Showing posts with label Belfast. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Belfast. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

April 2010: KVLR1 in Belfast

Belfast is full of political murals, but dig a little deeper and you'll find KVLR1's pieces all around. Along with a crew of old friends, he decorates Northern Ireland's capital with stencils and freestyle spray. Today, he checks in to talk about Base, stickering, and projects for the future. He writes:
"I'm based in Belfast in Ireland. I've been doing a lot of stuff here lately. We've managed to get a lot of legal walls and have been taking our time over doing pieces collaboratively with a few other artists from here. I have done a little bit of stuff in Dublin and Cork in Ireland and a bit in Manchester, New York and Thailand."
"Where I grew up there was a lot of derelict space and we painted a lot in run down buildings and stuff. I kind of didn't paint on the streets for a long time while I was at college. I studied graphic design and began to get my head around computers and technology. I then worked as a tee shirt designer and started to make a lot of stencils and exhibit stuff. Then I progressed back to doing walls with stencils at first and then more freehand stuff with brushes and spray paint." 

"I enjoy collaborating with others but still do a lot of work solo. We have a bit of a collective between us called Spoom. It's myself, Frizelle, Dogboy, Bad Seed, Redmonk and Horse Goat. We've been painting together for years and get along really well. I do a lot of work with organizations like Spearfish and Trans. We co-organize street art festivals like Base which had over 20 street artist from Ireland, UK and Europe. This gives people the opportunity to paint with others they normally wouldn't meet. "
"Other than my home town, I really enjoyed painting in Thailand. It was a good way to meet the locals. I've done some stuff in bars and things. When I painted a wall or something, they would hook me and my friends up with free food, drink and banter. There's also a cool street festival in Manchester called Eurocultured (pretty much the same thing as Base over here) which was great fun, sunshine, painting, cold beer and live music... a fine combination."

"I don't have any exciting stories really. I was out with a few stickers one day on my bike and a plastic bag got caught in my wheels. I was trying to pull it out whilst coming down a hill and went straight into a lamp post. I didn't hurt myself or anything. When I recomposed myself, I looked to the traffic waiting at a red light and there was a bus load of people pissing themselves laughing at me.. I had to laugh myself."
"We've been doing some posters for a dude in Paris called Urban Hearts. He gets street artists from all over the world to send him paste-up pieces. When he collects enough, he hits them up in various cities across the world. It's cool to have one of your pieces on a street in São Paulo, for example, even if you've never been there. We're also working on our website for the summer: SpoomCollective.com We're going to do a big show / party in Belfast for the launch, which should be a laugh. I'm getting a couple of walls to paint in town with a few heads and should really start gearing up for Base in the summer."

Thanks, KVLR1! For more photos of his work and the rest of Spoom Collective, visit his Flickr.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

March 2007-Belfast




NOTE: Sorry this post has become so mangled over the past two days. Being a fresh little blogger muffin straight from the oven, I'm still getting used to the format and posting procedures. 

After a ridiculous work week, it's Friday and I'm itching for a tasty post. I'll keep the text short and let the photos have their say.

In the spring of 2007, a day trip to Belfast sparked interesting discoveries. The city was completely different from the tank-infested combat zone of the 1990s. In the city center, posh shops lined the bustling streets while locals and tourists alike packed trendy restaurants. 






Straying from the CBD, however, the mood changed. The murals of Shankill Road and Falls Road shed light on the lingering tension between Catholic Unionists and Protestant Loyalists. On Falls Road, "Free Palestine" and "Santa is a British agent" stretched across whole buildings. These Unionist messages sharply contrasted the "Years of Resistance" and "Never Surrender" murals on Loyalist Shankill Road. Negotiations and treaties may have quelled the violence, but the historical roots of the problem are on display in this snug square mile.

What surprised me most about the trip was how disconnected I felt. Despite my Irish decent, I viewed the murals from a historian's perspective. Growing up miles from the source, I could not connect to the strong emotions fueling the fire. This conflict was never mine. I appreciate the Einstein stencil because he captured the absurdity that I felt. His playful face didn't fit in the middle of West Belfast and neither did I. Someday, I'd love to return and wrap my head around this complex city.