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07-01-2010

BERST

By Leilani Momoisea

 

GBAK’s monstrous roller piece, 90 metres of pipeline sitting atop the ocean almost completely covered in paint, is a thing of legend – and not just in New Zealand’s graffiti circles. University students and...

07-01-2010

TWESH

Word by Jiroe

Twesh is one of many foreign style dons to have graced UK shores. He paints real well, is active and comes from a strong writing history. Totally Italian but with a certain understated humbleness that shouldn't be...

07-01-2010

KAK

Words Jiroe

Kak One is dope – ask anyone in the UK. Watch him paint and you see that age-old confidence of a writer that's out there non-stop. One of those guys that gets around and knows folks, but ducks under the big radar. He...

30-11-2009

Ben Horton

Words by Melissa Williams

Ben Horton is a skateboarder, graphic designer, skateboard company owner, family man, nature lover and artist who lives in California, USA. His creative work is innovative and inspirational, a...

Words by Sami Montague

Stephan Doitschinoff or under his nom de plume ‘Calma’ is an artist at the very top of his game. Working under both names, this Brazilian artist creates work of intense beauty and mystery....

30-11-2009

Jessica Joslin

Words by Kyle Niart

There’s a certain air of wonder and magic to inanimate objects that look like they’re alive but are not. Things so fine and precise in their detail they’re knocking on the doors of perfection, so totally...

30-11-2009

Gianluca Mattia

Words by Steed Williamson 

If high gloss, hyper-real, part-emo, part-punk-type vixens are your thing you will be more than glad to be introduced to the work of Gianluca Mattia. To describe these character illustrations is...

30-11-2009

Brandi Milne

Words by Melissa Williams

Self-taught South Californian Brandi Milne creates art that is a mixture of ‘nice and yummy’ with a sprinkling of ‘scary and kinda creepy’ thrown in. Mynameis? speaks to her about...

30-11-2009

OMENS

By Sami Montague

The name ‘Omens’ sounds a little menacing, perhaps even evil, but they are not reflected in the style of this writer. Omens’ style has a sweet and slick font-based look that is readable on rolling freights and...

30-11-2009

LIME

By Kyle Niart

 

There is so much innovative style writing currently coming out of France and Lime is another fine example. Hailing from Lyon, he is a highly creative individual, painting amazing pieces under the names of Lime...

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25-05-2010
Gary

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Gary

By Jiroe

 

Gary isn't the type of graffiti writer that comes across with brag and swagger, he is the king of understatement. He is also a perfectionist but what may scare many of you that know his accomplished work is that he really does consider himself just starting to get to grips with painting.

Despite his humility Graphotism felt it was time to immortalise some of his pieces and try and scratch the surface of what motivates him. Step forward one of the the benchmark writers for English wall painting…

 

Where and when did you start?

I have pretty much always lived in Brighton so this is where I started. I think the first few things I painted must have been around 1998.

 

What got you into writing?

I travelled to San Francisco in late 1997 or ’98. It was and still is a Mecca for skateboarding which was my real passion at the time. This was the first time graffiti grabbed my attention. There’s always been a very healthy scene in that city but there was a lot going on around that time. Coming back to the UK I was looking out for graffiti. There was plenty about but only a few names stood out. If anybody knows anything about graffiti in Brighton in the late 90s they’ll know who was doing what. If you don’t know then there’s something to research. I was playing truant quite a lot and just traveled around the area racking crappy paint and pens with a few other friends. Around this time I met Aroe and Nylon. They were painting in a famous spot in town and were good enough to humour me at first but after a while I guess they realised I was dedicated.

 

Has being from Brighton with its strong writing history been important for you?

In comparison to much of the UK, Brighton has had a strong scene. It was valuable starting out in this town as other writers tended to be encouraging and the general attitude is laid-back. This, combined with a lot of talented writers meant it was a great place to grow up and start out in graf. It’s a tiny town, it’s far too small really, but for such a small town it does have an important history, in UK terms anyway.

 

The FULL interview with GARY appears in issue 56 of Graphoism magazine - click here to purchase your copy http://www.graphotism.com/nc/shop/cat/graphotism-books/

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