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STEVE EMBER: And I’m Steve Ember with Explorations in VOA Special English. Today, we travel through city streets all over the world to explore street art, a popular and lively art movement.
(MUSIC)
BARBARA KLEIN: Street art can be found on buildings, sidewalks, street signs and even trashcans from Tokyo to Paris to New York City. This special kind of art can take the form of paintings, sculptures, cloth or even stickers. Its international presence1 is supported by Web sites, artist communities, books and magazines. Street art has become part of a global visual culture. Now, even art museums and galleries are collecting the work of street artists.
STEVE EMBER: It is not easy to provide an exact history of the street art movement. This kind of art has developed in many kinds of ways in places all over the world. Also, street artists usually work secretly because it is illegal to paint public and private property without permission. This secretive nature of street art and its countless2 forms make it hard to define3 exactly. And people have different opinions about the movement. Some think street art is a crime and destroys property. But others see this art as a rich form of non-traditional cultural expression.
A popular spot for street art in New York's Greenwich village in 2007
BARBARA KLEIN: Many experts say the movement began in New York City in the nineteen sixties. Young adults would use paint in special cans to spray4 their “tag5” on walls and train cars around the city.
This tag was a name they created to identify themselves and their artwork. This colorful style of writing is also called graffiti. It is visually exciting and energetic. Some graffiti paintings were signs marking the territories of city gangs6 or illegal crime groups.
STEVE EMBER: Graffiti also became a separate movement expressing the street culture of young people living in big cities. Graffiti art represented social and political rebellion7. This art rejected the accepted rules of culture and power. These artists could travel around areas of the city making creative paintings for everyone to see. The artists could become famous without being officially recognized. Sometimes this street art created a dispute8 between artists and city officials. Graffiti artists created their images and city officials quickly painted over them.
During the nineteen eighties two New York painters who began as street artists became very famous. Keith Haring9 and Jean Michel Basquiat started creating their paintings on the streets. But soon they began showing their work in art galleries and museums. This is when street art started to become part of the popular culture.
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BARBARA KLEIN: Street art today takes many forms. One well known New York City street artist goes by the name of Swoon. Swoon creates detailed10 paper cutouts of people that she observes around her. She places these life-size images on walls in different areas of New York. For example, one of her artworks is of a little boy playing. He is turning his smiling face and seems to be running into the distance. The lines of Swoon’s drawing give energy and movement to the picture. She placed the picture of the boy next to other large graffiti images. It looks like he is running around between the different pieces of artwork.
Swoon did not start her career making street art. She studied fine art at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. But she says she lost interest in the official workings of art galleries. She soon started taking her art into the streets.
Swoon likes how her work changes slowly after it is outside for a while. The art slowly disappears because of the effects of time, sun and rain. She also enjoys the freedom of expression which street art permits. And people enjoy Swoon’s strong and imaginative12 pictures. In fact, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City has bought several of her works11.
STEVE EMBER: Many street corners in Paris, France show the work of an artist known as Space Invader13. Space Invader was the name of a video game that was very popular in the nineteen eighties. This French artist uses small colorful squares of glass to make an image of a space creature. He then places these creations14 on buildings all around Paris. He has been arrested several times. But this does not stop him from working. He says that he is leaving a gift to the city with his art.
On Space Invader’s Web site, you can see the many other cities where he has placed his art. Space Invader has traveled to places like Dhaka, Bangladesh; Mombasa, Kenya, and Istanbul, Turkey.
BARBARA KLEIN: The streets of Sao Paulo, Brazil are also rich with artwork. For example, you can find the work of two brothers who go by the name Os Gemeos. They paint images of funny flat-faced people with orange-yellow skin. Their imaginative characters have many different forms and expressions. Art galleries all over the world have shown the artwork of Os Gemeos.
In Buenos Aires, Argentina, visitors can take a street art tour organized by the company Graffitimundo. The tour guides help visitors explore many kinds of exciting street art in different areas of the city.
The street art movement in this city was influenced by the economic collapse15 in Argentina in two thousand one. Many artists went into the streets and began making playful and colorful art to lift the spirits of people in the city.
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STEVE EMBER: Street artists have different reasons for choosing this special kind of creative act. Some artists do not approve of the profit-making business of galleries and museums. They think that these organizations disconnect art from everyday life. They also like the fact that street art stays part of the city environment.
Other artists express their political beliefs with their art. Some see street art as protesting16 the culture of big business and corporations17. They do not like the city walls covered with advertisements that sell products. These artists see these advertisements as examples of corporate18 aggression19. They think that if an advertisement can be on a wall, so can their art. Still other artists like the excitement of working in the streets and trying not to get caught.
BARBARA KLEIN: But some people pay a price for making street art. Shepard Fairey is a street artist who became famous for his image of Barack Obama that became popular during the last presidential campaign. But Fairey has been arrested several times for making his art. In two thousand nine, Fairey was arrested as he arrived at a party to celebrate an exhibit20 of his work at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. Police arrested him on several graffiti charges. Fairey said he was being punished for suggesting that public space should be filled with more than just advertising21 for companies.
STEVE EMBER: Shepard Fairey has also been involved in legal action with the Associated Press. The AP accused him of using one of its photographs of Barack Obama without permission. He used it to create his famous campaign poster in two thousand eight. Fairey says he used the AP photograph as a reference22, but then changed it greatly for his own idealized and colorful picture of the future president.
Last week, Fairey and the AP reached a settlement. Fairey agreed to share profits from the poster and other objects with his image of Barack Obama. And he agreed not to use another AP photo without permission. Fairey and the AP agreed to work on a series of images that the artist will create based on other AP photos.
A movie about street art called “Exit Through the Gift Shop was released23 in two thousand ten. The movie tells about a French-born shopkeeper in Los Angeles, California. Thierry Guetta loves street art and becomes friends with its artists. He films the artists as they work. He meets the famous and secretive street artist who goes by the name Banksy. Banksy takes the many hours of film created by Guetta and makes this movie. Guetta later becomes an artist who shows his work at a very successful gallery exhibit. Critics have questioned whether parts of the movie are true. But the movie gives an interesting view of the world of street art.
(MUSIC)
BARBARA KLEIN: The Internet has had a big influence on street art. Street artists can show their work to people all over the world. Web sites like Streetsy.com and WoosterCollective.com have thousands of pictures of street art from all over the world. Also, artists and fans can communicate with each other and exchange ideas.
However, people say the Internet is not a replacement24 for the experience of seeing street art live. To really understand this art you have to see it in its environment. The street art movement depends on the energy and life of the city. And like cities, this imaginative and exciting art will continue to change and grow.
(MUSIC)
STEVE EMBER: This program was written and produced by Dana Demange. You can see examples of street art at voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Steve Ember.
1 presence | |
n.出席;到场;存在 | |
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2 countless | |
adj.无数的,多得不计其数的 | |
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3 define | |
vt.解释,下定义,阐述,限定,规定 | |
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4 spray | |
v.喷,(使)溅散;n.浪花,飞沫;喷雾 | |
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5 tag | |
n.标签,附属物,名称,谚语;vt.附以签条,尾随,添饰,指责,连接;vi.紧随,尾随 | |
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6 gangs | |
n.(罪犯有组织的)一帮( gang的名词复数 );一伙;(闹事青少年的)一群;(工人有组织的)一队 | |
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7 rebellion | |
n.造反,叛乱,反抗 | |
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8 dispute | |
n.争端,分歧;v.争论,争吵,辩论,辩驳 | |
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9 haring | |
vt.& vi.飞跑,疾走(hare的现在分词形式) | |
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10 detailed | |
adj.详细的,详尽的,极注意细节的,完全的 | |
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11 works | |
n.作品,著作;工厂,活动部件,机件 | |
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12 imaginative | |
adj.富有想象力的,爱想象的 | |
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13 invader | |
n.侵略者,侵犯者,入侵者 | |
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14 creations | |
创造( creation的名词复数 ); 创造物; (尤指所述由上帝)创造天地; 宇宙 | |
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15 collapse | |
vi.累倒;昏倒;倒塌;塌陷 | |
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16 protesting | |
v.声明( protest的现在分词 );坚决地表示;申辩 | |
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17 corporations | |
法人( corporation的名词复数 ); (政治、经济的)组合; 市政委员会 | |
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18 corporate | |
adj.共同的,全体的;公司的,企业的 | |
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19 aggression | |
n.进攻,侵略,侵犯,侵害 | |
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20 exhibit | |
vt.展览,展出,陈列;n.展览品;陈列品 | |
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21 advertising | |
n.广告业;广告活动 a.广告的;广告业务的 | |
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22 reference | |
n.提到,说到,暗示,查看,查阅 | |
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23 released | |
v.释放( release的过去式和过去分词 );放开;发布;发行 | |
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24 replacement | |
n.取代,替换,交换;替代品,代用品 | |
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