When
you cycle in an urban area, you see more graffiti than the average
person. More important, you see it at closer range than someone riding a
bus or cab, or driving by.
Even while seeing so closely, you don't remember a lot of it. After all, so much of it, frankly, looks alike. But every once in a while you see "tags" that stand out for their use of color, artistry or simply their overall size. And, sometimes, you see a graffito that's a true work of art. I am fortunate in having lived, for years, not very far from Five Pointz--whose days are. lamentably, numbered.
But this piece--on the side of a Barrow Street building, just west of Hudson Street in Greenwich Village, is like no other I've seen:
Even while seeing so closely, you don't remember a lot of it. After all, so much of it, frankly, looks alike. But every once in a while you see "tags" that stand out for their use of color, artistry or simply their overall size. And, sometimes, you see a graffito that's a true work of art. I am fortunate in having lived, for years, not very far from Five Pointz--whose days are. lamentably, numbered.
But this piece--on the side of a Barrow Street building, just west of Hudson Street in Greenwich Village, is like no other I've seen:
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