Showing posts with label graffiti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graffiti. Show all posts

Dec 31, 2010

Photo: Graffiti Portrait

. Posted by Sherrie Thai by Shaireproductions.com

Graffiti Portrait Mural

Viewed this wonderful urban portrait while walking through the SOMA district of SF.

May 4, 2010

Video: "Girl Power", Documentary on Female Graffiti Artists

Girl Power Title



Posted by Sherrie Thai of Shaire Productions.

Take a sneak peak at the upcoming documentary on female street artists from around the world or view photos of their work on the Czech site.

Apr 27, 2010

Art Collaboration: Monkey Madness, Paris

Monkey Madness

Posted by Sherrie Thai of Shaire Productions.

Here is another art collab between myself and other artists (Ro, Face, 101, 2D Crew) in Paris. My "Monkeys of Oz" image was mailed off for Eric Marechal's "Street Art Without Borders" project. His urban photos can be found on his UrbanHearts site and on Flickr.

Feb 9, 2010

Shaireproductions on the Streets of Paris

Phoenix

Big Brother is Watching You

Posted by Sherrie Thai of Shaire Productions.

I mailed off some artwork for Eric Marechal's Urban Hearts "Street Art Without Borders" urban project. His photos can be found on his site and on Flickr.

Jan 28, 2010

Photo: Urban Animals on a Wall

Urban Animal Wheatpaste

Posted by Sherrie Thai of Shaire Productions.

Found in downtown SF on Market Street and Fifth.

Aug 21, 2008

Artwork: Wildstyle Graffiti

Art by Sherrie Thai of Shaireproductions.com

Wildstyle Graffiti

This was an experimentation in combining tribal tattoo styles with letterforms. This is a mixed media piece (pen & photoshop). I didn't clean up the linework very much, as I like the rough quality of line. In case you're wondering, it's another homage to "Hip Hop".

Jun 15, 2008

Graffiti's Gone Mobile!


Voice of the Streets is a interesting site that gives graffiti writers and artists a way to receive feedback on their work anonymously. Because it's in Beta form, the functionality of the site isn't really smooth, but the concept is pretty hot. The graff artists could upload their work and receive a unique QR Code (which conveys info like URL, images, phone numbers, etc), all the while uploading their own voice message. If someone recognizes the work, they could leave the artist a voice-mail response to their work.

There aren't many uploads to this website and it seems to be a global project, so there are language barriers involved. Adding a simple text feedback option could be advantageous to the site so artists could translate the response if it was in a different language or if the voice-mail fails somehow.

Engaging the graffiti artists with their public/fanbase through technology is an interesting one as it provides an open, anonymous channel of communication, while increasing visibility for the artist.