Graffiti that has been there long enough to fade and streak by Nemesis. Another example unofficially tolerated graffiti. Personally I think it is clever. Nemesis executed it better than I photographed it I have to admit. I’m thinking that the dog and human figures are stencils. But what do I know.
Check out Jen one of Oklahoma’s blogging stars. She got me started on this graffiti thing. She blogs about a bunch of stuff.
Also check out FatCap, a great web site with all sorts of information about graffiti around the world. Find out who the graffiti all stars are in your town. Their database doesn’t list Nemesis. He doesn’t google either. Anybody who this person is?
These remind me of the prehistoric petroglyphs I just blogged about.
Defintily better than most of the graffiti I have seen lately!
I’d call that true street art instead of graffiti.
This is clever. Is it on the river trail? There was quite a lot of graffiti/street art along the trail between 31st and 51st that got painted over last year when the trail got a face lift.
This is terrific. “She blogs about a lot of stuff.” haha! Well if that ain’t true! I love the FatCap site. I was amazed at how many graffiti-themed sites were on Web.
Now this graffiti I can deal with and I agree with Clairz, I, too, was reminded of the petroglyphs I’ve seen at several places in Arizona. Interesting post for the day — as always! Hope your week is off to a good start.
That’s a really neat piece of graffiti.
«Louis» would never be accused of being a fan of graffiti, but he finds this to be quite clever.
That’s clever. I think it’s amazing what these artists accomplish with a stencil. I wonder if that stencil was made to order for that space.
love that .. and I am thinking you’re right they are stenciled .. in my opinion for what that’s worth, stencils are art, tagging is graffiti
That is a long leash. Cool graffiti where you have to follow it along to get the whole picture.
This is brilliant!
Very clever
Very interesting.
Grin!