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History of Modern Grafitti

by Teddy Bau
Modern graffiti (the type that one most likely sees on a possibly neglected corner of a city) is a staple of many movies, shows, and even photos. To acquire knowledge regarding its history, one needs to travel back in time to the 1960s. During that time period, people in New York city started writing their names on walls of buildings. The graffiti of the time was also very simple, mostly names and numbers.  An example photo of graffiti from that time period. However, the simplicity of modern graffiti was not retained for long. The introduction of the aerosol spray can catapulted the evolution of modern graffiti to new heights. With the aerosol spray can, people could create intricate drawings and writings at a pace never witnessed before.   An image showcasing what an aerosol spray can from the time looked like.        After the rapid spread of graffiti throughout New York City. Artists began to target subway cars as places to place their tags. Overtime, the graffiti on subway cars that started out as simple tags evolved into large complex works due to the artists seeking flashier displays that strayed them further away from the increasingly common tag-style graffiti.                                                                      Image showcasing what a subway car from the time   period looked like.   The graffiti eventually became commonplace enough to the point where the New York’s Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) started to view it as a major vandalism issue in the 1980s. The MTA initiated a five-year Clean Car Program in 1984 that aimed to eradicate graffiti on the subways through not allowing subway cars to be in service until all graffiti was cleaned off.  The aim of the program was to   make subway cars such as the one     in the previous image look like     the subway cars in his image. Despite attempts by organizations like the MTA and the New York police to eradicate graffiti, the impact of graffiti was already carved into the world. By the 1980s, graffiti became a great part of New York’s hip-hop culture and was spread around the world through media that often filmed and recorded New York’s hip-hop.    Hip-hop graffiti works like this one   were done when graffiti became an   essential part of hip-hop and spread           throughout the world due to media. While text-based graffiti remained prominent, artists were starting to stray away from it in order to create more picture based works which paved the path for graffiti to morph into the form in which one would see in a city of the present day.   An example of picture based graffiti that   later appeared as a result of artists straying   away from text based graffiti. With those previous aspects mentioned, there remains one undiscussed aspect of graffiti that is legality. Graffiti is largely illegal and considered vandalism by most jurisdictions. That in turn hinders its ability to become its own category of art. Artists have found solutions to the legality issue through seeking city spaces offered by organizations for graffiti and featuring their art in galleries and museums. An image of a graffiti museum in Miami.   Sources Used:   https://www.theartstory.org/movement/street-art/   https://90degrees.graffitiartistsforhire.com.au/news/the-history-of-graffiti/

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