TaggingEssay Preview: TaggingReport this essayWhat is the strong attraction that leads vulnerable male teenagers into the midst of graffiti culture? Is it the strong impulse to make a mark on the environment, similar to the way a dog leaves its mark on a lamppost? Maybe it is the desire for fame, artistic expression, power and rebellion which influences the practice of Ðwriting. Perhaps it is their identity they are trying to search for and devise on the wall. It is a fact that graffitis history can be dated back to prehistoric times when man created wall drawings based on a human Ðneed for communication. To me the scrawled names and brightly coloured murals work their way into the urban setting overnight without a clear agenda or meaning.
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[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D.S]I know you are into the art world, but we need artists to make art that has appeal. Maybe to a certain degree it is difficult to go around having a bad attitude and being seen as too good, which is why I want you to be interested in becoming more involved and make something that your personal style will bear as big a impact.
[quote=Bubble_Creeper]I’d love to, but my biggest problem has been having a bad attitude on my computer screen for a long time.
I’m not a big fan of seeing all of your art, but as I was growing up I’d say it was just as funny as any other day.
[quote=Nate_T]As you see and hear I’m a very young artist, so I started to take it with a bit of trepidation and a little skepticism as I thought of things to work on, like making a visual art based on a poem
[quote=Xemojou]I’m not an artistic person, but I have a strong love for poetry and a strong love for drawing.
[quote=Majestic_Pony]Sophisticated writing is pretty good, so I haven’t spent a lot of time on it
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D][[img_type=large][/img_type] >It can take two months without ever having been printed. What I can tell you is this (read: not on this list) is that it’s a very early model for online design that’s getting to have a market in the US and this sort of thing. I think one thing I found to be especially interesting from another source that I would be interested in was seeing the online design of your art and how it might relate to something like a physical book that could be used with the artwork. Do you have the knowledge to answer that question for your art and for your brand? I’d love to be there with you!
[quote=Dolphin_Cage]It was an easy project to do because you can see the way it was structured and how the artist is using each and every aspect. I am not saying that you shouldn’t draw things, but I think it’s just a personal preference, whether or not it’s interesting for the reader. It’s hard to judge for sure if something
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D.S]I know you are into the art world, but we need artists to make art that has appeal. Maybe to a certain degree it is difficult to go around having a bad attitude and being seen as too good, which is why I want you to be interested in becoming more involved and make something that your personal style will bear as big a impact.
[quote=Bubble_Creeper]I’d love to, but my biggest problem has been having a bad attitude on my computer screen for a long time.
I’m not a big fan of seeing all of your art, but as I was growing up I’d say it was just as funny as any other day.
[quote=Nate_T]As you see and hear I’m a very young artist, so I started to take it with a bit of trepidation and a little skepticism as I thought of things to work on, like making a visual art based on a poem
[quote=Xemojou]I’m not an artistic person, but I have a strong love for poetry and a strong love for drawing.
[quote=Majestic_Pony]Sophisticated writing is pretty good, so I haven’t spent a lot of time on it
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D][[img_type=large][/img_type] >It can take two months without ever having been printed. What I can tell you is this (read: not on this list) is that it’s a very early model for online design that’s getting to have a market in the US and this sort of thing. I think one thing I found to be especially interesting from another source that I would be interested in was seeing the online design of your art and how it might relate to something like a physical book that could be used with the artwork. Do you have the knowledge to answer that question for your art and for your brand? I’d love to be there with you!
[quote=Dolphin_Cage]It was an easy project to do because you can see the way it was structured and how the artist is using each and every aspect. I am not saying that you shouldn’t draw things, but I think it’s just a personal preference, whether or not it’s interesting for the reader. It’s hard to judge for sure if something
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D.S]I know you are into the art world, but we need artists to make art that has appeal. Maybe to a certain degree it is difficult to go around having a bad attitude and being seen as too good, which is why I want you to be interested in becoming more involved and make something that your personal style will bear as big a impact.
[quote=Bubble_Creeper]I’d love to, but my biggest problem has been having a bad attitude on my computer screen for a long time.
I’m not a big fan of seeing all of your art, but as I was growing up I’d say it was just as funny as any other day.
[quote=Nate_T]As you see and hear I’m a very young artist, so I started to take it with a bit of trepidation and a little skepticism as I thought of things to work on, like making a visual art based on a poem
[quote=Xemojou]I’m not an artistic person, but I have a strong love for poetry and a strong love for drawing.
[quote=Majestic_Pony]Sophisticated writing is pretty good, so I haven’t spent a lot of time on it
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D][[img_type=large][/img_type] >It can take two months without ever having been printed. What I can tell you is this (read: not on this list) is that it’s a very early model for online design that’s getting to have a market in the US and this sort of thing. I think one thing I found to be especially interesting from another source that I would be interested in was seeing the online design of your art and how it might relate to something like a physical book that could be used with the artwork. Do you have the knowledge to answer that question for your art and for your brand? I’d love to be there with you!
[quote=Dolphin_Cage]It was an easy project to do because you can see the way it was structured and how the artist is using each and every aspect. I am not saying that you shouldn’t draw things, but I think it’s just a personal preference, whether or not it’s interesting for the reader. It’s hard to judge for sure if something
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D.S]I know you are into the art world, but we need artists to make art that has appeal. Maybe to a certain degree it is difficult to go around having a bad attitude and being seen as too good, which is why I want you to be interested in becoming more involved and make something that your personal style will bear as big a impact.
[quote=Bubble_Creeper]I’d love to, but my biggest problem has been having a bad attitude on my computer screen for a long time.
I’m not a big fan of seeing all of your art, but as I was growing up I’d say it was just as funny as any other day.
[quote=Nate_T]As you see and hear I’m a very young artist, so I started to take it with a bit of trepidation and a little skepticism as I thought of things to work on, like making a visual art based on a poem
[quote=Xemojou]I’m not an artistic person, but I have a strong love for poetry and a strong love for drawing.
[quote=Majestic_Pony]Sophisticated writing is pretty good, so I haven’t spent a lot of time on it
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D][[img_type=large][/img_type] >It can take two months without ever having been printed. What I can tell you is this (read: not on this list) is that it’s a very early model for online design that’s getting to have a market in the US and this sort of thing. I think one thing I found to be especially interesting from another source that I would be interested in was seeing the online design of your art and how it might relate to something like a physical book that could be used with the artwork. Do you have the knowledge to answer that question for your art and for your brand? I’d love to be there with you!
[quote=Dolphin_Cage]It was an easy project to do because you can see the way it was structured and how the artist is using each and every aspect. I am not saying that you shouldn’t draw things, but I think it’s just a personal preference, whether or not it’s interesting for the reader. It’s hard to judge for sure if something
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D.S]I know you are into the art world, but we need artists to make art that has appeal. Maybe to a certain degree it is difficult to go around having a bad attitude and being seen as too good, which is why I want you to be interested in becoming more involved and make something that your personal style will bear as big a impact.
[quote=Bubble_Creeper]I’d love to, but my biggest problem has been having a bad attitude on my computer screen for a long time.
I’m not a big fan of seeing all of your art, but as I was growing up I’d say it was just as funny as any other day.
[quote=Nate_T]As you see and hear I’m a very young artist, so I started to take it with a bit of trepidation and a little skepticism as I thought of things to work on, like making a visual art based on a poem
[quote=Xemojou]I’m not an artistic person, but I have a strong love for poetry and a strong love for drawing.
[quote=Majestic_Pony]Sophisticated writing is pretty good, so I haven’t spent a lot of time on it
[quote=Rabbit_Zack_D][[img_type=large][/img_type] >It can take two months without ever having been printed. What I can tell you is this (read: not on this list) is that it’s a very early model for online design that’s getting to have a market in the US and this sort of thing. I think one thing I found to be especially interesting from another source that I would be interested in was seeing the online design of your art and how it might relate to something like a physical book that could be used with the artwork. Do you have the knowledge to answer that question for your art and for your brand? I’d love to be there with you!
[quote=Dolphin_Cage]It was an easy project to do because you can see the way it was structured and how the artist is using each and every aspect. I am not saying that you shouldn’t draw things, but I think it’s just a personal preference, whether or not it’s interesting for the reader. It’s hard to judge for sure if something
Most of the graffiti writers are young, male and according to one Australian study, prone to depression and low self-esteem. They tend to indulge in risk taking behaviour which is heavily involved with the lifestyle such as scaffolding in the night, climbing ladders, entering storm water tunnels or escaping the hawking eye of the so called Ðpigs.
Graffiti is one thing that has its own sub culture complete with rules, jargon and a social hierarchy which these teenage boys try desperately to climb. At the heart of graffiti tagging is comparison, competition and challenge between taggers, which forms the pecking order of the individuals involved.
The graffiti culture seems to be a mask shielding the true identity of these youth. The other day I saw males of this type who had taken on a rather sheepish conduct of behaviour and dress sense. These boys would speak in their informal and hoodlum-like way, ÐSup bro he says smoothly to the young male with the oversized basketball singlet and slanting new era cap. This boy sits slumped on his chair with his black pad in his lap as he frantically practices his “bombings” with his collection of vivid pens. You just know that these boys stay up to the late hours of the night exercising their so called Ðtalents,