example.
Subtle and unassuming, it is positioned shin-high by an automated teller machine on the high street, creating new meanings through the appropriation of a common everyday form and material subversion. As with the majority of urban interventions the artist and their intentions remain anonymous, thus engendering an otherwise banal environment with myriad opportunities for personal experience and interpretation. It poses a question, yet refrains from ever explicitly spelling out what that question is.
Subtle and unassuming, it is positioned shin-high by an automated teller machine on the high street, creating new meanings through the appropriation of a common everyday form and material subversion. As with the majority of urban interventions the artist and their intentions remain anonymous, thus engendering an otherwise banal environment with myriad opportunities for personal experience and interpretation. It poses a question, yet refrains from ever explicitly spelling out what that question is.
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
URBAN INTERVENTIONS - COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN
This exquisitely crafted masonry mobile phone lies camouflaged on the sidewalk of City Rd. Darlington. Chances are you've walked passed it countless times and not noticed it; perhaps this is part of the anonymous author's intentions... to concretise the breakdown of communication? To surrealistically explore the separation of word and image? Or is it the physical manifestation of a messy break-up played out over the phone?
Conjecture aside, this intervention enhances an otherwise derelict urban environment through sophisticated subtlety and jestful provocation, but blink and you will miss it.
Conjecture aside, this intervention enhances an otherwise derelict urban environment through sophisticated subtlety and jestful provocation, but blink and you will miss it.
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