Banksy Filmed Painting Live For Exclusive Sunday Times Magazine Cover
Banksy Filmed Painting Live For Exclusive Sunday Times Magazine Cover
So everyone has heard about the new Banksy film by now, ‘Exit Through the Gift Shop’, well he did an interview for the English Newspaper Magazine ‘The Sunday Times’ at the end of February 2010. They filmed him paint an exclusive chimp stencil for their cover and featured a pretty interesting interview with the man (done remotely of course…). Have a look…

Banksy Sunday Times Magazine Exclusive Cover - February 2010
More Graffiti From Spain
More Graffiti From Spain
A few more bits of graff from a Spanish visit last year, out on the back wall of a supermarket. It was a lucky find, don’t ask why I was round the back.


Train Graffiti North West London – Euston to Watford, Richmond to Victoria – MOREEEE
Train Graffiti North West London – Euston to Watford, Richmond to Victoria – MOREEEE
Not in the country at the moment so posts may be a little patchy this week… We’ll be back next week with some great stuff though, including an exclusive INKIE interview, nice.
But – Here are some shots from the camera phone on the train, a bunch of random bombs.


Southern Spain Graffiti – The Coast Between Malaga and Gibraltar
Southern Spain Graffiti – The Coast Between Malaga and Gibraltar
I took these graffiti photos in Spain last summer but they’ve just surfaced, they were on the back of a supermarket in a town between Malaga and Gibraltar. I think Manilva but I could be wrong. Anyway, some good ones here!


New ID-IOM Stencil Art Video – Wet Manx Cat
New ID-IOM Stencil Art Video – Wet Kitten
Here is a new vid from ID-IOM, a wet Manx cat. It’s a bit of a different style to some of their other stencils, looks great!

North London Graffiti and Urban Art – Old Street
North London Graffiti and Urban Art – Old Street
I put a lot of graffiti and urban art from around Old Street and Shoreditch, London, but that’s because there is always loads of new stuff going up. Go have a look around if you’re in the city… There are some Sweet Toof photos here, and a few good looking INVADER too.
Also check out the suit of armour! Awesome.


Upfest Urban Art Festival 2010 – Worldwide Artists Register Now!
Upfest Urban Art Festival 2010 – Worldwide Artists Register Now!
From today the Upfest website will go live for artist registrations for Upfest’10 – ‘The Urban Paint Festival’ 2010, they’re open to artists from anywhere in the world.
It’s an awesome urban art event that has been going for a few years now, come and paint live at the event or sell your work! Or just come and have a look, it’s the best urban art event in the UK so you shouldn’t miss it.
It’s on the 5th and 6th of June in Bristol, UK.

Sweet Toof and Burning Candy Huge Graffiti Wall
Sweet Toof and Burning Candy Huge Graffiti Wall
Another great piece from Sweet Toof and the Burning Candy crew, looks sick! Been up for a while but I’ve not had a chance to go see it till now…
You can watch an interview here with Sweet Toof talking us through the piece.


Wildstyle Graffiti In London, Near Old Street
Wildstyle Graffiti In London, Near Old Street
I saw this wildstyle in London, on Great Eastern Street (near Old Street), seems to be on the side of a building for a printer cartridge company Sustain.com. There are 5 pieces around the building, they’ve got the same taste in colours as us…


Some New Urban Art In Cargo Club, London
Some New Urban Art In Cargo Club, London
Ok so some of it’s not new but I’ve not been there for a while. There is a C215 piece and one that look very much like Blu but can’t be totally sure. There is also the big OBEY wall, looks great.
Cargo Club is near Old Street, well worth a look in.


Cargo Club, London Urban Art And Graffiti - OBEY
More From the World Graffiti Phones – London 100%
I didn’t get the chance to leave the country for a while but I’ve been running around London loads so here is what been seen on my travels. It’s another World Graffiti phone clear out.
Loads of these are taken from moving trains (one of the few places that bombing is still going strong is on the side of railway tracks here in the UK). It makes the boring journey great, here are some from 2010.


Jodie H Shows World Graffiti Art, UK, New York, France
Jodie H Shows World Graffiti Art, UK, New York, France
Jodie has been busting around the world for what seems like forever, and she’s taken some great photos of graffiti and street art along the way. She said we could post some of them for the rest of you to see, which is nice of her.
We’re especially feeling the paste ups from New York, great stuff, and there are some shots from Birmingham (UK), and Paris too.
Static Interview – Stencil, Print, Graffiti and Sticker Art
Interview with Tom & Craig aka Static – Stencil, Print, Graffiti and Sticker Art
World Graffiti got the chance to speak to the Static lads at the recent Art Republic street art competition, so I asked them a few questions…
Street and Urban Art at Art Republic Gallery, London
Street and Urban Art at Art Republic Gallery, London
Art Republic had an event to announce the winner of their latest competition (interview with the winner to come soon!), I took a look into the gallery before going to the event. Here are some of their current pieces for sale, it’s a cool place to look around…

D*Face - 'It Feels So Good'
Grant DeJonge Wins the 2010 Art Republic StreetSmart Street Art Competition
Grant DeJonge Wins the 2010 Art Republic StreetSmart Street Art Competition
The Art Republic announced the winner of their 2010 street art competition at an event in London in January, and World Graffiti was there to see Brighton based artist Grant DeJonge take the crown with his piece ‘Lost’.
He gets to have a limited edition print sold by Art Republic, with a proportion from each sale going to homeless charities like StreetSmart.
Preparations have begun to transform a 2 storey-wall into an original work of art. The wall kindly donated by myhotels has been prepped, and the winning image will serve as a reminder of the UK homeless situation when it is unveiled on Brighton’s Jubilee Street on Friday 5th February.
The next location is in Covent Garden, London where the image will be painstakingly reproduced onto a 4-storey building.
Check out the winning image…
New KA’a Website – Stencil Art From France
New KA’a Website – Stencil Art From France
World Graffiti have loved KA’a for a while, now they have a new website up and it’s full of all their stencil art.
Read the previous posts we did with KA’a.
ID-IOM New Stencil Video from Show at Metro, Clapham (London)
ID-IOM New Stencil Video from Show at Metro, Clapham (London)
The ID-IOM lads have put together this video of them doing their latest stencil art at Metro, in Clapham (London). It’s a Manx cat in a tank! No Tail No Fail.
Looks great, they have a pretty unique style I reckon. Check out this previous interview World Graffiti did with them, and this other large London stencil piece from the Isle of Man artists.
SUSO33 Graffiti and Urban Art from Spain
SUSO33 Graffiti and Urban Art from Spain
Here is some graff and video art from SUSO33, well worth showing we reckon (it’s been around for a bit, I’ve been slow…). Got a really recognizable style and I’m loving his signature video tag (see lower down). Turns out I had a photo on the site by SUSO33 already (see it here, second last pic) so it’s all worked out nicely.
MDZ aka MUSA,REBAN,MENDOZA and more… Classic Style Graffiti from Germany
MDZ aka MUSA,REBAN,MENDOZA and more… Classic Style Graffiti from Germany
World Graffiti has been following MDZ for a while, I love the wicked style lettering and wild colours so it’s about time we showed you some of his art and get a few answers out of him.
AZID Interview & NSA CREW Graffiti Art from Liverpool, UK -Awesome Style
AZID Interview & NSA CREW Graffiti Art from Liverpool, UK -Awesome Style
I’m pretty excited about the post today, got a great bunch of graffiti photos from AZID and the NSA Crew, and an interview with AZID too. I’m loving the wildstyle and the colours, We’ll bring you more NSA Crew when we can. I reckon their photos are really well taken too, moody skies and great locations.
Kim-Lan Graffiti Art – Portraits and Clothes from Paris, France
Kim-Lan Graffiti Art – Portraits and Clothes from Paris, France
We saw Kim-Lan’s graffiti art portraits on MySpace and it blew us away, some properly wild pieces in Paris, France. So it’s time for World Graffiti to ask her a few questions and show you some pics…
WG – Where are you from, and where do you live?
Kim-Lan – I live in Paris in France.
WG – When did you first start painting and what got you interested in it?
Kim-Lan – Drawing has always been my passion but I only started to make graffiti for the past 4 years. I’ve always been fascinated by urban art and hip hop culture.
In my Art School I had some friends older than me who went with me in order to make graffiti, I remember that I made a big character; A half woman tiger.
I make graffiti on walls, it’s more interesting because I love make everything in BIG! Even if I’m little!
WG – What influences your art?
Kim-Lan – Nothing influenced me in particular. Since I was 3 years, I always loved create portraits. This has always been my reason for living.
WG – You seem to love painting portraits of people, how do you choose who to paint?
Kim-Lan – I’m passionate by people and I like to represent them with my way. I’m particularly fascinated by faces with fine lines.
WG – When did you start the clothing line, and how did that happen?
Kim-Lan – I began to personalize my pants and shoes when I was in High School but I did it only for my own pleasure.
Since I posted my graffiti and my own clothes on MySpace many people asked me to personalize their clothes.
So I decided to create my own Worldwide and French shops on the net: It took me several months to create this shop.
But my real dream is to open a Big Store in Paris with all my creations, clothes and shoes. But I need to get rich!
WG – What artists do you like at the moment?
Kim-Lan – I like many Graffitis Artists like Banksy or Banga.
WG – Where is your favourite place for urban art?
Kim-Lan – In skate parks.
WG – Favourite sneakers/shoes?
Kim-Lan – I wear many shoes like Air Force 1 or DC Shoes. Usually I take white shoes that I custom myself
WG – What music do you listen to right now?
Kim-Lan – I listen to lots of different music, I like many styles of Hip-Hop, Reggae, R’n'B, Rock. I also love Japanese songs like “Jasmine – No more”.
Thanks loads to Kim-Lan for talking to us, check out her MySpace, there is some pretty wild graff on there.
Here is some more urban art from France by KA’a (Krupion Collective).
Urban Art & Graffiti TShirts – Designs and art by out(R)o – From Nonoloa
Urban Art & Graffiti TShirts – Designs and art by out(R)o – From Nonoloa
[illustration by Pablo Lasheras/color by Out(r)o]
Nonoloa produce some of the sickest urban art and graffiti tshirts featuring exclusive designs by artists from around the world. We had a chat with the founder, original designer and artistic director, Juanjo – AKA out(R)o.
[illustration by Pablo Lasheras/color by Out(r)o]
WG - When did you first discover you loved urban art?
out(R)o - In 1998 I moved to New York. I first got curious about stencils; I loved how and where they were placed in the street. After, I opened my mind to posted photocopies, stickers and tags. And finally, I guess I went backwards to the origins, I got to old school graffiti and In memoriams.
I was amazed to see how everything interacted together… that was the beginning of my growing respect to urban art.
[illustration by Pablo Lasheras/color by Out(r)o]
Nonoloa graffiti and urban art tshirts…
WG – What is it about urban and street art that you love?
out(R)o – I love it because it is POPULAR in the sense that it is alive and it is free and it is part of everyday life; it makes much more sense than museum art, that it looks to me just the opposite.
I find urban and street art concept to be ancient and contemporary at the same time.
WG – You’ve previously described New York as close to Hell, what was it that you found difficult about the place?
out(R)o – In New York I just felt that there were no rules at all, for better and for worse. That meant great freedom, but also great vulnerability.
Well, in fact, I could only feel one rule: call it money, call it ambition, call it succeed. The rest didn’t seem to matter that much.
Some time after I made a trip to L.A. and changed my mind about where hell was located
[Photo by Manu Cervantes]
WG – Was the graff scene in NY still pretty open and exciting? It’s been a bit strangled more recently since the Mayor got moody…
out(R)o – It was weird, because I got to learn and love urban art through New York walls, but at the same time I had the feeling that the bombing wildest age was gone somewhere else [specially in places like Soho and Williamsburg]
WG – Favourite trainers/sneakers?
out(R)o – I am not much of a sneaker fan, but if I have to say one, I guess I would choose old NIKEs.
WG – If you could use only 2 colours in your art/design for the rest of your life, what would you choose?
out(R)o – I love red and turquoise paint over dirty walls… or may be classic black and red ink over old and yellowish posted paper.
WG – Do you still paint much? Madrid is a cool place for new art at the moment…
out(R)o – I’ve been completetely absorbed by Nonoloa for a long time, but I’m planning to hit the streets very soon.
WG – When i visited Spain recently there was a lot more exciting and alternative urban art around than you would find on the average street in the UK, what do Spanish people think about it all?
out(R)o – Definitely Madrid has a great scene: You don’t have to look for very hard, just take a walk and for sure you will see new and good stuff all the time.
Barcelona graffiti used to be awesome, but since they changed the city regulation [and fines are so damned high], it is getting harder and harder to see interesting things on the street [or may be I am walking the wrong streets]. But if you take some time, there are still amazing things to see.
WG – Is it universally loved or looked at as a crime?
out(R)o – Most urban art is respected by most of the people, unless they are done in the wrong places [spots with historical value], which usually doesn’t happen.
All over tags are probably the most controversial part of urban art.
[illustration and color by Out(r)o]
WG – How long has your business Nonoloa existed for?
out(R)o – It all started in April 2004; nothing serious, no big plans. But at some point I just felt that streets and internet were full of awesome stuff that claimed to be printed on t-shirts. And that is what I started to do. Somehow I specialized in transfering from one medium [streets/net] to another [t-shirts]. Since now.
WG – What’s your favourite part about running your own business?
out(R)o – To tell you the truth, what I like the most is so simple as seeing somebody in the street with a Nonoloa t-shirt; Especially if it is Friday on Saturday night, because that usually means that it is their favourite t-shirt.
And another fact that I enjoy a lot is that I get to know many artists whose work I admire; and it would be hard to meet them otherwise.
WG – Worst part of running your own business?
out(R)o – All the time and energy that you have to devote to the business… and specially holidays [the lack of them, I mean].
WG – What artists out there excite you at the moment?
out(R)o – Outdoors: Eltono, Nuria, Nano4814, Borraska, Boris Hoppek…
Indoors: VRNO, Eduardo Recife, Fernando Vicente, Eva Solano, Gabriel Moreno, Chuso Ordi, José Manuel Hortelano…
The other day I got to know the work of an amzing photographer: Jose Ramon Bas.
All-time reference masters: OBEY and David Carson and probably Nan Golding, even if she is supposed to be far from urban art.
Also INOCUO, (Barcelona) started to bomb the streets a long time ago; he is so damned good that soon he got the respect he deserved, so at some point he started Inocuo design Studio, that is what you can see at the web don’t miss the illustration link; it is awesome!
Here are a couple of images Juanjo chose to feature in the new Winter 09/10 graffiti tshirt collection, too sick!!
[illustration by Chuso Ordi]
[illustration by Fernando Vicente]
[illustration by Pablo Lasheras collage by Out(r)o]
Cheers to out(R)o for talking to us, check out the Nonoloa exclusive graffiti tshirt designs! They’ll ship them anywhere too, you lucky people.
We’ll feature another of the Nonoloa artists soon, and bring you more shots from the new collection when they are available.
Exclusive Banksy Exhibition, UK – Original Stencil Art Sold- Sneak Look October 2009…
Exclusive Banksy Exhibition, UK – Original Stencil Art Sold- Sneak Look October 2009…
I was a lucky lad on Monday (big shout to James W for sorting it!) and got the chance to go to a private Banksy exhibition and sale in London at a members-only club deeeeeeeep in the ground.
We weren’t allowed to take photos so apologies for the poor quality of the pics, but it ain’t easy to be subtle with a bloody huge camera phone so I did my best to shoot what I could!
It was great to see the art in the flesh instead of just prints, and there were a couple there I’ve never seen pics of before so that was pretty cool. I’d say it was about as far away from the ethos of graffiti art as it could possibly be, big money and plush surroundings…
As an added bonus there was art from Nick Walker, a friend of Banksy’s I believe. He is known for the men in suits and bowler hats, here is a Nick Walker ‘Vandal’ piece from New York. I actually prefer him to Banksy, bit more colour and less in your face political commenting.
But anyway, here are the pics, I took a note of some of the prices of the originals too in case you’ve ever wondered how much an original Banksy can cost….

Banksy Grim Reaper Original Print - Stencil Art - This was one of the few prints at the exhibition £11,000 ($17,000)
Check out these awesome Nonoloa graffiti and urban art tshirts…

Original Banksy Stencil Art - Rat and Saw (2002) - Paint, on board - £150,000 ($225,000). Yup, that's a lot...
So there you go. Got a few other posts on Banksy, and here is a collection of my Top 50 graffiti and urban art photos from 2009…
Check out these awesome Nonoloa graffiti and urban art tshirts…
Awesome Old Street London Urban Art – NETTA & More
Awesome Old Street London Urban Art – NETTA & More
Got an absolute monster of a post for you today, loads of different urban art in London, around the Old Street area. I do a lot of posts with graffiti, stencil art and paste-ups from around Old Street, but it’s because there is always fresh stuff around…
There is a huge piece by NETTA, check out the Netta blog! There is also a nice SPACE INVADER mosaic too, not seen this one before that was a decent surprise.
There are also some cool bits of paste-up art, and the last building art looks amazing…
- Old Street Urban Art – Space Invader Mosaic
- London Old Street, Stencil Art – EYESORE
- London Old Street, Stencil Art
- London Old Street, Stencil Art
- London Old Street, Stencil Art
- London Old Street, Stencil Art – Stencil Art is Highly Addictive
- London Old Street, Stencil Art – Eyesore
- London Old Street, Stencil Art – STIX
- London Old Street, Urban Art – Skull Mask
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- Old Street, London Street Art
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Paste-Up and Crows Stencil Art
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art – NETTA
- London Old Street, Urban Art
- London Old Street, Paste-up
- London Old Street, Urban Art – This was just amazing…
- London Old Street, Urban Art
- London Old Street, Urban Art
- London Old Street, Urban Art
- London Old Street, Urban Art – Paste-up
Here is more great urban art from Old Street, London.
Check out these awesome Nonoloa graffiti and urban art tshirts…

























































































