Street Art of Sasha Corban

Sasha Korban was born in Kirovske of Donetsk Region, Ukraine. In 2006-2011 he worked as a miner at the “Komsomolets Donbasu” mine. For the first time he tried to create street art as far back as in 2002. But he thinks that the start of his conscious work on the street as a graffiti artist was in 2009.

Peculiarity of his creative work is representation of “characters”, namely portraits and not tags or typography. He participated in different Ukrainian graffiti festival. In August 2014 he moved to Kyiv. In parallel with graffiti works he started to create easel works for galleries. Represented by Sky Art Foundation

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"Chained" Street Art by Edoardo Tresoldi and Gonzalo Borondo

"This is a brilliant street art piece made by wire sculptor Edoardo Tresoldi and muralist Gonzalo Borondo. Titled “Chained,” also the name of the art event organized by gallery Wunderkammern who invited nine important urban artists to create outdoor installations in the city of Milan. An exhibition focused on the food chain, and how humans are part of this biological community and “only one of many elements in a chain dependent on the entire system.”

Text via

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Art of Marco Battaglini

Marco Battaglini pastiches together bits of Renaissance art with graffiti and other elements of modern pop — not unlike the divine versus the vulgar — in his digital paintings. By mashing together opposing visual traditions, the Italian artist (living in Costa Rica) challenges the viewer to contemplate a variety of topics: cultural democratization, the evolution of knowledge and information, and what he calls our 'patchwork culture.'

via

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Collaborative mural for Strelka Institute Moscow

Russian illustration agency "Bang! Bang!" was commissioned by Moscow's "Strelka" Institute. Bang Bang agency approached 10 talented illustrators to visualise the Institute's Final projects. The mural was split in collage technique to eleven sections representing a future trends of social development. Appreciate the full project on Behance

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Bang-Bang Agency Producer: Valery Thewatt Illustrators: Varya Alay, Dmitry Ligay, Evgeny Dvoretsky, Tanya Vaskovskaya, Antonina Aleksandrova, Valery Thewatt, Valentin Tkach, Ilya Orlov, Igor Skaletsky, Ilya Kutoboy

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Collaborative mural for Strelka Institute Moscow

Russian illustration agency "Bang! Bang!" was commissioned by Moscow's "Strelka" Institute. Bang Bang agency approached 10 talented illustrators to visualise the Institute's Final projects. The mural was split in collage technique to eleven sections representing a future trends of social development. Appreciate the full project on Behance

strelka-panno-2015-0

Bang-Bang Agency Producer: Valery Thewatt Illustrators: Varya Alay, Dmitry Ligay, Evgeny Dvoretsky, Tanya Vaskovskaya, Antonina Aleksandrova, Valery Thewatt, Valentin Tkach, Ilya Orlov, Igor Skaletsky, Ilya Kutoboy

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Heavy Dreamers

During POW! WOW! HAWAII! 2015 street art festival, BOOOOOOOM portal and WeTransfer teamed up to create a film that profiles several artists from the street art festival, exploring their motivations and creative passions. The result is “HEAVY DREAMERS,” a gorgeous and truly inspiring short film that was directed by David Ehrenreich with cinematography by Liam Mitchell

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http://vimeo.com/130593856

Heavy Dreamers

During POW! WOW! HAWAII! 2015 street art festival, BOOOOOOOM portal and WeTransfer teamed up to create a film that profiles several artists from the street art festival, exploring their motivations and creative passions. The result is “HEAVY DREAMERS,” a gorgeous and truly inspiring short film that was directed by David Ehrenreich with cinematography by Liam Mitchell

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http://vimeo.com/130593856

Classical Paintings on Streets

Julien de Casabianca started Outings Project to fill the cultural gap between the museum and street. Using nothing but mobile phone people can take photos of abandoned and less-known pictures in museums and transfer them on street walls with the help of Outings team. It is legal until you break a law.

P.s. I bet Julien needs to visit Saint-Petersburg and check the street project done by Russian Museum with the same idea. It was vandalised several if not dozen times until people get used to it, and now you watch Russian Classic Paintings outside.

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Walking New York by JR

Earlier this month, workers with the French street artist JR (previously) covered a plaza in Manhattan's Flatiron district with a giant, wheat-pasted photograph of a guy walking. It was 20-year-old immigrant and Brooklynite Elmar Aliyev in mid-stride. The image was only up for a day, and almost no one noticed. But it would go on to create one of the most inventive New York Times magazine covers of recent memory.

The cover is a commentary on the invisibility of immigrants, a theme JR has previously explored. "For this project, we decided we’d photograph recent immigrants and paste their images on the city’s streets, where they and other immigrants are often invisible," the NYTimes writes. The French artist photographed several different immigrants before landing on Aliyev, who came to New York from Azerbaijan last August after winning the green card lottery.

via FastCo

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JBAK Street Art

JBAK is a creative partnership between artists James Bullough and Addison Karl. Each artist brings his unique vision and style to their combined body of work. Bullough’s main focus is photo-realism, with attention to ambient and deep space, layers, and geometric forms. He combines contemporary street art techniques and materials with those of realist oil painters, creating pieces of vivid color and masterful detail. Conversely, Addison’s work is produced using a hatch drawing style, which utilizes fine lines and details to create fantastic illustrations of both diminutive and immense images and proportions.

http://vimeo.com/52533308

http://vimeo.com/35320231

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Artist Samantha Everton Covers A Building In Her Work

Australian artist Samantha Everton, worked with the architecture practice Kavellaris Urban Design, to create the façade of this new building in Melbourne, Australia. The mixed-use building is called “2 Girls,” and features Everton’s “Masquerade” photo art from her “Vintage Dolls” series, re-created as the building’s façade.

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Mago Dovjenko in New York x Highsnobiety

Russia-born illustrator and street goth fashionista Mago Dovjenko (Web/Facebook) flew with the film production team BWGTBLD over to New York and have a bespoke piece of his work thrown up on a Williamsburg wall. Watch as the creative waxes lyrical on his venture, before his larger-than-life mural is thrown up with the assistance of a local crew of street artists.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JW-5HFSc0Qw

Surreal Illustration of Mehdi Ghadyanloo

"Merging the style of the early 20th Century surrealists with contemporary street art, Tehran-based artist Mehdi Ghadyanloo’s work is strange and beguiling. He’s currently in London, busying himself with the mammoth task of creating murals all around the capital, including one measuring a whopping 3.4km. As if that wasn’t enough, he’s also showing at the Howard Griffin Gallery in London, in an exhibition entitled Perception." via

Perception is at the Howard Griffin Gallery in Shoreditch, east London until 2 April.

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