Architecture_MPS
Article
Projection art and projection activism
Andy Buchanan
Assistant Professor, Computer Graphics Technology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, WI, USA;
[email protected]
Guest Editor: Andy Buchanan, Purdue University, USA
How to Cite: Buchanan, A. ‘Projection art and projection activism’. Architecture_MPS 20, 1 (2021):
1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2021v20i1.001.
Submission date: 24 July 2020; Acceptance date: 10 September 2020; Publication date:
1 September 2021
Peer review:
This article has been peer-reviewed through the journal’s standard double-blind peer review,
where both the reviewers and authors are anonymised during review.
Copyright:
c 2021, Andy Buchanan. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
⃝
Commons Attribution Licence (CC BY) 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which
permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original
author and source are credited • DOI: https://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.amps.2021v20i1.001.
Open access:
Architecture_MPS is a peer-reviewed open-access journal.
Abstract
This article explores the use of unauthorised projection-based artworks and messages as
a form of activism, and as contextual street art. The issues of authority and permission
that are central to the political nature of street art are unique in the case of projection
artworks as the ephemeral and temporary nature of light-based installations skirt some of
the fundamental objections to most street art and graffiti such as the damage to physical
surfaces. Through the changes imposed on urban forms by light projections, the city
is described as an animate entity, with various forces animating the surface at different
timescales. The effect of street art is to democratise the alterations of the animate urban
surface, and the effect of projection-based street art is to further democratise access to
protected visual spaces, and to accelerate its animate nature.
Keywords projection art; street art; activism; animation
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Street art, contextual art and the animate city
All acts of public visual art are inherently political. In many cases, the political aspect of artworks is
obvious, evident in the visual content of the images. In other cases, it is the material or contextual
situation of the images and their making, which has special political implications. In the case of street art,1
the mere existence of the work is often political in that it is created in contravention of basic assumptions
about authority and control over physical and visual public space. Indeed, this authority breach can
be used to distinguish otherwise visually, and even politically, similar works. Whether the creator of a
particular image in a particular context and location is authorised to do so – and by whom this authority
is granted – lies at the heart of the function and processes of street art.
Attempts at disambiguating the terms graffiti and street art include arguments for definitions
based on their material and situational properties2 as well as arguments based on the consent of their
installation.3 Whether identified as graffiti, street art, tagging, installation or other related terms,4
unauthorised artworks that appear in public space can be considered a part of the category of ‘contextual
art’5 as described by Paul Ardenne. Contextual artworks of this type emerge within the urban situation
as reflections of how the inhabitants live and as expressions of how they feel about their life and social
situation. Contextual art is both embedded in the physical location where it appears and is also a
democratic mechanism, a co-emergent aspect of the life of these spaces. Just as the surface and the
image become visually co-constitutive, so too the spaces are entwined with the lived experiences of
occupants, and this relationship can never be fully anticipated on the architect’s or engineer’s page. As
unauthorised contributions, they capture behavioural moments in time and force the visual landscape to
facilitate expressions that may be incompatible with legacy venues for the exhibition and reception of
art, such as art galleries.6
The creation of physical marks in this way is the concretion of a particular idea in a particular
moment. And although there is no expectation of permanence, this assertion of an idea in physical media
establishes an identifiable layer in the palimpsest of the city’s surface. Through constant erasure and
overwriting, these visual layers morph and move, animating through time. Participants from all aspects
of this process, including artists, regulators, law enforcement, owners and the public-as-audience, are
involved in a multi-factored political discussion on the right to alter the physical and visual public
landscape (or the right to prevent others from doing so). The alteration of the material landscape
is partly a question of laws, with punishments for defacement of property typically linked to costs
of damages. Paint is, if not permanent, at least physically significant. When an artist makes a
self-authorised contribution to a physical surface (such as through painting), these marks can be asserted
as damages, and these damages can be asserted as having real cost, while contributions that appear
less permanent (such as performances, or images made in chalk, or created by selective cleaning of
surfaces) are comparatively, if not entirely, unpoliced, with charges of mischief sometimes replacing
charges of damage.
Artists working in unauthorised contextual public art of all kinds contend with this issue as an
inherent aspect of their work. Decisions about what is permitted, and which authority structures will
be accepted as having rights to police expression and material practice, emerge as what Cameron
McAuliffe calls the ‘moral geographies’7 of the artistic practice – a landscape of ethical constraints that
are revealed as such primarily when their limits are tested. Importantly, these constraints are not merely
legal, but also cultural and intracultural, arising as ethical, rather than legal norms of creative practice
among the communities of practitioners. The culture of visual expression also generates its own culture
of preservation or removal based on these moral geographies, such as when certain artworks can be
justly painted over by other artists, for example. And though these ethics are not based on traditional
authoritarian hierarchies and powers of control, this does not necessarily make them less relevant, useful
or reliable.
There are numerous examples of regulatory authorities attempting to encapsulate or complement
these moral geographies in the form of more flexible urban design policies. Alison Young describes
the experience of attempting to draft strategic policy for the City of Melbourne (Australia) that would
designate certain areas as being tolerant of street art and implement policies of ‘negotiated consent’8
for street artists – policy proposals that were rejected in favour of a zero-tolerance policy. In London,
authorities designated a 200-metre tunnel (popularly known as the ‘Banksy Tunnel’) as an authorised
graffiti area, complemented by a billboard advising the rules for the space. In the context of this
contribution, there are two key issues raised by these regulatory efforts. The first is that while the
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increased acceptance of artistic contributions may be welcome, they serve to reinforce the ability of
regulators to either grant or withhold permission for such work. This permission could be revoked at
any time, and it legitimises efforts at control and punishment for expressions outside these designated
areas. The second issue is that if non-consent is an integral part of the work,9 these artworks cannot
fully function within these designated spaces. Deliberately highlighting the authority mechanism that
disallows it is (often) an integral aspect of street art, even if that means that the work will be removed.
As street art at the edge of the moral geography provokes through its unauthorised nature, it evokes
its own impermanence, reminding us of the impermanence of all urban form and image. Contextual
art, as described by Ardenne, ‘lives in the present, it is generally ephemeral, it does not aim to “make
something new present”’.10 This ephemeral nature of street art also highlights the range of timescales
of the visual and physical cityscape – it is ephemeral in contrast to the endurance of the wall or surface
on which it appears. But both are ultimately mere occurrences, or phases within the evolution of the
environment, differing in their impermanence only by degree. Ardenne encourages us to understand
contextual artworks not as a finite form, but as a process.11 While each image or installation of street art
may be a separate expression that uses its impermanence as part of the mechanism of the work, when
taken as a whole, across time, these efforts become collaborative processes displaying a succession of
lived moments and are thus collectively animated, rather than static artworks.
The animated and evolving nature of street structure and the street art which appears on its surface
is especially evident in times of political conflict, whether that conflict is physical or ideological. Tahrir
Square in Cairo is the site of a physical revolution, which took place in January 2011; but also leading
up to that event, the walls around this location became an evolving visual record of sentiment of the
population of Cairo (see Figure 1). As the sentiments of the inhabitants change, so change the images
and messages inscribed on the surface of the city. Once the site of visual and then actual revolution,
leading to the ousting of President Mubarak, Tahrir Square is now undergoing a beautification process,
with the installation of monuments and palm trees as the next phase of the animation.
Figure 1 Political graffiti near Tahrir Square in Cairo following the 2011 revolution (Source: Pierluigi
Mulas/Redux Pictures, 2012).
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The Black Lives Matter demonstrations against police brutality that took place across the USA in 2020
inspired many visual artworks that marked the magnitude of sentiment arising in a specific social
context. Statues with disagreeable cultural connotations, such as those of leaders of Confederate
States from the Civil War era, were summarily removed. Plywood barriers hosted an explosion of visual
expressions which included slogans, portraiture, and messages of rage, frustration and inspiration. Many
buildings and shopfronts in major US cities erected barriers that displayed commissioned artworks
and messages of support (see Figure 2), but these examples are a unique case, demonstrating the
function of permission and authenticity in political street art. These artworks ostensibly endorse the
sentiment of the moment and yet serve as a literal defence of the status quo of a broader system of
social inequality. The hastily commissioned artworks (while probably well intentioned) serve as protest
camouflage, expressing support for the righteousness of the social movement, while simultaneously
pre-condemning the movement with their assumption of violence.12 The consent for these graphic
imitations diminishes and de-legitimises their status as artworks, yet they are still participants in the
collective animation of the visual surface of cities.
Figure 2 Businesses in Washington, DC, decorated their façades and barricades with commissioned
graphics during Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 (Source: Heidi Lipson, 2020).
These efforts at camouflage operate due to the mimicry of form, rather than authenticity,
misunderstanding street art as a style, or genre, rather than as contextual art. Contextual art, as described
by the Polish artist Jan Świdziński, acts not in a sphere of aesthetics, but in a sphere of meanings,13 which
are always based on a practical context of reality. As such, contextual art of this type is a social practice,
rather than a part of the art world (and especially the art business). When seen through this lens of
contextual art, the efforts of corporations to adopt the correct visual forms is at best irrelevant, and at
worst may undermine the function of art in these important moments, a sentiment echoed by Rafael
Schacter, who highlights the need for criticality in street art projects, placing authenticity as a more
important factor than the aesthetic content of the images.14
While spontaneous activist images primarily communicate to the immediate viewer, they are also
often transmitted through a range of technological and social media platforms and are hence able to
communicate to a broader audience and contribute to a broader political moment. This secondary
technological effect is especially the case when they leverage two key aspects identified by Bolette
Blaagaard – first, digital ‘virality’, and second, when they embody reproducible political memes or
physical actions (for example, the phrase ‘hands up don’t shoot’, or ‘I can’t breathe’).15
In early 2021, during the military coup in Myanmar (which is ongoing at the time of writing),
projectors were used to display images of peace, including the image of a dove flying above a
three-fingered salute, a symbol originally adopted from the film The Hunger Games, that has become
recognised as a symbol of solidarity and justice in the region (see Figure 3).16 This imagery, and its
installation at this time, represent the potential for projection art to complement physical protest imagery
(such as signs, painted installations) and a multitude of online image types and platforms that utilise
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digital technology for distribution and raising awareness. The use of the projector gives the artist the
opportunity to literally upscale the repeatable meme, amplifying its recognisability.
Figure 3 A three-fingered salute and dove are projected onto a building during protests against a
military coup in Myanmar in 2021 (Source: Anonymous, The New York Times/Redux, 2021).
The best of these works, both physical and digital, highlight the key features of street art mentioned
above – the use of the street and location as an integral aspect of the work, their appearance without
concern for consent and the potential to address a larger digital audience through their virality. They
highlight the extended material potential of street art into the technological space where digital
technology becomes a part of the broadening material conditions of the work.
These works are inherently temporary. Graffiti is overwritten or erased, and the plywood shutters
of the 2020 protests in the USA soon gave way to the conventional visual landscape. While impressive
efforts have been made to preserve and archive the physical materials that were created throughout the
summer of 2020,17 when taken out of the protest moment, they become something different – no longer
contextual art itself, but now a mere record or archive of a contextual event. As they are removed from
the façades and shopfronts, they are revealed as another temporary phase of the overlapping expression
and erasure of public images that are always animating and transforming public space, highlighting the
urban landscape as a living, animate entity.
The current technological phase provides opportunities for new forms of contextual art using
illumination and projection to create ephemeral works that complicate the questions of erasure and
authority in the public visual landscape, by leveraging their immateriality and temporality.
Operations of projection activism
The evolution of lighting technology is integral to the evolution of projection-based art. Early projection
lanterns using candles or oil wicks enabled public performances akin to slide-shows, but only in limited,
light-controlled situations. The use of electric lights and electric motors to drive film strips in Edison’s
early projection kinetoscopes facilitated the emergence of cinema forms, though again, the situations
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for viewing were somewhat limited by the available brightness and the cost of the technology. These
two key factors, one physical and one economic, defined the potentials of early projection technology in
the social sphere – the brightness of the projection limiting the number (and potentially the social status)
of people who might witness a display, and the cost of the technology (camera, film and processing,
projector and cinema setting) demanding that the social act of the projected image also be economically
viable. As practices developed through the expanded cinema movement and other experimental art and
animation forms throughout the twentieth century, these limitations persisted, though in evolving forms.
We might express this limitation as the cost per lumen, or in the context of public presentations, the cost
per ‘on-site’ lumen.
Happily, through advances in projection technology, availability of equipment, new battery
technology (in certain cases) and the evolution of media hardware in general, the cost barrier has
decreased rapidly, while, concurrently, both brightness and portability of projection devices have
increased. Digital projectors, not needing the careful handling of film reels or slide projectors, have
made public projection as contextual art increasingly accessible. Instances of both authorised and
unauthorised projection installations, both aesthetic and political, have boomed over the past 10 years.
In 2011 Mark Read and collaborators projected large-scale messages onto a prominent New York
building during the Occupy Wall Street protest movement. The practicalities and permission for this
installation were negotiated not with authorities who owned the building where the images appeared,
but rather with the occupant of the apartment from where the image was projected. In this case, the
nature of the projection equipment made it possible for the artists to explore the moral geography18
of the action in a very explicit manner that aligned with their political intent. It is fitting that imagery
supporting the Occupy movement would be arranged at the level of the human occupant, rather than
the corporate controller of the surface on which the image was displayed.
In 2015 activists placed a sculpted bust of Edward Snowden in a park in New York, atop a
plinth commemorating American prisoners of war. When authorities censored and then removed the
physical bust, artists from The Illuminator collective (including Read, mentioned above) replaced it with
a projected image of Snowden, beamed onto a cloud of smoke. While the projection was certainly no
more permanent than the physical bust that was removed, it demonstrated the limits of control that
authorities were able to exert over public expression in that location. And while the projection was
temporary, the impact was amplified through images shared online indefinitely.19
The same group later beamed messages encouraging a broadening of economic theory and
education at the site of a major economics conference20 (among many other similar projection-based
artworks). These actions include the use of projection technology to evade the practical and legal
restrictions of their physical locations; busts are easily removed, and authorities could prevent the
painting of the side of a convention centre. But it is far more difficult to prevent the installation of light
beams that do not cause permanent change to the physical surface. In the words of the artists, ‘while
the State may remove any material artifacts that speak in defiance against incumbent authoritarianism,
the acts of resistance remain in the public consciousness. And it is in sharing that act of defiance that
hope resides.’21
Attempts at legal action against the projection artists involved in these types of actions has been
largely unsuccessful, deemed insufficient in part because laws on unlawful advertising are often based on
assumptions about materiality and material damage.22 Projections leave no damage, so the legal status
of the images reflects their materiality – somewhat ephemeral, and hard to define. Projection activism
can therefore operate not only through the explicit messages and content it displays, but also through
its existence as contextual art that causes us to reconsider the democratic processes that try to delimit
its existence (and the existence of other contextual art).
Olivier Dabène identifies three important contributions that street art makes to democratic process:
enhancing political expression, the empowerment of citizens, and the stretching of the public sphere.23
The public sphere is expanded in three dimensions: sociological (through the new empowered actors);
spatial (through the utilisation of new physical spaces and surfaces); and technological (through digital
technologies including digital imaging, social media and other technological mechanisms).24 It is in these
final categories where projection art and projection activism has most obvious impact. By integrating
physical surfaces, digital images and audiences, projection art establishes a new sociotechnical
materiality that includes both its on-site presence and its ongoing digital life.
The materiality (and immateriality) of projection art and activism is on one hand pragmatic, arising
from the opportunities of technology. But from another view, the material practices form an important
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part of what Awad and Wagoner describe as the ‘social life of the image’,25 a life that includes the
practices of production as well as material instance. The use of light as material reveals a paradox of
the immediacy and impermanence of the digital, mixed with the concrete reality of the physical. One
is persistent, one is ephemeral, though both (as outlined above) are participants in an animate and
impermanent visual display. Once projected, the images are transformed by integrating with the surface
on which they are projected, and when captured and shared online these new composite images have an
ongoing life in the extended public sphere online, recontextualising, amplifying and extending their life.
Activating the politics of public spaces
Projection art and projection activism operate not only through the content that is projected and the
unique attributes of the display technology, but also through the specific physical surfaces on which
the content appears, and the context of these surfaces in the lives of the audiences that bear witness.
When it was reported in 2017 that the Trump administration had banned the Centers for Disease Control
from using certain terms including ‘evidence-based’, ‘science-based’, ‘diversity’ or ‘transgender’, artist
Robin Bell and the Human Rights Campaign organisation responded by projecting these words onto the
façade of the Trump Tower in Washington, DC.26 In 2019, when Boris Johnson was elected to the office
of prime minister, the Led By Donkeys group projected an image of the new prime minister onto the wall
of Buckingham Palace along with the text: ‘Your Majesty, your new prime minister is a LIAR.’27
There are a number of semiotic mechanisms relevant to these examples that demonstrate how
these image installations operate in the socio-technical sphere as image and surface composites. The
selected locations have obvious symbolic and functional meanings. These are no random walls – the
buildings selected represent the ostensibly intended recipient of the message (President Trump and
the Queen of England respectively). This is a case of site-based metonymy, as the physical building
stands symbolically for the key occupant. To project onto Trump Tower is to project a message onto
Trump himself. The built environment is punctuated by these buildings of note that hold special semiotic
implications in our cultural lives and form an important part of the structure of the image and the selection
of sites is a deliberate act of meaning making. The metonymy (or synecdoche) is extended further,
because the stated target of the message is not actually (or not only) the individual indicated, but just as
the site represents the individual figurehead, this individual stands for the system they lead. The message
‘Pay Trump Bribes Here’ projected onto Trump Tower28 seems to operate both as an accusation of Trump,
and of the system that allows corruption to occur (see Figure 4).
Are these messages actually intended to communicate with Trump or the Queen of England?
Perhaps. But clearly these are also messages to the general public, both to those who see the projections
live and those who see the images preserved online in the expanded technical public sphere. And
the messages are not just that Trump or Johnson are dishonest, but also about the ability to make
these assertions publicly, brightly and spontaneously by re-democratising the built environment and
by extension the political structures they represent. This mechanism is not fundamentally different from
other politically motivated contextual art, but the image projection technology deployed and the digital
re-broadcasting of the images amplifies its impact. The images or messages are projected twice – once
onto the surface of the building, a shared visual and edifice in the physical landscape, and then again
as composite images projected into the digital public landscape. These secondary projections never
fully transcend their physical, situational priors, rather they carry something of the physical world into
the digital.
While the examples given above are directly, bluntly political (occupying the space of meaning
rather than aesthetics, to recall Świdziński’s phrasing of contextual art), projection and light-based art
can also act politically by simply activating spaces and their occupants in novel situations, revealing
presumptions, restrictions and conventions of the use of shared space, with the addition of projected
images or light displays evoking a reassessment of the built environment. Birgitta Hosea’s participatory
light action dotdot dash29 involves a voyage through an area of London largely unused directly by
humans, culminating in a light and voice performance in a large concrete tunnel. Inspired by the
night walks of Charles Dickens, and reminiscent of the psychogeography of Debord’s dérive, this action
connects inhabitants to the often overlooked physical structures of the city which are re-birthed through
light and sound, and made to live at an accelerated pace of action. Although the artwork leaves no trace
of its passage, participants are left with a sense of transforming the material of the concrete reality of the
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site. In such works, the effect of the illumination and motion animates the location and the attention of
the viewer. Here, the relationship between the physical and the ephemeral is inverted, as the physical
space becomes the spectral element – somewhat ungraspable as it lurks underneath the animate visions,
reverting to its unoccupied status once the participants and viewers leave. In this way, projection art fulfils
the claims of Dabène (and others) regarding the democratic function of street art, not only through direct
messaging but also through the contestation of urban space, ownership, function and occupation. These
political projections make the urban environment accessible at human scale, and able to be transformed
in ways that architecture often is not. It forces the sometimes slow pace of architectural transformation
to contend with the hyper-speed of digital expression which can transform these surfaces from night to
night, or even moment to moment through the use of moving images.
Figure 4 A message projected onto the façade of the Trump International Hotel in Washington, DC.
(Projection by Robin Bell, photography by Liz Gorman).
New and extended practices based on the projection of light and animation into physical spaces are
constantly evolving, such as projection mapping, or augmented reality installations. In the case of
projection mapping, images can be aligned with built elements, with specific content aligned on each
part of a built surface (or on any other surface, such as a physical sculpture or object designed specifically
for the installation). This creates a wonderful decorative effect, which can enhance and enliven the
actual structures with an array of aesthetic potential too vast to mention in detail in this article. This
is achieved by incorporating the space of the built environment into the space of animation production,
as the building elevations replace the default production and design ‘frame’. In many cases, the building
(or object) itself is modelled and projected back onto itself, with the virtual double aligned to the original
structure, but then changing, morphing, collapsing or animating in some other way. Animation scholar
Dan Torre observes this unique arrangement, noting that as the reality of the structure encounters the
irreality of animation, there is a unique opportunity for ‘situated metamorphosis’,30 where the specific can
become abstract, and hence avail itself of all the transformative potentials of the medium of animation.
While often visually stunning, there is also a deeper potential for these visual interventions to highlight
the transformation of the built environment as analogy for our situated political lives. As the ostensibly
solid and permanent buildings are transformed, we are able to observe the potential for transformation
of other systems and social constraints.
The ongoing project MoMAR31 creates a situation of contested space through the use augmented
reality (AR) technology. This project uses personal media devices (such as a smartphone) to overlay new
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artworks on top of existing artworks displayed in part of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. This
project operates without the permission of the gallery in which it is located, and importantly, without the
need for such permission, as the virtual space remains as yet uncaptured by corporate and institutional
powers. Similar to the installation of a light-and-smoke image of Edward Snowden, the ethereal nature of
virtual space remains somewhat democratic and accessible to new content. In this case, it is the viewer
who retains authority over what is seen in a particular location (through choosing to use the MoMAR
application), hinting at a potential future where all visual space could be personalised, returned to the
individual through augmentation technology. In these ways, contemporary image technology, both in
the form of image production and image viewing devices, as well as the broader sociotechnical and
extended lives of the image, can therefore restructure our political experiences of public space and our
situated political lives.
Concluding remarks
What will happen in the space of contextual art as projection technology continues to get cheaper,
brighter, and more portable, and as new platforms for adding content to public spaces proliferate?
Projection art and projection activism can operate to disestablish authority over expression and
appearance in public space. Mere denial of access and assertion of damages that can make these
interventions difficult in physical media do not necessarily apply to projection art. Will regulators react
with new conventions based perhaps on menace, harassment or defamation? Will existing authority
structures assert rights over location-based virtual space, as well as real space?
Both Ardenne and Dabène cite the risk of the emergence of a ‘culture of compensation’,32 where
authorities move to integrate, or co-opt, contextual art practices or where artists respond to the
commodification effect of social media by altering their agenda to suit this medium. This is already
evident in sanctioned street art zones and performative corporate participation in the visual and artistic
aspects of protest movements. The potential for full digital activation of the city surface either through
public projection or to broadcast via personal media networks, and the integration of digital, social
and physical space, will demand a reassessment of digital contextual art that should not necessarily be
conducted only by regulators. The concept of the street having evolved naturally from the necessary
existence of shared accessways has come to stand for a political, not merely physical, space where
democracies and processes of social life are contested. The tendency towards privatisation of physical
space likely cannot apply to visual space, to temporary interventions, free expression or virtual use
of space.
Notes
1
Street art is a somewhat insufficient term encompassing the spectrum of public art possibilities but
is adopted here (along with ‘contextual art’) as it preferences the social location of the work over
other criteria.
2
Riggle, ‘Street art’, 245. Riggle defines street art through its intentional use of the street as an
artistic or material aspect of the work, not merely artworks placed in a public setting, also excluding
commercial advertising.
3
Bacharach, ‘Street art’, 481. Bacharach contends that street art may best be defined by the
nonconsensual nature of its existence or installation in a given location, an attribute that often makes
the works somewhat temporary, anonymous and potentially illegal.
4
Other terms, including throw-ups, stencils, paste-ups, murals, pieces, tags and stickering, are all
potentially relevant terms related to various forms of practice of street art as contextual art.
5
Ardenne, Un Art Contextuel.
6
While this is broadly true in the author’s opinion, the relationship between the ‘art establishment’
and street art is increasingly complex, both with increasing cases of galleries welcoming (and even
specialising in) street art as a stylistic genre and artists managing relationships with traditional venues as
well as public spaces. This may not only re-enforce traditional power and authority relations in terms of
the production of art, but also provides expanding opportunities for artists. For extended commentary
on this issue, see Rafferty ‘Discourse on Difference’.
7
McAuliffe, ‘Graffiti or street art?’, 191.
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8
Young, ‘Negotiated consent’.
Bacharach, ‘Street art’.
10
Paré, ‘Contextual art’.
11
Paré, ‘Contextual art’.
12
It is difficult to condemn these actions entirely without considering what one might imagine as a best
response from corporate actors in such moments. Since the desire to protect property is understandable,
perhaps erecting blank surfaces would be the most genuine intervention. But it should not be overlooked
that these barriers represent an indictment of a group of potential troublemakers before the fact, running
under cover of sensible protection, an awkward mirroring of the relationship between racial minorities
and the police arm of modern capitalism, especially in the USA.
13
Świdziński and Martel, 20 Ans d’Art Contextuel.
14
Rafael Schacter identifies the potential of artworks that are ugly, yet important. Schacter, ‘The ugly
truth’.
15
Blaagaard, ‘Picturing the political’, 249.
16
Beech, ‘Paint, poems and protest anthems’.
17
Notably, the project Save the Boards to Memorialize the Movement has worked to preserve movable
examples of artwork created during 2020 protests.
18
McAuliffe, ‘Graffiti or street art?’.
19
The Illuminator, ‘Snowden’.
20
The Illuminator, ‘Battle for the soul’.
21
The Illuminator, ‘Snowden’.
22
Segal, ‘Projection artists’.
23
Dabène, Street Art.
24
Dabène, Street Art, 23.
25
Awad and Wagoner, Street Art, 6–10.
26
McBride, ‘HRC projects’. It was later reported that the claims of censorship were overstated and, rather
than a ban, were part of an internal funding strategy to avoid terms which may be less favoured by
government reviewers.
27
BBC News, ‘Boris Johnson’.
28
Bell Visuals, Emoluments.
29
Hosea, dotdot dash.
30
Torre, Animation, 234.
31
See https://momar.gallery
32
Dabène, Street Art, 26.
9
Declarations and conflict of interests
The author is Guest Editor of Architecture_MPS 20 this article is included in; all efforts to sufficiently blind
the author during peer review of this article have been made. The author declares no further conflicts
with this article.
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