From Merrill to Wausau to Stevens Point and destinations beyond, locomotives lug boxcars loaded with more than lumber, coal and the typical cargo. The cars also serve as wide metal canvases transporting chalk and spray paint left by artists or vandals.
The graffiti, whether considered beauty or blight, are almost impossible to miss. Anyone stopped at a railroad crossing has seen these numbers, letters, scribbles and drawings.
Some are made with chalk, like the markings hobos once left as messages to friends in other towns. Railroad workers still leave chalk markings on cars to note that the equipment is in "bad order," or in need of repair. The aerosol variety usually is the work of gang members or pieces by "taggers," individuals who try to earn the respect of their peers by spending hours painting bright, ornate pieces on the sides of dormant cars.
Such graffiti are the object of research, the bane of railroad bosses, the focus of at least one magazine and the hobby of a Wausau man, who turns them into decals for model trains.
And people waiting for the train to pass can read a sort of story in the strange designs coming into town from afar and headed to some unknown destination down the track.
One miniature mural of an unnamed city's skyline at sepia-toned dusk passed through Wausau recently on the side of a northbound train.
"That's been through here three or four times," said Bill Priepke, 33, of Wausau, who has taken more than 900 digital photographs of railcar graffiti and turned dozens of them into decals. He sells them to model train enthusiasts interested in adding a touch of authenticity to their boxcars and coal cars.
In 2½ years of posting the decals on the Internet auction site eBay, Priepke has come to know some of the graffiti artists personally. They see the items on eBay and send him e-mail identifying themselves as the decals' artists.
Gang symbols typically consist of crudely drawn letters and numbers in a single color, Priepke said. Taggers often use several bright colors and stencils to create a much more elaborate painting.
"A lot of them are middle-class white guys," Priepke said. "The one guy that I talked to down in Ohio is 28 and he still does it frequently. And he's married, has a kid and a house, (and) a real job."Ted Bullman, owner of Hobby Connection in Rothschild, has a great view of the trains passing on the tracks across Grand Avenue. He sells Priepke's decals and appreciates a good piece of graffiti.
"The railroad doesn't like it. Those railroad fans that are very staunch railroad fans, they won't like it. But I see that it's an interesting art form," Bullman said. "I also think it could be something that would create an interest (in railroads)."One of the most striking pieces he has seen is of a boxcar muskellunge.
Priepke has seen the same musky.
"A really wicked-looking musky, too. Kind of a caricature of a musky," Priepke said.The original railroad graffiti was the work of hobos and railroad men who expressed themselves in a much simpler language of white chalk and recurring monikers.
It is an art form that a railroad worker from San Jose, Calif., known only as Mick Trackside, has documented for a couple years in a sporadic journal called Faded-Glory Magazine.
Trackside, 52, spurns the spray-paint artists for covering up vital figures on the sides of cars. He reveres chalk art, however, as a sort of shadow history of the railroads dating back at least to the 1920's when a worker calling himself Bozo Texino began leaving his mark on car after car.
"I've researched the heck out of that," Trackside said in a phone interview.
Other prominent chalk artists include Ed Haskel, Raven, Colossus of Roads, Other, Broke, the Grabiron Kid and Pooh. These railroad workers are keeping up a tradition rather than vandalizing trains, Trackside said.
Even Jack Burke, spokesman for Canadian National Railway, which owns Wisconsin Central, speaks in reverent terms of some of this traditional chalk writing remembered from his days working on the trains.
One drawing in particular was "eloquent in its simplicity," Burke said, "a very simple but elegant graffiti of a gentleman in a sombrero sleeping under a palm tree.
"And this particular chalked artwork could be seen on railcars, particularly on wheels, but on railcars all over the United States. I'm going back 35 years now.
"And it eventually turned out to be a guy working for the 'MoP' in St. Louis - the MoPac, Missouri and Pacific. It was done with an economy of strokes, but it was still a fairly detailed piece of artwork. It was the railroad equivalent of the 'Kilroy was here' of World War II fame," Burke said.
"But it was done in chalk, and it was completely innocuous," he said. "(Painted graffiti) is not artwork but vandalism."Bullman, of the Hobby Connection, is more ambivalent.
"Yes, it is destroying property that belongs to somebody else, but there's artwork in there," he said. "And I enjoy seeing what goes down the railroad."
Monday, December 31, 2007
Graffiti, Art or Vandalism ?
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Graffiti School

Graffiti School Legendary street artists move up to the roof at Seward Park High School
by Pat Arnow
New Design High School Dean Jesse Pais, is a graffiti artist, under the name Evone. This is his work. Brian and Matthew Lentini created a tribute to Lower East Side pickles with mock movie posters starring pickles. Work by SHAUN from Trust Your Struggle YUSHI & KITOUH painted a cartoon crazed samurai raffiti covers the brick inner walls surrounding the rooftop of the Seward Park High School building. It’s not vandalism. In fact, the principal and teachers of New Design High School, one of the five small schools in the building, initiated the display of paintings by legendary graffiti artists.
The Rooftop Legends project, started this fall and completed at the end of November, created dozens of colorful images of names, sayings, portraits and pictures from water towers to R2D2, to brighten up a space that had been unused for nearly 20 years.
Now it can become a place where students from the different schools in the building, who rarely see each other, can interact. It can also be a place for neighborhood events such as film showings.
"Our goal is to make this a community space," says Corey Willis, Director of Design Education. The school hopes to create a green space on the roof, which covers nearly a square block at Essex and Grand streets. They’re also planning a sculpture show for the spring.
Well-known graffiti artists donated their time and paint. Some used the most traditional tools of the graffiti trade – spray cans. Others painted with rollers and brushes. One artist covered a wall in Metrocards (he went to countless stations to find thousands of used cards).
A few used the more recent outside the law art technique of gluing paper images to walls using wheat paste. Brian and Matthew Lentini created a tribute to Lower East Side pickles with mock movie posters starring pickles. Mounted with wheat paste, the posters advertise "Attack of the 50-foot Pickle," "Bride of Picklestein," "Army of Pickles" and other famous titles.
After graffiti gained cachet in the 1980s, many street artists left behind their outlaw past to become respected painters, and many of them contributed their talent to the Seward Park rooftop. Lower East Side graffiti artists include (by their street names) WOLF, TEAM, VEEFER, SPAR and EVONE (who is Jesse Pais, dean at the design school).
Some students painted walls in the project, too. One girl came in on three Saturdays to paint. "We’re finding ways to engage the students," Willis says.
While most of the artists come from New York streets, a few got their start in the "legitimate" art world. Brazilian graffiti artist Eder Muniz painted one of the walls; Shelter Serra, who painted geometric shapes on his section of wall, is the grandson of minimalist sculptor Richard Serra; and Eric Ratkowski, who created the wall of Metro cards, is a licensed architect.
New Design High School, 350 Grand Street, 212.475.4148 Principal: Scott Conti, rooftoplegends2007.blogspot.com

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Sunday, December 30, 2007
Fears Lingers in L.A. Community
Fear lingers in L.A. community
Latino gang members are no longer visible in Harbor Gateway. But they're still in the wings, residents and police say.
By Sam Quinones, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer December 30, 2007
Two blocks from where 14-year-old Cheryl Green was shot to death a year ago stands a symbol of the Harbor Gateway neighborhood where she died.The fourplex on 204th Street is one of many apartment buildings erected in this small and crowded neighborhood during the last 20 years. The building has a new coat of yellow paint, yet faintly visible beneath its surface is the graffiti that a year ago covered the building.It was the work of 204th Street, a Latino gang that terrorized the neighborhood and was known to attack blacks. An upstairs unit in the complex was its unofficial headquarters, police say.On Dec. 15, 2006, two members allegedly gunned down Cheryl as she stood talking with friends. Police say the youth accused of shooting the black teen had used a gun acquired at the fourplex. A year later, building and neighborhood improvements are evident. Members of 204th Street no longer hang out at the apartment complex. Many are in prison or jail. Two await trial on murder and hate-crime charges in Cheryl's death.Following her killing, intense police pressure on the gang "drove them underground," said Dan Robbins, the Los Angeles Police Department officer who investigated 204th Street. "We'd go for days without seeing a gang member."But police and residents say the gang lurks like the graffiti beneath the yellow paint, ready to reemerge when public resources are directed elsewhere."It's like a weed," said Charlene Lovett, Green's mother, who has since moved. "If you don't get it from the ground and uproot it, it's going to regrow."Uprooting it will be difficult. During the last 20 years, private developers and Los Angeles' declining industrial economy weakened this once-strong neighborhood, leaving it poorer, cramped, transient and more fertile turf for gang activity. The lesson from the Cheryl Green case is that "we need to think long and hard about our land-use decisions" and how they help gangs flourish, L.A. City Atty. Rocky Delgadillo said. "What that geography looks like is important." Few local gang crimes in recent years have generated as much media attention as Cheryl's killing.Within weeks of the fatal shooting, FBI Director Robert Mueller, L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, LAPD Chief William Bratton, L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca and other officials stood at the Del Amo Market that the 204th Street gang had declared off-limits to blacks. They vowed to crack down on gang violence."We are coming with everything we have," Villaraigosa said.The 204th Street gang was tiny by L.A. standards, with about 100 members. But its activities reflected a reality that has emerged in L.A. County in the last 15 years. Latino street gangs, while feuding with each other, are now also the chief perpetrators of hate crime, especially against blacks, according to the Los Angeles County Human Relations Commission. Black residents of Harbor Gateway told reporters that the 204th Street gang terrified them. Gang members shot at them, yelled racist insults and sprayed racist graffiti on walls, they said. Since 1997, roughly one black person a year has been killed in what appears to be a race-related crime, police say. Members of 204th Street said they were feuding with a black gang known as the 208th Street Crips. But police and black residents said that the black gang had long faded away.Black residents said they feared walking outside. They closely watched passing cars of Latino youths and they didn't use the Del Amo Market, the neighborhood's only store.Cheryl's killing brought the neighborhood's problems to light. The Los Angeles Police Department formed a list of the city's 11 most dangerous gangs that included 204th Street, along with powerhouses such as 18th Street, Grape Street Crips and MS13. City Councilwoman Janice Hahn promised more resources for the Harbor Gateway neighborhood.
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SCSU to Target Graffiti
SCSU to target graffiti By David Unze dunze@stcloudtimes.com
Published: December 29. 2007 12:30AM STORY CHAT (149)
Three days after issuing directives aimed at uniting a campus torn by a spate of racist graffiti and writings, St. Cloud State University reported Friday that yet another symbol of hate had been found.
A small swastika with the word “Hitler” under the symbol was found on a wall inside the west elevator in Holes Hall, according to Public Safety Director Miles Heckendorn. The vandalism was not in the elevator before 1 p.m. Wednesday, Heckendorn said, and it was reported to public safety officials at about 8:40 a.m. Thursday.
That report came the same week that President Earl H. Potter III announced that he is establishing a campus-based reward fund for information about the source or sources of numerous racist messages left on campus since mid-November.
The reward is one of several initiatives that Potter hopes will unite the campus against hate-filled messages that have been found in Atwood Memorial Center, in campus bathrooms and most recently in the Holes Hall elevator.
The reward fund is in addition to the $1,000 reward already being offered by Create CommUNITY.
Other developments in response to the incidents include:
Formation of an ad hoc committee of students, faculty and staff that will advise Potter on the issue.
Creation of a “campus climate” Web site where the university community can get updated information about the incidents, the efforts to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice and access a list of available resources to support victims.
Planning of an all-day campus forum, to be Jan. 24, that will focus on hate crimes and information about resources to help the campus community deal with feelings of being threatened and intimidated.
Uniting against hate
The efforts that Potter announced this week are aimed at getting the campus to unite against hate and create empowerment, a sense of security and being in charge “so we don’t feel subject to the things other people are doing,” Potter said.
History has shown what happens when the majority group stands aside as minority groups are attacked, he said.
“When a small group is attacked and the majority stood aside, it damaged the whole culture,” Potter said. “So we have to come together with the people who were attacked. If we fail to come together, our apathy or inaction damages the community.”
Potter announced the initiatives before the most recent incident of racist graffiti was found Thursday morning inside an elevator in Holes Hall.
When he announced the steps that were being taken in response to the continuing problem, Potter put the number of incidents of hate-filled messages found on campus at 17. From the time the first incident was reported, the university has tried to work with the whole campus community to think about responses and the needs of students, faculty and staff, Potter said.
He believes that the development of a leadership team of students, faculty and staff has changed the attitude of targeted groups from one of “what are you going to do about this” to “what are we going to do about this,” he said.
“One of the sensitive spots in the past has been that there was not full disclosure of things that happened on campus,” Potter said.
That’s why details of all of the reported incidents will be available on the Web site that is scheduled to launch Wednesday, he said. His hope is that members of the university community who don’t regularly read newspapers or even their e-mail will be able to go to one place to get the most updated information on the incidents.
“In this way, we have a place where full information about what has happened will be available,” he said. “It’s a communication tool intended to inform and support.”
Heckendorn said he was withholding some details about the most recent incident, including the color and size of the symbol and writing and the exact writing style and location of the symbol, because it could help the ongoing investigation determine who is responsible, he said.
Faculty, staff and students are being encouraged to attend the Jan. 24 forum.
Included in that event will be people from other campuses where these types of incidents have happened to tell students here that this isn’t the only campus to be attacked this way.
“We want to link arms with them,” Potter said.
As for the motivation of the perpetrators, how many there are and whether any or all are St. Cloud State students, “at this point it’s hard to tell,” Potter said.
Previous incidents
Several large swastikas were found on a bathroom mirror in late November in Holes Hall. Another partial swastika was found burned into the ceiling of an elevator.
Swastikas also have been found scratched into the wall of a computer lab at Multicultural Student Services and in a bathroom stall.
After those incidents, university officials found on a bulletin board a comic-book style drawing of people talking about “rednecks” wearing swastikas on their arms, holding alcohol containers and applying bias-motivated graffiti.
Police also received a report that a document with a swastika drawn on it had been placed under a professor’s door.
A safety alert was issued in mid-December after a swastika was found in a bathroom in Stewart Hall.
“(The person) who wrote the cartoon said he was making fun of the ignorance of the people who put the swastikas up,” Potter said. “It’s possible, and in fact probable, that there are folks who have placed messages, placed symbols, to get a rise out of the community. It’s possible there are people asserting a right to put whatever they want on the wall.”
But, Potter stressed, you can’t shout fire in a movie house and you can’t make statements designed to induce fear or intimidation. Those are hate crimes, he said.
“The police and FBI have all the materials in their hands,” he said of the investigation.
Public safety and the St. Cloud Police Department are investigating the most recent incident as well as the others.
Anyone with information about any of the incidents is asked to call St. Cloud State’s public safety department at 308-3333 or St. Cloud police at 251-1200.
Letter: Racist graffiti highlights all kinds of ignorance David Allen Kelly St. Cloud
Published: December 30. 2007 12:30AM STORY
I have read with interest about the problems with racist/bigoted graffiti and cartoons at St. Cloud State University. As a person who has worked in cleaning for private industry for many years, I would like to offer a few insights.
Every few months one will find a swastika or the like on a bathroom wall, and we always just get a rag and some solvent and clean it off.
Most often management is not even told of the matter unless the wall needs to be sanded and repainted.
We know there is little chance that the culprit(s) will be found. We don’t wish to keep such a close watch on the bathroom stalls that one could be mistaken for a Republican senator from Idaho. And we do not wish to give these idiots any free publicity.
As for the cartoons about “rednecks,” which I have not seen, I will just say that to think of a “redneck” as a racist is rather unfair. If one considers the term “redneck” in the broad sense of being a rural person who works in agriculture or does manual labor, then ranchers and cowboys would be included.
According to programs such as “Rediscovering America” from the Discovery Channel, and “The Real West” from the History Channel, fully half of all professional cowboys were either black, Hispanic or Native American. Obviously real cowboys are not racist.
And let us not forget that it was a Southern, “redneck” rancher — President Lyndon B. Johnson — who pushed the Civil Rights Act of 1966 through Congress.
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Saturday, December 29, 2007
Racist Graffiti Reported
Three days after issuing directives aimed at uniting a campus torn by a spate of racist graffiti and writings, St. Cloud State University reported Friday that yet another symbol of hate had been found.
A small swastika with the word “Hitler” under the symbol was found on a wall inside the west elevator in Holes Hall, according to Public Safety Director Miles Heckendorn. The vandalism was not in the elevator before 1 p.m. Wednesday, Heckendorn said, and it was reported to public safety officials at about 8:40 a.m. Thursday.
That report came the same week that President Earl H. Potter III announced that he is establishing a campus-based reward fund for information about the source or sources of numerous racist messages left on campus since mid-November.
The reward is one of several initiatives that Potter hopes will unite the campus against hate-filled messages that have been found in Atwood Memorial Center, in campus bathrooms and most recently in the Holes Hall elevator.
The reward fund is in addition to the $1,000 reward already being offered by Create CommUNITY.
Other developments in response to the incidents include:
Formation of an ad hoc committee of students, faculty and staff that will advise Potter on the issue.
Creation of a “campus climate” Web site where the university community can get updated information about the incidents, the efforts to identify the perpetrators and bring them to justice and access a list of available resources to support victims.
Planning of an all-day campus forum, to be Jan. 24, that will focus on hate crimes and information about resources to help the campus community deal with feelings of being threatened and intimidated.
Uniting against hate
The efforts that Potter announced this week are aimed at getting the campus to unite against hate and create empowerment, a sense of security and being in charge “so we don’t feel subject to the things other people are doing,” Potter said.
History has shown what happens when the majority group stands aside as minority groups are attacked, he said.
“When a small group is attacked and the majority stood aside, it damaged the whole culture,” Potter said. “So we have to come together with the people who were attacked. If we fail to come together, our apathy or inaction damages the community.”
Potter announced the initiatives before the most recent incident of racist graffiti was found Thursday morning inside an elevator in Holes Hall.
When he announced the steps that were being taken in response to the continuing problem, Potter put the number of incidents of hate-filled messages found on campus at 17. From the time the first incident was reported, the university has tried to work with the whole campus community to think about responses and the needs of students, faculty and staff, Potter said.
He believes that the development of a leadership team of students, faculty and staff has changed the attitude of targeted groups from one of “what are you going to do about this” to “what are we going to do about this,” he said.
“One of the sensitive spots in the past has been that there was not full disclosure of things that happened on campus,” Potter said.
That’s why details of all of the reported incidents will be available on the Web site that is scheduled to launch Wednesday, he said. His hope is that members of the university community who don’t regularly read newspapers or even their e-mail will be able to go to one place to get the most updated information on the incidents.
“In this way, we have a place where full information about what has happened will be available,” he said. “It’s a communication tool intended to inform and support.”
Heckendorn said he was withholding some details about the most recent incident, including the color and size of the symbol and writing and the exact writing style and location of the symbol, because it could help the ongoing investigation determine who is responsible, he said.
Faculty, staff and students are being encouraged to attend the Jan. 24 forum.
Included in that event will be people from other campuses where these types of incidents have happened to tell students here that this isn’t the only campus to be attacked this way.
“We want to link arms with them,” Potter said.
As for the motivation of the perpetrators, how many there are and whether any or all are St. Cloud State students, “at this point it’s hard to tell,” Potter said.
Previous incidents
Several large swastikas were found on a bathroom mirror in late November in Holes Hall. Another partial swastika was found burned into the ceiling of an elevator.
Swastikas also have been found scratched into the wall of a computer lab at Multicultural Student Services and in a bathroom stall.
After those incidents, university officials found on a bulletin board a comic-book style drawing of people talking about “rednecks” wearing swastikas on their arms, holding alcohol containers and applying bias-motivated graffiti.
Police also received a report that a document with a swastika drawn on it had been placed under a professor’s door.
A safety alert was issued in mid-December after a swastika was found in a bathroom in Stewart Hall.
“(The person) who wrote the cartoon said he was making fun of the ignorance of the people who put the swastikas up,” Potter said. “It’s possible, and in fact probable, that there are folks who have placed messages, placed symbols, to get a rise out of the community. It’s possible there are people asserting a right to put whatever they want on the wall.”
But, Potter stressed, you can’t shout fire in a movie house and you can’t make statements designed to induce fear or intimidation. Those are hate crimes, he said.
“The police and FBI have all the materials in their hands,” he said of the investigation.
Public safety and the St. Cloud Police Department are investigating the most recent incident as well as the others.
Anyone with information about any of the incidents is asked to call St. Cloud State’s public safety department at 308-3333 or St. Cloud police at 251-1200.
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Wall of Frustration
Sunday December 30, 2007
Wall of frustration
Graffiti on school walls has become a form of self-expression for students.
TEACHER TALKBY MALLIKA VASUGI
SOMEONE had told Fauziah Norizan (who heads the language department in my school) about the pre-Deepavali sale in KL Sentral last month. The elaborate, sequined shimmering salwar kameez were going at a tiny fraction of their original price, as well as the exquisite gossamer shawls, satin and silk drapes, not to mention the intricate dangling earrings, beads and bangles.
And so with visions of smouldering Bollywood hunks spreading embroidered silk before her feet Fauziah set off to do some last minute Deepavali shopping that weekend. When we asked her about it on Monday, she sulked, put on a long face and said we’d sent her on a wild goose chase, a fruitless mission, that there were no stalls or shops selling any of the items we’d mentioned except for a toothless old Malay man promoting madu asli (honey) guaranteed to bring marital bliss.
She sulked even more when we laughed at her for so successfully managing to land in the completely wrong place and she stomped off in a huff vowing never again to speak to people who didn’t know how to give proper directions. She came back after about half an hour and asked me what we thought about graffiti on school walls.
“Isn’t that something they throw during weddings, the rice, bits of coloured paper, stuff like that?” said Ida. “Do they have it in school now?”
“They’ve got fake graffiti now,” said Tina who had just returned from her niece’s wedding. “Puffy little Styrofoam pieces. All shiny and glittering. I managed to shower the bridal couple with two fistfuls of graffiti,” she mused dreamily.
“And I can’t believe I actually asked you lot for directions,” said Fauziah. “Graffiti, G, R, A, F, F, I, T, I” she spelt the word out. “Not Confetti. Graffiti - words that people usually scribble or write on walls, sometimes even pictures... You know, like who-loves-who, which teacher has a huge posterior, stuff like that.”
“Oh, graffiti,” said Tina, losing interest. “Why didn’t you say so in the first place? Graffiti, confetti?trivial things, but at least I got the ‘itti’ part right.”
“I deeply appreciate the fact that the two of you don’t teach English,” said Fauziah.
Ida and Tina thanked her warmly as they left the staffroom.
“OK,” I said, “Now let me guess – boys’ toilet, graphic illustrations, body parts...”
Fauziah nodded. “Who’s the lucky teacher?”
“No identification found on body,” said Fauziah. “Owner unknown, although,” she continued in a lower note, “I do have my suspicions. Perhaps I should go back there into the toilet to get a better look.”
“Do that,” I warned, “and you will be next on the wall. Or have you already had that honour?”
Fauziah sighed. “You know,” she said, “After all the school walls I’ve seen in all my teaching years I’ve finally come to the conclusion that no teacher is above 'graffitification'.
In fact I believe that it is no more a personal thing when you find your name scribbled, painted, or even carved on the school walls. Really. Even if there’s a life-size, detailed drawing of you, complete with labels at strategic points explaining various bodily functions, it’s really not about you.”
“Then who?”
“It’s a kind of need,” said Fauziah, “for people to leave their mark somewhere. The ‘Look, I’m here. I exist, I matter,” Remember the prehistoric drawings on cave walls?” she nodded wisely. “Yes, same kind of thing. The heart-shaped notches on trees, correction-fluid writing on school desks, footsteps on newly cemented corridors.”
I thought hard. Somehow the images of bison-hunting cave dwellers didn’t quite correspond with the pictures I’d seen on school walls.
“Also,” continued Fauziah, “graffiti is one way, perhaps the only way for some school kids to express whatever they’re feeling inside, the anger, the resentment, bitterness and frustration. Against their friends, parents, society, teachers or even against themselves.”
I had to agree with her. Most of the students who had been disciplined for defacing school walls with crude vulgarities were academic underachievers in the school or came from dysfunctional homes situations. Perhaps graffiti was the only form of articulation they knew to communicate the hopelessness of their situation.
And yet there remains the uneasy question of why most graffiti on school walls tend to be of a sexually perverse nature.
Thiru, who is in the discipline committee in his school, feels that it is due to the manner in which topics related to sexuality are dealt with both in the school and at home.
“In spite of all the apparent progress, the gigantic strides forward we are supposed to have taken in the education field, sex remains a taboo subject. We are dealing with teenagers here, adolescents, raging hormones. And how much of sex education do they really learn in school? Are they getting answers to at least half of the questions in their minds? With so much wrong information from pornographic websites, is it a wonder they come to school with a head chockfull of smut and lewd images ready to unload on whoever falls victim for the day, either in graffiti form or through more direct approaches?
“Once,” said Thiru with a smile, “we had a complete mural – all five male administrators clad only in our ties and name tags depicted in various stages of fornication on the toilet wall. We managed to round up the perpetrators of the crime, said we appreciated the way they had enhanced certain features but told them that they had to be punished anyway. One lesson we men teachers learnt anyway was never to underestimate the importance of the tie or the name tag.”
My friend Yashida who teaches in an all-boys school had another interesting story to tell. One of her colleagues, a matronly and rather well-endowed teacher in her fifties, was continually being given starring roles in the boys’ graffiti productions. She called the boys involved up to the staffroom one day and told them she understood their obsession with her beauty but if they were serious in their intentions they had to ask her husband for permission first – when he returned from his hunting trip. She said that after that incident she was dropped from all further productions.
I met Fauziah again after the break. “What about us teachers?” I asked.
“How do we express our pent-up frustration, dissatisfaction with the school system, administrators, other teachers?? We can’t go around writing on school walls.”
“Eh,” she said, “Where’ve you been the past twenty years? Leave graffiti to the kids. We teachers have more sophisticated and refined methods. Never heard of surat layang ah?”
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Friday, December 28, 2007
Graffiti Database of Tags

by Peter Young, Evening Chronicle
A DATABASE of tags used by graffiti vandals is being built up by Metro bosses in the battle to combat problems on the North East railway.
Public transport operator Nexus, which runs the Metro, is spending more than £800 a day on clean-up operations, including trains and stations.
Specialist squads blitzed 48,000 square metres of graffiti on the Metro during 2007 and repainted more than 3,000 pieces of track-side equipment across the network.
The bill came to £300,000 and managers say the aim is to ensure it is one of the cleanest urban rail networks in the country.
Some graffiti vandals leave behind crucial evidence in the form of tags, or signatures, when they deface public property.
The Nexus graffiti team is now building up a database of tags that have appeared on stations and tracks. A spokesman said: “This can help the police to track down graffiti taggers more quickly.’’
Members of the team have given statements to court that have led to convictions after graffiti taggers were caught.
In September, three members of a gang of graffiti vandals calling themselves WTR were locked up, while others received a suspended sentence and a community order after causing £180,000 of damage on the Metro and streets of Tyneside in a year-long spree.
Today, Metro bosses paid tribute to the work of the 17-strong team of graffiti cleaners, based in South Gosforth, who have worked throughout the year to ensure that all illegal daubings were washed off swiftly.
They work around the clock cleaning graffiti from the Metro’s 90-strong fleet of trains, 59 stations and track-side areas including fences, walls, bridges and signal boxes.
All graffiti of an offensive nature, particularly if it is racist or homophobic, is prioritised and cleaned off within 24 hours.
The team – highly commended earlier this year at the Light Rail Transit Awards in London – use high-powered jet washers and chemical solutions to remove graffiti.
The cleaning team works on a rota of day and night shifts to ensure that 90% of Metro stations are totally free of graffiti.
Metro director Mick Carbro said: “Graffiti and vandalism can create a foreboding environment, so it’s essential to provide a clean and welcoming system for people to travel.
“The work of our graffiti cleaners has been outstanding this year and they have not let up in their efforts to keep the system free of graffiti at numerous spots across our network.
“Train operators across Britain have to face the problem of graffiti vandals targeting their property.
“We have an excellent team of graffiti cleaner in place who are striving to become recognised as the best in Britain at what they do.”
During 2007 Nexus has worked with schools, youth groups and the probation service to educate youngsters and help to reduce graffiti.
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Thursday, December 27, 2007
New Sheriff in Town
Graffiti vandals beware — there’s a new sheriff in town, and you won’t ever see him.
About a dozen Scotts Valley Police Department members and their families, including Chief John Weiss (from front), officer Scott Freeman’s 11-year-old daughter, Hanna, and officer Scott Mitchell, showed up for graffiti cleanup Saturday, Dec. 22, in the back of Scotts Valley Sports Center. Lucjan Szewczyk/Press-BannerGraffiti vandals beware — there’s a new sheriff in town, and you won’t ever see him.
Broadband Discovery Systems, a two-year-old company based in Scotts Valley, has developed a series of devices finely tuned to detect the sound of an aerosol spray can from as far as 35 feet away.
“I despise graffiti,” said president and chief executive Cory Stephanson, who worked with a team of engineers to build the device aimed to stymie graffiti vandals.
Stephanson and vice president Michael Neely discovered that $22 billion is spent every year in the United States dealing with graffiti, and they think their latest innovation will help.
The device, nicknamed “Project Merlin” after Stephanson’s son, has intricate sound recognition features that are tuned to detect only the specific sounds an aerosol can makes. When the sensor detects the sound of a can dispensing, it uses cell-phone-like technology to send out an alert.
The sensor can trigger an alarm, light or camera, as well as send a text-message alert to a roving security guard or to the police.
“A mall can deploy wireless units from one base unit that sends texts to an alarm infrastructure or to mall security,” Stephanson said.
For example, the moment someone discharges an aerosol can in one location at a mall, a roving security guard would receive a text message with the location and head out to catch the perpetrator in the act. The Capitola Police Department has been beta-testing the police version of the sensors to help work out the kinks.
Courtesy photo“It does work,” said Chief Richard Ehle. Capitola has been testing the devices in hidden locations for about six months. At one location, the device activated a security camera, which recorded graffiti vandals at work. “We didn’t get a real good ID on the individuals, because the lighting was low,” Ehle said.
The devices can be held in the palm of the hand and are designed to be encased in harmless-looking electrical boxes.
Project Merlin devices will be sold commercially starting in February. The company will sell the devices, which integrate with existing alarm systems, wholesale to alarm companies who can distribute to their clients, Stephanson said. Already, police departments in Santa Paula, New Jersey and Utah have signed on to purchase the system.
“We’re coming up with some really innovative solutions,” Stephanson said of his company’s recent products, which include a human hydration monitor and a gunshot recognition system.
The company’s latest project? Project Merlin’s cousin, a system that detects the sound of a marker on a mirror, used specifically to catch graffiti in bathrooms.
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Monday, December 24, 2007
Merry Christmas and news from Bethlehem
Graffiti Artists Decorate Bethlehem Barrier
(Because of intense interest in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, NPR makes available free transcripts of its coverage. View related web coverage or listen to the audio for this story)
Morning Edition: December 24, 2007
STEVE INSKEEP, host:
It's MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Steve Inskeep.
This Christmas season, a group of guerilla graffiti artists has gone to work in Bethlehem, the West Bank city where Christians believe that Jesus Christ was born.
Bethlehem's economy and tourism industry are in tatters. Palestinians blamed that on Israeli checkpoints and Israel's massive security barrier that now separates Bethlehem from nearby Jerusalem.
This month, international and local artists used parts of that concrete barrier as their canvas. They've also set up an art exhibit in Manger Square called Santa's Ghetto.
From Bethlehem, NPR's Eric Westervelt reports.
ERIC WESTERVELT: Hassan Salama, an unemployed laborer, walks curiously along a garbage-strewn dirt road in north Bethlehem that hugs Israel's massive barrier. Here, 30-foot high, concrete blast walls are dotted with watchtowers manned by Israel soldiers. But the huge slabs of concrete were recently transformed by gallons of paint.
An artist, who calls himself Sam 3, painted a long, black silhouette of a man reclining. Nearby, someone painted a giant boxing scene - Jake La Motta and Sugar Ray Robinson are in Bethlehem, slugging it out on the concrete. A little further down, there's a silhouette of children riding an escalator up, up, up and over the wall.
Salama looks at a painting of an enormous insect toppling colossal dominos that resemble the wall itself, and he cracks a slight smile.
Mr. HASSAN SALAMA (Resident, Bethlehem): (Through translator) I don't understand what it means, but I like it.
WESTERVELT: Nearby, along the main roadway leading out of Bethlehem, the British guerilla graffiti artist, who goes by the name Banksy, has painted a picture of a little girl in a bright pink dress frisking an Israeli soldier. Further down the road, the elusive artist depicts an Israeli soldier checking the ID of a donkey.
And outside of Maha Sakar's store, a group of anonymous painters calling themselves Banksy painted a white dove of peace in the crosshairs of a gun and wearing a bulletproof vest.
Ms. MAHA SAKAR (Storeowner, Bethlehem): They told me, don't tell anybody about their name. And I don't know exactly.
WESTERVELT: Sakar, a Christian Palestinian, says some of the art didn't go over well with locals. She was a little offended by the pieces involving donkeys. Is Banksy trying to say Palestinians are donkeys? She asked. But Sakar says she likes much of the work and praises the artists for drawing attention to this downtrodden city.
Unemployment in Bethlehem remains staggeringly high. The West Bank economy is in ruins. Tourism is actually up some in Bethlehem over the last three months, but is still nowhere near the pre-intifada tourism high, which topped nearly 1 million annual visitors in 2000.
Today, Manger Square, just days before Christmas, is all but empty; the nearby shops idle.
Ms. SAKAR: We ask angel - Bethlehem is the city of God, city of Jesus, and city of Christmas. And the wall has divided Bethlehem from Jerusalem.
WESTERVELT: Israeli officials say the West Bank barrier, a 400-plus mile-long mix of cement walls, fencing and barbed wire is vital to the Jewish state's security. They say it thwarted many would-be Palestinians suicide bombers and saved lives.
Palestinians see the barrier as a unilateral, illegal border that has stolen Palestinian land and ruined their economy.
Mr. SOULEIMAN MANSOUR (Palestinian Sculptor and Painter): It's important for international artists to come to Palestine and express the situation here in their art. And it's a start, you know. We don't have art galleries in Palestine.
WESTERVELT: That's Palestinian painter and sculptor Souleiman Mansour. He's donated several of his pieces to the exhibit in Manger Square across from the Church of the Nativity. The show, called Santa's Ghetto, is linked to the graffiti art around the city.
Mansour says personally, he's against using the Israeli barrier as a canvas. The wall should be used for nothing, he says. It should come down. But Mansour praises the artists for raising awareness of Bethlehem's plight.
Mr. MANSOUR: The situation here is a very strange, very contradictory, and also absurd, you know? This is heaven for contemporary artists because they deal with these subjects.
WESTERVELT: The Santa's Ghetto art show and art auction in Manger Square, proceeds of which go to a children's charity, runs until Christmas Eve. The graffiti art on the wall and around the city could last far longer.
On his Web site, the artist Banksy encourages people to visit Bethlehem and explore the art and the politics for themselves. If it's safe enough for a bunch of sissy artists, Banksy wrote, then it's safe enough for anyone.
Eric Westervelt, NPR News, Bethlehem. 




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Two More Graffiti Taggers Busted in Bend Oregon

Three teenagers, two 18-year-olds and one aged 17, were arrested Thursday night in connection with spray-painted graffiti on several buildings and vehicles in northwest Bend, police announced Sunday.
Jedidiah Elliott (left) and Luke Mott (right) - DCJ photos
According to Bend Police Lt. Ken Stenkamp, officers responded to the 800 block of NW Columbia about 10:10 p.m., December 20, to a report of suspicious activity. Upon arrival, they found a vehicle with freshly painted graffiti, and an investigation led to the arrest of three boys for multiple counts of criminal mischief.
Jedidiah Elliott and Luke Mott, both 18, were taken into custody and lodged in the Deschutes County Jail. A 17-year-old was also apprehended, the lieutenant reported. All were charged with two counts of first-degree criminal mischief and eight counts of second-degree criminal mischief.
Chet’s Electric, Bend Metro Parks and Recreation, Pacific Power, Les Schwab and the U.S. Post Office have so far been identified as victims in this latest rash of vandalism, Stenkamp said. It is anticipated that more victims will be identified as the investigation continues, he added.
During the week of December 10, six teenagers were cited for criminal mischief in connection with a graffiti vandalism to businesses, vehicles and other property on the south side of Bend, the lieutenant said. Those cited, all males, included 18-year-old William P. Hill, four 17-year-olds, and a 16-year-old.
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Sunday, December 23, 2007
Graffiti Tagger Busted
Cier is behind bars tonight for his art work, that’s because for his canvas he choose other people’s property. He painted on planes, billboards and buildings. He was doing all this to win a tagging war.
Cier documented all his work on Myspace.
“He will now serve two years in a state penitentiary and a five year suspended sentence,” says Paco Balderrama with the Oklahoma City Police.
Oklahoma City estimates this tagging war cost the city close to $60,000.
The way the law is now makes it hard for prosecutors to get a felony conviction for tagging. It currently states the damage has to be $2,500 at one location. One legislator hopes to change that.
“Anybody convicted of defacing property with paint or any other defacing, $500 or greater will be punishable by a felony,” says Senator Todd Lamb, R-District 47.
Senator Todd Lamb also hopes to combine different locations into one incident.
“If you have a hundred dollars here, and a hundred dollars there, sprinkled throughout the community or throughout the state, we will be able to combine those damages and get to the $500 threshold,” says Senator Lamb.
These tagging wars will also be considered gang related.
“Although most of these individuals involved are middle class to upper class white males, we are considering them gangs,” says Balderrama.
Oklahoma City Police are in support of the legislation and say they won the tagging war against Cier. They are still investigating and have several suspects they hope to convict in the future.
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CHATHAM COUNTY, N.C. – Authorities says there is an increased amount of gang graffiti in several areas of Chatham County. They believe the spray painted symbols represent nationally known gangs from Los Angeles, Chicago and Texas.
The symbols can been seen on back of stores, under railroad over passes and even on some homes. Siler City police officer Bill Harmon and Chatham County Sheriff Deputy Raymond Barrios are experts on gang symbols. They have both noticed an increase in gang graffiti.
“Some are folk nation symbols. Some are crip symbols. Some are blood symbols and a lot of it is made up stuff”, said Harmon.
“The symbols or letters represent the name of the gang. Or they may be sending a message to another gang that this is their area or territory”, said Barrios.
Both Harmon and Barrios believe some of the gang symbols come from people who are not directly associated with nationally known gangs. But they also say they believe there are some hardcore gang members who have moved into Chatham County.
Harmon says some of those members have gone as far as to try and recruit new members through a myspace page on the internet.
“Gangs for some reason like to advertise on myspace. We take their photographs and catalog them. And try to make it know to us who are affiliated with gangs”, said Harmon.
Barrios says an abandoned home near a trailer park in northern Chatham County was the location of a brutal stabbing almost two years ago. He said known gang members who were doing drugs got out of hand one night and stabbed a woman. She was able to escape and later testified against them in court.
The men were all convicted and sent to prison. The house where the stabbing occurred is now a drawing board for graffiti artist. Barrios said gang signs are all over the exterior of the house as well as on the inside.
Every time authorities come out to the house, they say they notice new symbols have been painted over older symbols. Barrios says gang members often do that to upset rival gang embers.
To the untrained eye, the gang graffiti may appear to be spray-painted lines and numbers with no real message or meaning. But the Chatham County Sheriff’s Office says it knows better. In fact, the office has a message of its own.
“We can identify individuals who are in a gang and if they are convicted of any type of crime and go to sentencing, there is legislature that can allow prosecutors to impose harsher sentences on gang members”, said Barrios. A harsher sentence could mean a very long time behind bars.
On Thursday morning, a known gang member was arrested on drug distribution charges by Chatham County Sheriff Deputies. Deputy Barrios said the suspect was no stranger to law enforcement because he had already spent time in prison before this latest arrest.
Barrios also says a lot of drug trafficking in the Chatham County area is directly related to gang activity.
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Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Online Effort to Fight Graffiti Taggers
Goal of online effort is to catch taggers
By Mark Arner
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER
December 18, 2007
A south San Diego resident has taken his frustration with graffiti online in an effort to catch the vandals defacing his neighborhood.
JOHN GASTALDO / Union-Tribune
San Diego city utility worker Anvil Thomas used pressurized water on pretreated graffiti on Elm Street in south San Diego. A concerned resident is crusading against graffiti vandals through his Web site. Activist Rodel Reyes spent two days and $100 creating his anti-graffiti Web site, which shows images of gang or tagger names spray-painted on fences, freeway signs, Dumpsters and other surfaces around Nestor and Otay Mesa.
The Web site, launched Nov. 19, invites the public to look at the photos and share any information with the San Diego Police Department. Residents can send comments or photos to Reyes for possible publication.
Although the Web site spurns law enforcement advice by displaying dozens of examples of graffiti, it is a hit with viewers, police, the District Attorney's Office and City Councilman Ben Hueso.
“I just see him as a concerned citizen who wants to help solve the problem,” said San Diego police Officer Bryan Roberts, who serves on the city's Graffiti Task Force.
At 41, Reyes is not a professional Web designer. He said he just wanted to help stop chronic graffiti vandalism, which has unnerved him and hundreds of other residents in south San Diego.
Online: To see Rodel Reyes' Web site, go to web.mac.com/argento1/iWeb/Graffiti Law enforcement officials usually worry that publishing graffiti images could encourage similar vandalism or give glory to the perpetrators.
Publishing photos “gives taggers what they want: publicity,” Roberts said. “But the way it's presented on (Reyes') Web site, as a problem, is different. I don't see it as hurting us in any way.”
Roberts said he is frustrated that vandals he had arrested are often back on the streets days later, spray-painting more graffiti.
“I would hope that the court would hold the parents responsible,” he said. “But after I arrest them, it's out of my hands.”
Reyes said the city's current solution of quickly painting over or sandblasting graffiti doesn't work. He also contends that people convicted of such crimes should serve time in juvenile hall or jail, rather than just being ordered to pay fines and restitution.
Under state law, graffiti vandalism can be punished by up to a year in jail, and by fines of up to $50,000. District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis said judges rarely sentence those convicted for graffiti to jail.
Reyes believes graffiti has lowered property values in his Egger Highlands neighborhood near Nestor. Local housing experts said they know of no studies calculating graffiti's effect on property values.
During the past year, Reyes has served as a volunteer member of the Otay Valley Regional Park Citizen Advisory Committee, and was among several people who organized a Sept. 26 meeting on graffiti that attracted a crowd of more than 130 people.
Steven Schroeder, 64, helped organize September's meeting.
“We're tired of our neighborhood looking like a ghetto,” Schroeder said.
Since its inception, Reyes said, the Web site has earned warm reviews from the public. Deputy District Attorney Jeffrey Dort and Hueso also like it.
Dort called the Web site “an important first step” in fighting the problem because it will allow community members to take an “active role” in cleaning it up. He did warn that photographing graffiti vandals in action could be dangerous, even deadly.
Hueso represents District 8, which covers much of south and southeast San Diego. He said graffiti has long been a serious problem.
“It is costing us millions and millions of dollars,” Hueso said. “Rodel has taken it upon himself to create a Web site to help stop it.”
Hueso said he too has struggled with graffiti near his home in Barrio Logan, and often jogs or walks his neighborhood streets to jot down where he sees such vandalism.
“I'm very sympathetic, because I live with this problem every single day,” Hueso said.
Reyes acknowledged the compliments but said “we don't need any more praise.”
“This fight against graffiti vandalism will ultimately be won in the political arena by electing officials who want to put these taggers in jail or juvenile hall,” Reyes said.
Mark Arner: (619) 542-4556; mark.arner@uniontrib.com

Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 18/12/2007
Colin Gleadell on British art
Market news: graffiti art
Last Thursday's £9.4 million sale of 20th-century British art at Sotheby's brought the year to a jubilant end for department director James Rawlin. He said that 2007 had been a "fabulous" year; the sale brought his year's turnover to £24.1 million. In fact, it has been a fabulous year for both Sotheby's and Christie's. Together they have totalled more than £50 million in their specialised sales of 20th-century British art for the first time.
Good Friday, Daisy Nook: L S Lowry has proved one of the safest investments for collectors
To put this into perspective, it is important to understand that Rawlin and his adversaries at Christie's rarely get their hands on major examples by the top, internationally recognised names of British art. The best Henry Moores, Barbara Hepworths and Ben Nicholsons are usually sold in the swish Impressionist and modern art sales in London or New York.
Similarly, important works by Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud or David Hockney are placed in the more glamorous and high-profile post-war and contemporary art sales with the likes of Rothko and Warhol. The 20th-century British sales, or "Mod Brit" sales as they are known in the trade, may attract some international interest, but they are perceived as primarily local affairs.
Nonetheless, business has been booming for the Mod Brits with new artists emerging into the limelight with each sale. This year, artists who have sprung to life after years of market neglect include the mystic Scottish abstract expressionist Alan Davie, with a record £234,000, and the abstract painter John Hoyland, whose exuberantly coloured works of the 1960s have been selling for up to £50,000 each.
A common factor with these and other early-20th-century artists, such as Adrian Heath or John Cecil Stephenson, is the role that dealers have been playing - working with living artists or their estates - to promote their work through exhibitions that in turn trigger demand in the salerooms.
But the king of the Mod Brit sales, who needs no such trigger, is L S Lowry, whose inimitable paintings of the industrial north populated with "matchstick" men and women are among the most popular in Britain.
Since 1995, when Christie's sold a large number of works from the collection of Lowry's close friend and early supporter, the Rev Geoffrey Bennett, he has become the most heavily traded artist in the Mod Brit sales. He has also proved one of the safest investments for collectors. According to art-sales analysts Art Market Research, the top 25 per cent of his works sold have grown by 20 per cent a year since 1997. Average prices at auction have more than doubled in the past year alone.
In 1999, a painting of crowds going to a football match broke the £1 million barrier for the first time when it was bought by the Football Association for £1.9 million. Last year, two more paintings fetched more than £1 million, and this year there have been five. The highest price came at Christie's in June when his masterpiece, Good Friday, Daisy Nook, last sold at auction in 1970 for £16,000, was bought by London dealer Richard Green for £3.7 million.
The price, astonishingly, placed Lowry above Hepworth, Nicholson and Hockney in the auction tables. It also surpassed anything fetched by Frank Auerbach or Bridget Riley, whose best works are placed in the international contemporary art sales. As for Henry Moore, only one work, a massive bronze, has sold for more at auction.
Not surprisingly, therefore, Lowry has huge influence on the distribution of power among the Mod Brit auctioneers. While some do surface at smaller salerooms such as Bonhams or Lyon and Turnbull, Christie's has tended to handle the majority of highly-priced Lowrys, helping it to claim market leadership in the Mod Brit field.
But, last week, Sotheby's also had a superb selection of paintings and drawings by Lowry. The Fairground, which had been identified as a view of Blackpool Pleasure Beach in the 1930s, doubled its estimate to sell to a private UK collector for £1.4 million. A Football Match, which had been bought five years ago from Richard Green for £510,000, was sold to another UK collector for £1.1 million.
Altogether, the Lowrys contributed nearly £3 million to the total and brought Sotheby's Mod Brit sale on to a level with Christie's for the first time in many years. That's why they'll be toasting Mr Lowry in New Bond Street this Christmas.
Art Sales returns on Jan 8





