Clean Up Davis Square
Jan. 31st, 2006 03:51 pm![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
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Davis Square is a great place to live.
Lately though it seems to have gotten a little shabby with an increase in littering and graffiti.
I'd love to meet up with a few people on a weekend morning (or covertly late at night!) and repaint graffiti on trashcans and doorways, pick up litter, plant flower seeds...whatever it takes to bring a nicer, cleaner environment to where we live.
The city doesn't seem to have the will so let's take the initiative.
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:08 pm (UTC)If you want life without graffiti, go live in the suburbs. In the mean time, for every tag you paint over, they'll spray two more. It happens the same everywhere.
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:16 pm (UTC)seriously tho, I love street art but gang cyphers are not something I want to look at. They are vandalism especially on private property like the one tha owners of Orleans had to paint over a few months ago...
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:22 pm (UTC)I agree, private property shouldn't be vandalised, but repainting it yourself is also a form of vandalism. What if the property owner *likes* the art?
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:44 pm (UTC)That sounds a lot like a standard protection racket.
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:53 pm (UTC)'Course, it also assumes that the "artist" would actually come forward and not think that the offer to paint a logo was just a sting operation set up by the narcs.
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Date: 2006-01-31 09:57 pm (UTC)But I was just thinking that if he liked their work, then he could ask them to do it in a way that his buisiness would like as well. The money is just because they're doing a job and should be reimbursed.
*shrug* I'm not a city person. I just love Davis.
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Date: 2006-01-31 11:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 01:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 02:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 01:17 pm (UTC)If the "artists" want to get permission from the city to do a mural (like a number of ones scattered around town), more power to them. Gang signs and tags? That's not art. It's marking turf.
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Date: 2006-01-31 10:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-31 11:12 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-01-31 11:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 04:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 11:05 pm (UTC)No, it's teenage hoodlums trying to "claim" space as their own, with no more intellect than dogs who piss on things.
Hmmm, that's a little harsh, don't you think?
Date: 2006-02-02 12:35 am (UTC)You may believe what you wish about my goals, but I can clearly say that I wasn't trying to piss on anything. I was trying to express myself creatively, and I was hoping to entertain and educate people who happened to be passing by an otherwise dull and lifeless concrete landscape. In the same vain, I also enjoy when others do the same kind of public art. Good graffiti included.
Re: Hmmm, that's a little harsh, don't you think?
Date: 2006-02-02 12:58 am (UTC)So you and George W. Bush get to decide which laws apply to you, and which ones you can cheerfully ignore, eh?
Whenever somebody "makes public art" on the sign by the community garden on the bike path, I get somebody down there with the paint remover to get it off immediately. The garden is a community project, and the gardeners don't appreciate anybody "expressing themselves creatively" on the sign that the city gave us.
In the same vain,
I'm sure you mean to write "vein". But "vain" (http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=vain) also seems appropriate.
no subject
Date: 2006-01-31 11:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-01 11:23 pm (UTC)Graffiti, on the other hand, is the exact opposite of community-oriented. Graffiti is a single person, or a gang, attempting to make the claim, "This space is mine! All MINE!"
There's graffiti and then there's graffiti...
Date: 2006-02-02 12:23 am (UTC)Now that's what I'm talking about!
There's a cool organization in Portland, Oregon called City Repair (http://www.cityrepair.org/ir.html) that encourages communities to improve their streets with fun, and personalized stuff like pavement painting, sculpture, street gardens, community kiosks, and tea stands. I've been to a couple of these intersections and they are amazing. They are like mini-Art Beats all the time. Crime nearly disappears. Neighbors are more neighborly. And traffic slows down to a safe and livible pace. I'd love to see something like that in Somerville. I think we even have the right sorts of mixed, fun communities for it. I just wish I, myself, had the organizing a social skills to pull it off!
"Graffiti, on the other hand, is the exact opposite of community-oriented. Graffiti is a single person, or a gang, attempting to make the claim, "This space is mine! All MINE!""
Yeah, there is definitely some graffity that's done in an attempt to claim at least some small bit of the world as one's own (probably by the "less successful" young adults and teens who don't see a lot of options in their lives). But then there's political graffiti, which is more about communicating an important issue to the masses than is is about the person who creates it. And, of course, there's also the art. Graffiti can be wonderful folk art - art that isn't commissioned by the wealthy, or juried by a group of "art experts".
I love the "Santa is Real" graffiti all over the Boston area (with at least one in Davis). And the cute little clouds and critters that appear on signs are wonderful. I'm thankful for those little treasures because they make a place a little more interesting and personal.
Re: There's graffiti and then there's graffiti...
Date: 2006-02-02 12:43 am (UTC)But then, how do you distinguish that sort of "public art" (which I personally appreciate) from teen hoodlums tagging park benches and throwing their sneakers over telephone wires, or the Newbury Street club-promoters who wander down the street with a backpack of posters, dropping a few on the street every ten feet?
That's hard to do. Somebody's gotta make a judgement about the skill level and the motivation of the artist. And then we get back to arts councils and the like...
And speaking of motivation, apparently a lot of the tagging in dangerous low-income areas is done to broadcast one's own continued existance. Davis Square is hardly a dangerous area, though, and we've got some little wannabees tagging.