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Sean Mahan
Level 4: 566 points
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Last Logged In: June 25th, 2024
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40 + 52 points

Mayor Daley's Graffiti Busters by Sean Mahan, qwerty uiop, Ian Kizu-Blair

October 30th, 2005 1:55 AM / Location: 37.773820,-122.4307

INSTRUCTIONS: Take back your neighborhood! Paint over some advertising; ideally, this involves matching the color of the surface the ad is posted on, but an alternative is to use industrial, drab grey. Under no circumstances should you paint over advertising with anything but a solid color. Easy targets are iPod or movie posters on vacant buildings. Bonus points for hard targets like bus station ads or billboards. Before and after photos are, of course, a must.


- smaller

hdtv

hdtv


hdtv 3

hdtv 3


hdtv again

hdtv again


absence of hdtv

absence of hdtv


absence 2

absence 2


before

before


one

one


one again

one again


two

two


three

three


IMG_1543-1.JPG

IMG_1543-1.JPG


four

four


four

four


six (no five?)

six (no five?)


and six again

and six again


IMG_1550.JPG

IMG_1550.JPG


someone else did this

someone else did this



11 vote(s)



Terms

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4 comment(s)

Ads, Graffiti, and Daley
posted by Sean Mahan on October 30th, 2005 8:01 PM

Most comunities have some official or unofficial structure in place for removing graffiti - but (to my knowledge) only Chicago has claimed the legal right to remove graffiti from private property. The assumption that graffiti artists are virtually impossible to hold financially accountable for removal has led to cities spending civic dollars for paint, soda blasters, etc. But the recent phenomenon of corporate graffiti adds a new twist to this structure.

The theory has always gone that a property owner has the right to allow advertising to be placed - in whatever form - on his or her building, and that this advertising is easily recognizable as such, while graffiti is easily recognized as something that no landlord has been compensated for. But what of IBM's Peace, Love, and Linux campaign of a few years ago? Locally, San Francisco fined IBM and its agencies $20,000 for the campaign. In Chicago, IBM offered to remove the stencils, but was informed by Mayor Daley that, instead, IBM would pay the city to remove them (graffiti removal being a union job). In the end, one man was sentenced to a year of supervision and 30 hours of community service, and IBM footed an $18,000 "bill" for the removal of the stencils.

The idea behind this task is that we claim the same right to remove graffiti from private buildings; and the same right to remove even "paid for" advertising. But why only focus on coporate graffiti (unless you believe the inherent evil of graffiti causes rich gangs, violence, etc)?

(no subject)
posted by Bex. on October 7th, 2007 3:12 PM

Check out someone else's sweet "completion" of this.

(no subject) +1
posted by Sean Mahan on October 7th, 2007 5:11 PM

Wow, that's amazing - and I know that guy! He made one of my favorite video games

(no subject)
posted by Blue on October 25th, 2007 11:18 PM

Great minds think alike; I was just about to hyperlink that
Sean that game is fucking amazing where can I play it!