Welcome to the new/updated site, with revisions happening daily! Since 2002, your old-school website for all things stencils. Please consider donating what you can to support the much-needed upgrade. Photo, video, links, and exhibit info submissions always welcome. Enjoy and stay curious.

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21 July :: A Cut Above Exhibit

Espionage Gallery Presents
A CUT ABOVE - INTERNATIONAL STENCIL ART EXHIBITION

Featuring
JOSHUA SMITH (Adelaide), E.L.K. (Melbourne), PISA 73 (Berlin), 23RD KEY (Melbourne), DAVID SOUKUP (Chicago), SCOTCH WILLINGTON (USA), ARTESTENCIVA (Brazil), PHIL BUNGLE (UK), IAN WALKER (UK), FLETCH (Adelaide).

A Cut Above is an exhibition showcasing some of the best stencil art talent in the world. This is an exhibition not to be missed!

OPENING NIGHT
Thursday the 21st of July 6:00pm-10:00pm

Sponsored by Bird in Hand Winery

Contact Page Works Now

Who wants to contact Stencil Archive with advice, questions, or words or support? Well, if you have tried to contact me via the new Contact page you probalby got two confusing responses: "Message is sent" AND the error "Message Not Sent". Someone on the Saturday Banksy tour gave me heads up about this, so the fix is complete.

All is good and the Contact page is functional.

Drop me an email. Links, news, comments, etc. all welcome.
To submit images for the Stencil Archives, go to: http://www.stencilarchive.org/submit-your-photos

There is FAQ there that will help you set things up for me to easily post on the site.

Thanks - Russell

1 July :: Parsprototo Fanzine Release

PARSPROTOTO - FANZINE
Friday, July 1 · 6:00pm - 11:00pm
FH Bielefeld Fachbereich Gestaltung
Lamingstrasse 3
Bielefeld, Germany
........................
AUSGABE 1 feat.

PEACHBEACH
HENDRIK BEIKIRCH / ECB
MWM
13.13
STEFAN WINTERLE
DXTR
44 FLAVOURS
theYOUNG
INCK
ROBERT MATZKE
LOW BROS

Getting a 404 Error Page from This Site?

Just a quick post to let you know that I am keeping track of the 404 Errors that come up when you try to surf the site.

Links from the older version of the site no long will work.

Links from the initial release of the site (where you may see "gallery3" in the url, instad of "archives") do not work.

I am looking at the 404 hits frequently and creating redirects for the pages that get the most hits. These redirects will take you to the right page!

Before the link "gallery3" became "archives" I posted three stories with links to all the latest uploads to the Stencil Archives. Well, I just corrected all the links in those three posts, so they should take you to the right archive.

Sorry for any confusion and thanks again for visiting!

25 June :: Shadows and Reflections (Paris)

Shadows and reflections - Group Show

From 25 June, 2011 to 30 July, 2011
Opening 25 June, 2011 from 6pm to 9pm

Magda Danysz Gallery - 78, rue Amelot - Paris 11

The gallery Magda Danysz is pleased to welcome you on Saturday June 25th from 6.00 pm to 9.00 pm to the opening of the newest group show Shadows and reflections.

On this occasion, the gallery invites worldwide famous pioneers like Blek le Rat, Miss.Tic and Jef Aerosol as well as the young generation represented by Vhils and Kris Trappeniers or C215.

Shadows and reflections proposes a totally new point of view on stencil art by presenting the various techniques and inspirations of these artists through works on canvas, installations and even video!

Exhibition until July 30th 2011

http://www.magda-gallery.com/en/shadows-and-reflections-group-show

23 June :: Urban Artists in Action Exhibit (Berlin)

URBAN ARTISTS IN ACTION – ANOTHER VIEW ON STREET ART & GRAFFITI
Brenna - Urban Artcore

Dates 23.06.2011 - 02.07.2011
West Berlin Gallery :: http://www.westberlingallery.com/
Vernissage 23.06.2011, 6pm - 10pm

“For years now, I document street art in Berlin and other European metropolises like Paris, London, Barcelona and Madrid. What I learned is, when you are deep in that multicultural and highly creative public art scene, you want to get in touch with its protagonists, with the people behind those sometimes funny or political street artworks. You want to know faces, want to see how they work, want to feel the adrenalin...” ( Brenna 2010 )

West Berlin Gallery is pleased to present Urban Artists in Action - Another View on Street Art & Graffiti, the photography of Jan Brennenstuhl, the brain behind the blogs www.urbanartcore.eu and www.urbanart-photography.eu. For the first time, the gallery will show not the result but the fascinating process of urban art, the secret of which so many artists are at pains to conceal.

Join us at West Berlin Gallery with the artist for the opening on thursday June 23rd, 18:00.

Wed. I talk about tourism; Sat. I talk during a tour...

Join me Wednesday on 24th St. when I speak for only 10 minutes at A Vayable Idea

Join me Satuday with TransportedSF for the Banksy Tour.  I will guide you through the six remaining Banksy pieces via a biodeisel bus (drinking and fun allowed).

Some thoughts about Street Art Tourism in SF

Sometime around 2002, when an article about "The Mission School" of public art appeared in the SF Bay Guardian, the alleys where I wandered to photograph stencil art. Of course, this was around the time Banksy was becoming a sensation, Melbourne, Australia's walls were exploding with public art, and Tristan Manco released his book "Stencil Graffiti." As books began to get published, websites like MySpace and Flickr began to allow massive photo and info sharing, and digital cameras became cheap and easy to use, people started noticing that I was taking photographs of the sidewalk (and other strange locations). People started asking me questions about the art. Then I eventually saw people taking their own photographs. Prior to about 2005, very few people documented what was now being called street art. But this began to change. Like me, people were traveling around the world to see the art, the exhibits, and the freshest city walls. One of the pillars of street art entailed that artists had to travel and put their art up all over the world. It was only a matter of time before this all went mainstream.

When Banksy wandered through the USA about two years ago, there was a frenzy of Tweets and posts sharing the locations and art he left behind. I jumped into the frenzy and saw many other people wandering San Francisco to snap up photos of the fresh work. A few who scooped Banksy's visit ended up on TV, and the blogosphere many cities ate up his art (and the eventual removal of much of it). In my mind, the sensation had arrived. Irionically, Banksy was promoting his documentary that looked at the hollow sensation of art's next greatest thing.

I wasn't surprised when I was asked to speak as an expert for a Banksy tour in May. With only six pieces remaining (well, one is totally destroyed but still possibly relevant), and a law in the books where drinking alcohol on a bus is legal, there was a good combination for a fun Saturday afternoon. The tour sold out, and we all had a great time. I know that Precita Eyes gives mural tours, and Chris Carlsson gives FoundSF tours, both of whome fill in gaps where the mainstream double-decker buses never tread. Antenna Theater developed the Magic Bus as a multimedia bus show, but demand was so high, they turned it into an ongoing "tour". There are other tours that I probably do not know about, and some, like the Barbary Coast, Dashiell Hammett, and Beat Generation tours are a bit more mainstream. Jeremy Novy has an exhibit titled "A History of Queer Street Art" which is closing just in time for Pride Weekend. I am sure that people here for Pride are going to this exhibit and then looking for the illegal art afterwards.

Prior to the Banksy tour, I had wondered how many people came to San Francisco to seek out the painted alleys and walls. As street art became a topic of LA tabloids ("Is Banksy going to appear at the Oscars???" "The Art in the Streets show is causing more graffiti!" ) and Shepard Fairey became a household name, I saw the back streets of San Francisco turn into photo opportunities. Back when I visited Melbourne, Australia in 2008, their official tour brochure boasted that tens of thousands of tourists came to the city to see the painted laneways. As I visited the Citylights gallery just off Hosier Lane, I saw Japanese tourists snapping photos, a newlywed couple posing in front of the walls, and even a school group of young children looking at the art. This was only in maybe an hour of visiting the area!

As San Francisco spends $22 million a year to erase graffiti and street art, these changes beg the question "just how much money is the City making from all the graffiti and street art?" The best way to find out would probably be a funded study of underground and subculture tourist trends. If two people stood at both ends of Clarion Alley on a Saturday, and asked a small list of questions, I assume that the results would be surprising for the bureaucrats that only see vandalism. Then there are the stores that cater to the culture of street art. Upper Playground reigns supreme in the Haight. 1AM holds it down in SoMa. White Walls makes the illegal walls quasi-legal with their top shelf legal walls.

This is what I hope to talk about Wednesday night A Vayable Idea. This is a start up dot com that allows people to purchase tours from everyday people who love their cities. I've already done a few tours through Vayable and they've been great. My tourists have been curious about all the art that they see around them. I try my best to answer all their questions and show them the best spots. There are skateboard tours on Vayable, available in SF. There's another underground tourist source that is understudyed. Our hills are famous for skating down. So I'm putting the word out: Who is catering to alt-tourism and why isn't San Francisco paying attention? I'm crious to see what happens. Hope you come by and visit so that I can hear what you think about it all.