San Francisco Graffiti

(walzr.com)

125 points | by walz 12 hours ago ago

118 comments

  • toephu2 2 hours ago

    For a small business owner, graffiti is an unconsented, recurring tax that provides zero ROI for the neighborhood. In SF if you own a business that gets tagged, you have X number of days to clean it up yourself otherwise YOU get fined.. the city does nothing to go after the criminals. They only go after law-abiding tax paying citizens cause that's where the money is.

    • nipponese 2 hours ago

      This site scrapes the city efforts to document who is doing "how much" damage/art.

      Once they catch an artist in the act, they will use these archives to recommend a punishment.

      But your point in valid - San Francisco likes graffiti.

      • guywithahat an hour ago

        Did he argue SF likes graffiti? I don't think he does, and the people living in the city certainly don't. These are criminals tagging buildings, and city officials who either don't care or are too busy with other things. I'm not aware of anyone who actually lives there who likes graffiti, and logically there's no reason anyone should. If someone wanted a mural they would have hired a real artist to do it.

  • jasonkester 11 hours ago

    I live near Paris, and it's a shame to see this sort of thing on every surface here. It's so easy and effortless to trash the look of a place, and so much effort and pain to get it back to a presentable state. It just seems hopeless trying to stop it.

    Sure, you can point to examples of graffiti that don't look all that bad, and I imagine some examples can even be considered to improve the look of a space. But taking this site as a random sample, the "good" ones are a vanishing minority. For every subtle Invader mosaic high on a building, you get dozens of effortless name tags that just wreck the look of a place.

    Adding frustration is the fact that there's no way to effectively dissuade people from doing this. You don't want to fine, jail or otherwise ruin the lives of thousands of kids to get them to stop. You just want them to stop spraypainting shit. It's really the only example I can think of where I'd support some form of corporal punishment. Catch kids in the act, 20 lashes in the town square to convince them not to do it again, then set them to work with a wire brush until they can demonstrate that it's back to the state they found it. Even still, I can't imagine it would really do much to dissuade.

    It's a shame.

    • dcposch 3 hours ago

      > You don't want to fine, jail or otherwise ruin the lives of thousands of kids to get them to stop. > You just want them to stop spraypainting shit.

      https://i.imgur.com/qaFgSm7.png

      You have it backwards. It's the act of NOT fining them, NOT calling their parents, of ignoring small destructive acts that ruins lives.

      Almost everyone doing a 10 year sentence for a serious crime started out by getting away with a lot of small ones.

      • guywithahat an hour ago

        I agree with everything you said but I don't understand the imgur reference

        • lelandfe 5 minutes ago

          That you "want to have your cake and eat it too," is what they're saying.

          Yon dog does too.

    • zahlman 2 hours ago

      I consider corporal punishment inherently barbaric. An appropriate fine or short stay in jail ought not be life-ruining.

      Also, I think there are other effective approaches in some circumstances. People (including "the kids"), locally (Toronto) and other places I've heard of, have been paid (not a super common thing, but it happens) to do actual artwork. There's a mural I consider quite well done, not too far from my place, that isn't getting defaced even though it's in a place where I would otherwise ordinarily expect strong temptation to "tagging" and other graffiti.

    • socalgal2 4 hours ago

      Tons of people unfortunately see this as ok. My response to them is always "let me tag your car, your house, your laptop" and if you complain you're a hypocrite

      I like "Street Art" where permission has been given. I don't like tagging and property destruction. Maybe when I get a little older I'll find some graffiti exhibit at a museum and go tag it.

    • komali2 11 hours ago

      No accounting for taste, but, graffiti is important whether it's aesthetically pleasing or not.

      https://ancientgraffiti.org/Graffiti/

      Graffiti is a population's expression of ownership of their city. It's a very common form of countercultural resistance and therefore an important relief valve. It's a way for anyone to express themselves on their environment. A city only has value because it's occupied by many people, and those people need to express their autonomy and quite literally "leave their mark."

      Not to mention, it's lovely to be connected to a common thread of humanity over literal millenia. Just as I scrawled onto a bathroom stall in 2005 "Cameron takes it up the bum," so too did Salvius write of his friend on a wall in the House of the Citharist in the year 79, "Amplicatus, I know that Icarus is buggering you. Salvius wrote this."

      • ZpJuUuNaQ5 9 hours ago

        >It's a very common form of countercultural resistance and therefore an important relief valve. It's a way for anyone to express themselves on their environment.

        So, what are these random scribblers resisting, exactly? It's like saying that defecating on the street is a form of self-expression and "leaving their mark". Even if it is, do we really need to tolerate it?

        >Not to mention, it's lovely to be connected to a common thread of humanity over literal millenia.

        There is nothing lovely about seeing all this garbage littering the walls of public buildings and historical finds do not justify this behaviour.

        • komali2 8 hours ago

          > So, what are these random scribblers resisting, exactly?

          The idea that the city is owned by the uppermost caste of that society.

          > There is nothing lovely about seeing all this garbage littering the walls of public buildings and historical finds do not justify this behaviour.

          Massive cathedrals to the rich would be erected and made holy, and individuals upon whose back society is build would demonstrate that though entrance is barred to them, they still can make the thing their own.

          Nowadays there's plenty of such things in a city that closes its doors to many people that live in said city. San Francisco is a great example of this, where rising costs are pushing anyone not working in tech. Graffiti is an easy way to spit in the face of the rich that are trying to take a city away from you. Clearly, it has an outsized impact on their sensibilities.

          • nmeofthestate 5 hours ago

            I suspect most graffiti doesn't actually have this twisted motivation. It's just selfishness by thoughtless people wanting to advertise themselves, like dogs marking their territory. This intellectual rationalisation is more of a projection by resentful people with a poisonous worldview.

            • dole 2 hours ago

              Commentary is graffiti. We're all selfish dogs marking our territory, advertising that we exist.

            • fwip 4 hours ago

              I think you may have agreed with them a long time ago, when you chose your username. Have you perhaps become wealthier, in the interim?

          • culopatin an hour ago

            You really think that the majority of taggers are thinking this deep? It’s mostly teenagers in high school that are mimicking others thinking “I’m so cool”. It fights nothing regardless. We can assign it value out of our asses all day and take some documentary as the truth, but if you think a kid writing a random scribble on the bart window or a bar bathroom, or a small business’s door deserves to take any of that back from the “caste” what are we talking about? The city is everyone’s, the tagger claiming a wall is as selective as what you claim the city is doing. Why do they think some random surface is more theirs than everyone else’s? I find tagging more selfish than what the city is doing.

          • ZpJuUuNaQ5 7 hours ago

            To me personally, it sounds really bizarre. I cannot understand this way of thinking, but I guess it's just a matter of cultural differences.

          • stickfigure 2 hours ago

            That explains why I see graffiti in all the rich neighborhoods and none in the poor neighborhoods </s>.

        • nemothekid 2 hours ago

          >Even if it is, do we really need to tolerate it?

          People not only tolerate, but I'd argue most people prefer it. I think, unlike Singapore or Tokyo, Americans, in cities, largely prefer a little lived in grime.

          The Mission Bay is a relatively new neighborhood in San Francisco - mostly free of graffiti and is pretty much sterile, and most people would prefer to live in the Mission rather than Mission Bay. OpenAI likely pays a huge premium to HQ in the mission rather than settling in the more corporate offices of Mission Bay or even the Financial District.

          I also noticed the same in Berlin - Kreuzberg, Neukolln, and other neighborhoods in East Berlin attract the most people, despite being drenched in graffiti.

          If ever move to a city in America and tell people you live in the generally clean, spick and span, neighborhood in that city, half the people will look at you like you have 3 heads or simply assume you have no personality. Graffiti has largely become an accepted, or even valued, feature of a neighborhood. I believe internally it separates the "cool" city inhabitants from the "losers" out in the suburbs.

          Edit: I just looked through all the images in the OP and one of them is a banksy. It's been there for over a decade. Graffiti isn't just tolerated, its practically protected.

        • direwolf20 8 hours ago

          Resisting the ideology that only people with money can alter the city environment.

          When you see an impressive sculpture or skyscraper you know a lot of resources were spent, you know the rich people here are rich. When you see an area with lots of graffiti, there may be many good or bad things about it, but you know the citizens are free.

          I would hope graffitiers have respect to only draw on the mundane parts of the city, not on cool sculptures. And in my experience, that is true. Also they should not obscure windows or information signs.

          • ZpJuUuNaQ5 8 hours ago

            I think the cultural barrier preventing me from understanding this way of thinking is impenetrable to me. What a strange world, huh?

            • direwolf20 6 hours ago

              Are you American? Freedom means the ability to do what you want. It doesn't mean owning guns.

              • nmeofthestate 5 hours ago

                I'm not American, but I doubt being pro-graffiti is a universal American value. I suspect many Americans aren't that into it, given it makes the place look bad. Many Americans might think instead that you should only deface things you own.

                • direwolf20 4 hours ago

                  I think it makes the place look like a place where people are free and not oppressed, which is nice.

                  • lostdog 2 hours ago

                    They are oppressed by their neighbors, who can scribble all over their home without consequences.

                    Have you had to clean off graffiti?

              • ZpJuUuNaQ5 5 hours ago

                >Are you American? Freedom means the ability to do what you want. It doesn't mean owning guns.

                No, I am not, and I haven't mentioned guns or even hinted at the topic. Do whatever you want, but trying to purposefully destroy and smear the environment around you and claim it's an expression of freedom is ridiculous. It's just malicious, disgusting behavior that helps no one, serves no cause and has nothing to do with freedom.

                • recursive an hour ago

                  I don't think most graffiti writers are trying to destroy their environment.

              • socalgal2 3 hours ago

                I'm surprised you don't understand it. Put your money where your mouth is. Let me come over and tag all your property.

      • ryandrake 2 hours ago

        > Graffiti is a population's expression of ownership of their city.

        I think this is the heart of it, and where cities and suburban towns differ.

        It's admittedly very hard to articulate in words. The walls of buildings in a city are part of the greater, broader, "face of the city." They are in a sense both part of a general "public space" yet also still privately owned. The walls of single family homes in suburban neighborhoods don't really compare. There's much more of a shared sense of "ours" in a city than there is out in the country, where everything's fenced off in little discrete boxes of land, each with someone's name on it. This greater sense of shared agency over the aesthetic of the broader "city" makes street art more justifiable there than it is in single family home places.

        • jakobnissen an hour ago

          Oh I disagree completely. Precisely because city spaces are more shared, vandalism, including graffiti, is Mitch more destructive in cities.

          It really undermines the sense of community when vandals deface public spaces and community centers and apartment blocks.

      • BryantD an hour ago

        If you're a cinema person, I strongly recommend Agnes Varda's documentary on LA street art at the end of the 1970s, Mur Murs. (That's a pun: murals as an expression of the murmurs of the community.) It takes graffiti as an expression of ownership as the central thesis and I found it really lovely. Thanks for this comment.

      • nurettin 4 hours ago

        They should work as plate cleaners and civil park workers 100 hours a month. That will teach those entitled teens to leave their mark while autonomously cleaning those plates and planting flowers.

      • akomtu 9 hours ago

        I suspect it's not the population's expression of ownership, but simply gangs marking their territory.

        • komali2 8 hours ago

          Sometimes tagging is that, sure, or just some person indicating that they exist there. For some taggers, it's an addiction. I knew one that would tag at people's houses when invited to parties. I was outside smoking a cigarette with him after the owner had threw him out on his ass, asking why he did shit like that, and he said "I just feel like if I can tag someone's house, it's like I've won."

          I can kinda empathize since I'll have an addiction to getting the perfect photograph during a protest or whatever and will go to extreme lengths and burn through SD cards to get it.

          In my experience the majority of graffiti is artists just putting up art. Privileged folk pass down the propaganda that graffiti is dirty and gangster and so any street art is viewed as dirty, but in the end it's just a matter of taste.

          • akomtu 4 hours ago

            Art? There are some exceptions, indeed, where graffiti can be called art, but most of it is tasteless disgusting mess. It's borderline demonic in some cases. This especially applies to the list of pictures in the post. My theory is why ugliness is often considered beautiful is because ugliness invokes stronger and darker emotions.

            • fwip 4 hours ago

                  > "Borderline demonic"
                  > look inside
                  > it's Calvin and hobbes
        • at-fates-hands 2 hours ago

          The most well known writers (this is their term, few if any graffiti writers I know refer to themselves as artists) are actually the ones who paint trains, not in metro areas. Yes, writers do paint all over metro areas, but that gets buffed out so quickly that the real holy grail is to get up on trains that go all over the country.

          Train graffiti allows your art to roam and writers from other cities see it and recognize it. Your creativity proceeds you when you go to other cities to write and expand where you're known.

          I live in a large metro and see very little if any gang graffiti. Also, most of the really good stuff? You never know its there because its under bridges, in aqua ducts and other areas few, if any people know about or venture to.

        • direwolf20 8 hours ago

          Why do you suspect that?

    • s_dev 11 hours ago

      I think there is a lot of nuance here. Just as councils and developers can construct ugly buildings artists can also add ugly work to walls.

      I agree there is a spectrum. On one hand you've Banksy or Basquiat adding to a flat grey wall and creating art that has a political voice or some artistic merit and the other you've some twat scribbling hate symbols on a historic monument. I don't have on ideas on how we can ensure one and not the other though.

      • dkarl 3 hours ago

        It sounds like you're saying the only thing ugly about tagging is when it contains objectionable political content. That's not really responding to the complaint here, which is that the vast majority of it is low effort, low quality tagging that makes things aesthetically uglier. It's easy to go out with a collector's eye, cherry-pick the good stuff, and put together a slideshow that makes it look like a public amenity, but that ignores the overall effect of wall after building after block of proof of Sturgeon's Law.

        Is it ignorable? Does all the terrible stuff just disappear into the background, or should we care about how it affects the experiences of people who have to live with it and walk past it every day? I think that's the question people are arguing.

    • mahrain 9 hours ago

      One of the most startling differences between Chinese and European cities is the lack of grafitti in China. I wonder if it's explained by laws, norms, enforcement?

      • threethirtytwo 4 hours ago

        Also culture. There’s just no culture of it.

      • brador 9 hours ago

        It’s explained by punishment.

        • jerlam 4 hours ago

          Also probably a lot of surveillance. Not just cameras, but by people in the community.

          • droopyEyelids 2 hours ago

            People underestimate the tattle-tale culture in China.

        • direwolf20 8 hours ago

          If you execute everyone who commits a misdemeanor, crime rates are extremely low.

    • tristor an hour ago

      I really enjoy graffiti murals, and I go out of my way to photograph them in my own city and when I travel. I will see them when I driving or walking around and stop to look for a moment and try to understand the perspective and message of the artist and take a picture if I can.

      That said, I don't much like tagging, tagging is generally not art in my opinion even if you can say artist styles are used within it. Tagging is all about ego and selfishness, it's there purely for the sake of saying "I was here", as if you are the most important person in the city that you should claim to put your name on that wall.

      I've met quite a few graffiti artists all over the world in my travels, and the people who tag and the people who paint murals are by and large /not/ the same people. The folks who paint murals are trying to say something, the folks who tag have nothing more to say than to try to create a monument of some kind to themselves. I don't respect taggers, I do respect muralists.

    • mmooss 3 hours ago

      To include the obvious in this discussion, it's your opinion that street art / graffiti makes things ugly; others feel differently. I think it brings places alive, brings human expression into the otherwise highly controlled environment. There's a spirit to it, and I love to see kids who have no voice take the step of speaking up. I love to see it, generally. To me it's a sign of freedom and very democratic.

      As for it's quality as art, I don't buy that's a purely subjective, arbitrary opinion (meaning, I think it's reasonable to use some judgment). But people still differ greatly: look at their responses to abstract expressionism, for example; some people think it's trash, others pay tens of millions.

      There is plenty of ugly in cities: There is a lot of ugly architecture; buildings are much more visually prominent and for aesthetics I would remove the ugly ones much sooner than removing the street art. There is ugly advertising and marketing; there are ugly industrial sites on beautiful waterfronts and in neighborhoods.

      Should those be subject to the same judgement as some kids expressing themselves? The people who make the buildings, ads, sites have far more power and resources, including enough to make those beautiful. They seem much more responsible for the results than the kids, who may have nothing else.

      • lostdog 2 hours ago

        Please post your address. I'd like to help make your home "feel alive."

    • rimbo789 11 hours ago

      I like graffiti - even random tags over blank walls because it’s a sign people are truly living and breathing in a space.

      As long as there have been walls there has been graffiti. Spaces without graffiti are artificial and antiseptic.

      • bigDinosaur 11 hours ago

        Graffiti on things like trees (e.g. in urban parks) is awful and trees are the opposite of artificial and antiseptic. The main problem with graffiti is that most of it is made without thought or consideration, and that never ends well.

        • direwolf20 8 hours ago

          Yes, I think they should avoid covering other works of art, nature, information signs, and windows. But blank space should be fair game.

          • nmeofthestate 5 hours ago

            Most graffiti is an ugly demoralising reminder of the existence of thoughtless people who have no consideration for others and are happy to degrade the shared public space for a few seconds of selfish enjoyment. For some reason it's got noticeably worse where I live, feels like over the last couple of years.

            • chickensong 2 hours ago

              I wish you'd stop being coy and just tell us how you really feel.

            • GuinansEyebrows 4 hours ago

              most modern buildings are an ugly demoralising reminder of the existence of thoughtless people who have no consideration for others and are happy to degrade the shared public space for a few seconds of selfish enjoyment (or in this case, millions of dollars at the public's expense).

      • InMice 8 hours ago

        I like that part of it too - but feel that if I owned a building and had people spraying paint all over its exterior whenever they felt like it...maybe not so much.

      • socalgal2 4 hours ago

        Tell me your address so I can come tag your car or your windows or your laptop

        Graffiti is property destruction, pure and simple. I'm happy to come destroy your property. Complain and you're a hypocrite

        • rimbo789 2 hours ago

          There are tags all over my building, it’s lovely. Please come add more

        • nemomarx 3 hours ago

          Why windows and not their homes walls? People rarely tag windows in my experience, or cars.

  • voidUpdate 8 hours ago

    The thing that really gets me about graffiti is that you don't own the canvas. It's just vandalism. If you're commissioned to do it one someone else's wall, I'd call that a mural instead, and I see quite a few aesthetically pleasing ones around. Why can't you paint on stuff you actually own, instead of making it someone else's problem? You might as well just shit on someone else's lawn and say it's fine because it's art

    • nipponese 2 hours ago

      If a graffiti artist believed shitting on a lawn was art, they would, but they don't.

      The problem and solution are similar to OSS:

      The problem: the artists have something to say, they want as many people as possible to see it and use it.

      The solution: make it free, and put it where as many people as possible can access it.

      Yes, I just compared graffiti to github.

    • Ylpertnodi 5 hours ago

      > You might as well just shit on someone else's lawn and say it's fine because it's art.

      Are you referring to 'tagging' (putting your, or your gang name on something)?

      I agree.

      Referring to well-crafted, or political (think banksy), images, i agree less. Unless i don't like the image/style then it's only lawn-worthy.

      • socalgal2 3 hours ago

        I don't agree with the political graffiti either. See imgur as where this leads. imgur used to be interesting images. Now it's 90% images of text as political statements. The site is effectively ruined.

  • gabrieledarrigo 8 minutes ago

    Old time graffiti writer here.

    There's nothing so wild, anarchic and energetic than painting illegally on some surface without any permission.

  • greeniskool 10 hours ago

    Having a bit of a cultural shock at how English doesn't have a separate name for the "cruder" graffiti (such as tags) vs the more socially accepted street art. The former is typically called "pichação" [1] in Portuguese, and I was taught this distinction when learning about modern art movements back in elementary school.

    [1] https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picha%C3%A7%C3%A3o - I recommend looking into a machine translated version of the Portuguese Wikipedia article, as the English Wikipedia article reads far more biased

    • pimlottc 3 hours ago

      There are terms within the scene - tag, throwie, piece, burner - but they are not generally known by the wider public.

      https://www.kmuw.org/beautiful-city/2014-08-04/what-were-tal...

      https://www.instagram.com/p/COrxyrCMkOx/

    • rconti 3 hours ago

      Graffiti is the catch-all, but "street art" vs "tagging" have pretty clearly distinct meaning.

    • garbawarb 9 hours ago

      Is "street art" not the name? Like how "comics" are low but "graphic novels" are respectable.

    • kingkawn 9 hours ago

      English does, and definitely invented it before the rest of the world caught on to this culture. Try watching “Wild Style” from 1983, documenting some of the earliest beefs between the types of graffiti artists. Portuguese speakers did not invent this distinction.

      Throw ups are the quick ones and Pieces are the long ones.

  • s_dev 11 hours ago

    Fascinating, I do love street art and tastefully done graffiti. Some of it is obnoxious. I think it does add to the character of a city e.g. New York, Berlin, Montreal, Paris all have some amazing work etc.

    I submit Irish Graffiti I see here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Graifiti/

    Though I think displaying these things as a map is more useful: https://streetartcities.com/cities/sanfrancisco

    There is a an Irish artist called Dan Leo and I have bought lots of his prints. https://www.danleodesign.com/ so they are dotted around my office and home.

    I think they're great! He does animals and I love the style, clean lines and bright colours, they remind me of US football team logos.

    • Gigachad 11 hours ago

      I'm probably the minority where I don't mind any graffiti, quality or not. As long as it isn't horribly offensive or impacting the functionality of something (over signs/glass/etc). Think I just prefer the look of a wall covered in even shitty tags and pasted posters over a completely blank slate.

      I particularly love seeing peoples stickers about.

  • boblawbomb an hour ago

    generally speaking- it is frowned upon by people in graffiti communities to tag peoples homes, cars, private property etc. This doesn't really cover "mom and pop" business'. Not justifying it per se, Although I am more on the favorable side of graffiti.

  • rib3ye 9 hours ago

    I’m the early 2000s I worked as an assistant producer on a San Francisco graffiti documentary featuring several of these artists

    https://youtu.be/7Ub8uRFzUCQ

  • InMice 11 hours ago

    Cool, but why lay out the images in such an annoying way? Whatever happened to simple, functional photo galleries? I miss them.

    • guerrilla 11 hours ago

      It works great on mobile. That's more than I can say for most things.

      • InMice 11 hours ago

        Turn your phone to landscape, does it sitll work for you? Or are you stuck viewing only the top half of the images and unable to scroll down.

        Side scrolling in portrait is not my opinion of working great. It does work to view them at least. Youre trapped in a vertical scroll, no way to get back to the beginning but scroll all the way back.

  • walthamstow 9 hours ago

    As an aside, the Financial Times (yes, that one) did a great interview a couple of years ago with prolific London graff artist 10FOOT.

    The comments were predictably howling with rage and injustice ("he's a criminal!!", says employee of cartel laundry HSBC), but I enjoyed it a lot.

    https://www.ft.com/content/45a184ee-b7d9-4c16-b1c2-71def32cc...

    • xnorswap 8 hours ago

      He is indeed incredibly prolific, anyone taking a train around london will recognise 10FOOT.

      But he is not an artist, he literally just tags 10Foot in what could be described as looking like it was done with a marker pen.

      something like this is very typical: https://ldngraffiti.co.uk/graffiti/writers/flash?pic=152931&...

      I enjoy good graffiti, but 10FOOT does not fall into that category.

      • walthamstow 4 hours ago

        Your link describes him as an author or writer, which is a kind of artist I guess. I'm not bothered about the nomenclature.

  • asveikau 3 hours ago

    I'm surprised to see so many anti-graffiti comments here. Some of these are crude or ugly (and I'm aware that this is subjective), but a few of these are really good and don't deserve a citation. Meanwhile this thread is SCANDALIZED that there is GRAFFITI (clutch your pearls!). It really goes to show the ongoing slide into total conformity that is the tech industry. I remember when tech had more of a nonconformist, countercultural bent, but it has been dying for quite a few years.

    • throwforfeds an hour ago

      I'm surprised and also not. We're a long ways away from 90s hacker culture, and even then there were plenty of upper class kids that were just in it for good pay working for the giant tech corps. We like to romanticize everyone dropping acid and being part of the counter culture, myself included, but reality is different.

      The saddest part to me is that the aesthetic of street art has been totally consumed by major corporations and spit back out on to the streets here in Brooklyn. I laugh to myself whenever I walk by a tourist taking a selfie in front of some mural that is really just some brand advertisement.

    • browsingonly 2 hours ago

      I don't know anyone in tech who enjoyed watching gangs mark their territory with tags in their neighborhood.

      • asveikau an hour ago

        Sometime in the last 30 years I realized the "gang territory marking" thing is mostly made up and basically not to take anyone seriously when they say this.

  • mergy 9 hours ago

    Lasercats that was briefly on the old theatre on Divisadero remains a favorite. This was like 15 years ago.

    https://mergy.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/xndqw-full.jpg

  • jameslk 2 hours ago

    I wish I could say this evoked a nostalgic feeling, but having lived in SF, the literal memory that came to mind immediately seeing these is the repulsive smell of urine and the sight of dirty, trash-laden sidewalks. While graffiti itself could be viewed as artistic expression on its own, I liked looking at some of it, in my mind it seems so often correlated with decay

  • deadfall23 4 hours ago

    I did a similar pet project about 12 years ago called Graffiti City. It was very simple map that displays pins where reported cases of destruction of property with paint, aka graffiti art, throughout the city of San Francisco. This uses public data available at data.sfgov.org.

  • comrade1234 8 hours ago

    We have places in Zurich where anyone can spray (I'm sure most cities have designated areas like this) but they still come out into the neighborhoods and do it. Its usually in areas with poor refugee/subsidized housing but the people doing the graffiti are local young swiss, making areas where they don't live shittier.

    • bigstrat2003 3 hours ago

      Well yeah, of course they do. Contrary to what what some in this thread are claiming, the modal graffiti isn't self expression or a yearning for freedom. It's tweaking people's noses by altering the property without permission. You can't do that on a designated spray area, so those people have to go into the neighborhoods to get their jollies by pissing people off.

  • senfiaj 11 hours ago
  • molsongolden 2 hours ago

    Scraping these from the city violations DB was a cool idea.

  • wumms 12 hours ago

    Would have looked further, but scroll wheel finger cramped. Keyboard nav would be great.

    • kg 11 hours ago

      Enabling the browser's scrollbar would also be good.

  • ghuroo1 11 hours ago

    I like the concept, wish it was a vertical scroll with some safe margins between each picture (also to give them more stage time and removing the noise/distraction from many pictures stitched together)

  • defrost 11 hours ago

    As a suggestion,

    * Orientation - some images are sideways,

    * Option to walk through by date order, and by location ...

    There is an audience for the time ordered flux of images on particular sites (at least in Australia).

  • mvellandi 10 hours ago

    This collection is a bit ordinary and unremarkable. There are many great large format, new/used print books on street art

    • tieze 9 hours ago

      That is arguably the point. They are taken from the SF city website and are placed in arbitrary order. I personally love this unfiltered take.

      There's more to get from these than just aesthetics, precisely because they're not curated.

  • JKCalhoun 10 hours ago

    Some of these are great.

    I expect the mundane "wildstyle" tagging on train cars but have been surprised a few times to see trains roll through town with much more complex graffiti. I'm happy to see examples of some of that more artful work in this post.

    If you've seen the film, "Brother From Another Planet" you might look at graffiti a little differently as I do. :-)

  • themark 9 hours ago

    I scrolled pretty far and didnt see Borf in there. Was that Web 2.0 ?

  • threethirtytwo 9 hours ago

    Beautiful and disgusting at the same time.

    It’s vandalizing public property in the same way that human shit vandalizes a lot of public property in SF. I don’t know which one is worse. One can be beautiful, the other is done because he has no choice.

    For graffiti I’m in support of lashing or whipping the people that do this. It’s effective in Singapore. But then we lose all this great public art.

    • direwolf20 8 hours ago

      If they're not covering windows, signs or art, what is being vandalized? A blank slab of concrete performs its function equally well no matter the color.

      • toephu2 2 hours ago

        A 'blank slab of concrete' isn't just a structural element; it’s a signal of stewardship. When you ignore tagging on that slab, you create a permission structure for more intrusive vandalism. It’s the 'Broken Windows' theory in practice: tagging leads to broken glass, which leads to copper theft, because the physical environment signals that the space is unmonitored and ownership is absent.

        High-trust societies rely on the shared maintenance of the commons. If the community can't even agree to keep a wall clean, it’s a leading indicator that the city has lost the ability to enforce the social contract on larger issues.

        Sadly this is partly why SF will never be a high-trust society.

      • toephu2 2 hours ago

        Most graffiti is just tagging, scribbling their name on something. I do not consider this art. It makes the environment you live in lease appealing (looks more ghetto).

      • threethirtytwo 5 hours ago

        Bro a lot of these aren’t beautiful quotes. Gang signs, immature shit from kids who do most of this stuff. Some is beautiful art most someone just signed their name.

        • Ylpertnodi 5 hours ago

          At what age would you suggest whipping or lashing kids?

          Would you personally be prepared to do it? Or, the owners of the property

          Should it be public lashings, or pay-per-view, or witnessed only by a select group of people, you place your trust in?

          If it's a caught female, can men whip her?

          How would you phrase the job application?

          I see a few flaws in your idea. Does Singapore still not allow males with long hair?

          • threethirtytwo 4 hours ago

            In Asia it’s done as young as 5. Maybe that’s why they’re ahead.

            > If it's a caught female, can men whip her?

            Yes. Men and women are equal. Your question implies you are sexism. Do you believe women are superior to men?

            > How would you phrase the job application?

            Whatever term they use in Singapore.

            > I see a few flaws in your idea. Does Singapore still not allow males with long hair?

            There’s tradeoffs for either idea. San Francisco is covered with human shit while Singapore isn’t and you can get whipped for shitting in the streets.

            Remarkably in both systems not very many people get whipped. Nearly zero. Because the possible consequence is what enforces the rule, not the actual consequence itself. As long as people know they will be whipped, they then act in ways that will prevent the whipping from happening. In the beginning a few people will be whipped but that number will drop dramatically very shortly.

        • direwolf20 4 hours ago

          You didn't answer the question.

  • metalman 11 hours ago

    If graffiti changed anything it would be illegal.

    It's ok

    • direwolf20 8 hours ago

      It is illegal. It gives the population the idea they have the right to alter their environment, and that's dangerous.

      • readthenotes1 6 hours ago

        Alter other people's property.

        Agreed, that is a dangerous concept

        • direwolf20 4 hours ago

          *in ways that don't harm that person

          • browsingonly 2 hours ago

            Not all harm is physical.

          • bigstrat2003 3 hours ago

            Nonsense. The owner almost certainly doesn't want someone's "art" to adorn his wall, and will then have to pay to restore the wall to its desired condition. That is material harm done to the building owner.