![]() |
The Urban Shop Gallery of Friends - Brave One |
Remember when compairing prices,we have FREE DELIVERY worldwide
Clothes Auctions grab yourself a clothing bargain. Urban News the latest in men's fashion, hip hop gossip and urban related news. ![]() Up to 40% reduction through out the site with FREE shipping giving you an extra saving of up to 20% and dont forget FREE with every purchase of Ambiguous, Mada and QWST The Urban Shop mixtape NEW BRANDS The Originators 100% Hip Hop t-shirts. Dilate clothing UK Hip Hop t-shirt design. Ucon skateboard inspired streetwear. ROGUE STATUS cult US t-shirt design. QWST think Carhartt, MHI, Stussy think style think minimal street wear. Gumball 3000 for all you petrolheads. RVCA artist designed skate / urban clothing. LIMITED EDITION T-shirts and Clothing Addict t-shirts with designs by SheOne, Mr Jago, Mitch. Ambiguous artist t-shirts King Apparel t-shirts & hoodies SKATE CLOTHES Skateboard clothing that performs, Matix Ezekiel Circa Skateboarding Element Fenchurch Skateboard Trends GRAFFITI Clothing designs produced by graffiti artists and street artists. What's it all about? Graffiti T-shirts STREETWEAR Streetwear and men's urban clothing, check out some of our major Streetwear clothes brands. HIP HOP Hip Hop clothing, scratching & mixing from Graffiti to DJ's, Five Four King Apparel The Originators CAMO CLOTHING See our camo clothing brands and read our camo fashion feature. Seventyseven DCSHOECOUSA Addict MORE THREADZ T-Shirts Hoodies Jeans Beanies Jackets ETHICAL FASHION Alternative clothing for the politically correct with Organic Clothing |
||||||||||||||||
Brave One The Brave One paints wall murals using emulsion and spray paint, His work is often associated with `Graffiti Art'. "People hate graffiti. People call my work graffiti. I use spray-paint to create images often based around letter forms." In the early seventies New Yorks Graffiti scrawls gave birth to an art form, which has since influenced thousands of artists world wide to master the art of painting with spray cans. The Brave One is part of the Graffiti - Art movement and he finds most people are immediately interested. To gain his Graphic Design degree, he wrote his dissertation centred around the subject of visual languages,"Graffiti", and youth sub-cultures, he understands this subject and the issues that surround it very well. Since leaving University, he has painted large scale murals, and run workshops with Youth Groups, in Schools and for many Councils art initiatives. Click the picture for a closeup view.
Brave One interviewed by slatorious :- What initially got you involved in graffiti? I saw walls painted with graffiti in the music video for "Everybody Walk the Dinosaur". Straight after that I did my first drawing of graffiti on paper. It said `Scott' my name. Soon after that writers started "tagging up" in my area, and I became obsessed by these scrawls. I was really young and didn't know anyone else that felt the same about it as me, but I soon found my local hall of fame. I used to go down there just to hang out and look at the painted walls. I wished I could get involved. I used to search the ground for nozzles and tried to find old used tins of paint with dregs left in so I could have a go. Soon after that I graduated to Secondary School, (age 12) bought the book "Spraycan Art" and began to suss out who the writers in my school were. From there I learnt Graffiti the traditional way, the way of the original New York writers. The Mentor & the Apprentice. I was first apprentice to IKIE a local writer who I still get up with, he went to my school but is 3 years older than me. I have also been apprentice to REAKT Who I met through IKIE a few years later. REAKT who now writes RUIN or THIRD-EYE taught me a lot, I owe a lot to both those guys. I would also like to thank TOXIC and the DESTROYERS. ERASE, ZHAR-JAZ, PART2 and the original S.D.T. crew. Do you prefer being commissioned for work or as it were `keeping it real' by working illegally? I don't prefer being commissioned. Painting somewhere without permission can be great, but my favourite type of painting is somewhere in-between, see I am not content with just tags, throw-ups and dubs, I've been there, done that and it left me feeling like I had more to give. I think you're `keeping it real' if you're giving as much as you can for the cause. For me this means a bit of everything. I like to give my all and get really involved y'know, take my time and consistently produce "burners". This means I paint a lot in places that are semi legal, or overlooked by the authorities. Some writers would say writing graffiti for a living or being commissioned is selling out, how do you feel about this point? I understand why some people say that you're a sell out if you always do commissions and nothing else. If you're an active writer that still gets up, doing commissions is good practice and great for your supply of paint. (Believe me!) As for graffiti for a living... I wish! The confusion surrounding this matter stems from people's perception of the word "graffiti". When you've done a huge full colour "burner" with characters and background designs - the works . . . you've spent all day at the wall and used 40 tins of paint - then someone calls it "graffiti!" . . . the same word they would use to describe a single tag scribbled by some `toy' on a bus shelter, that's where the "G" word causes confusion. There are a few different elements that make up the graffiti scene, there are different types of writers that want different things. At one end of the scale you've got taggers, people who just tag on anything and everything and the other end of the scale the spraycan artists who lost their tag, or stopped writing it for some reason or another and now only paint commissions or canvases. Have you ever had any of your work crossed out by other writers or had confrontations with other writers? "Toys" always dog our pieces, especially in East London. I try not to make confrontations with other writers, if you want to battle we will have it out on the wall in a contest of style, that's what it's about for me man. I think it's a shame graffiti writers carry weapons and gas and stuff for defence against other writers. Yeah I've been "lined" before it was of major significance for me, it got me motivated man! I haven't really been involved in that much battling. Certain people vex me but I'm a calm kinda guy so I can keep my cool with most writers . . . . we are all in the same boat and we could be sailing on . . . y'know what I mean! Once when our crew was painting over a lot of writers, I dedicated the wall to them saying . . . . back in the day we used to say "Peace" to the writers whose burners we went over.' It wasn't just to keep everyone we went over sweet, I really meant that there should be a little more respect for the next man - y'know what I mean, if you can't respect other writers, how can you respect yourself. |
||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||