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The first thing that struck us as we walked around Mitte yesterday in Berlin was the amount of graffiti. From what we could tell, the buildings with graffiti tend to be the ones with squatters, like the one on the jump. Of course, the squatter buildings are among the oldest and most beautiful, albeit in a rundown way, that we saw.
Brownstoner in Berlin: Part 1 [Brownstoner]

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What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Regarding the “bad old days”, NYC in the 70’s when I was in my 20’s had its own unique craziness, including grafitti, but believe me it was a different, very screwed up place. It was when people believed that NYC was ungovernable: when we almost went bust in 1975, when crime was truly out of control, when I was burglarized several times on the upper east side, when being accosted on the subway was the usual. (I remember getting a black eye on my way to my job when I mouthed off to someone sharing his genitalia). My cousin was a cop on the lower east side then and going to cop funerals was part of his life. When the lights went out in the blackout of July 1977, I could hear the rioting and looting up the street and I used to slouch in the back of cabs when kissing my boyfriend goodnight (thank you, Son of Sam) and yes, grafitti was all over the place. I know I sound like a middle aged crank – sure I had plenty of fun in the 70s despite how screwed up NYC was then. It was before everyone got a business suit and forgot about how wild they were in the ’70s. Try getting a mortgage then – I bought in the early 80’s with an ARM – 16%.

    But I may be too working class to find grafitti cute or cool. It seems like you might find it cool if you were going on a day trip to the slums to prove your hipness. It doesn’t seem that anyone would think grafitti was cool if it was on their brownstone, or their van.

  2. Rennaissance meaning “rebirth” can be used as a positive or negative. Grafitti WAS a sign of decay, and the poor youth reaching out to make a statement of their surroundings, the 80’s wasnt mush less violent, actually grafitti crews were much more violent in the 80’s (one of the reasons i got out of it when I did).. Its the kids you brownstoners are raising now that are draining your savings in art school just to emmulate poor teenagers from 30 years ago. Art students and grads, “artists” working their asses off to buy wheatpaste, spray paint, and markers. a huge waste.Like the rich kids in the heights and elsewhere trying to dress “ghetto”. Yeah I wrote grafitti when I was young, it was a rite of passage to me, I fully agree the new stuff is fake, and that the parents should be held responsible for their kids actions (the crappy grafitti in the heights and dumbo is done by the young residents of the heights and dumbo).and where my current art is influenced by what I went through, I agree the new stuff is fake, and done hugely by upper middle class kids who cant identitfy with their parents geeekishness and closemindedness, they wish they had the freedom we felt back then (the streets were much safer in the 70’s with the absence of crack). As far as appreciating the Beginnings of graffitti, people riding the “dirty subways” cowering in all corners of the city, I cant imagine the 70’s were fun for you, I had a blast.