Photos of eL Seed’s graffiti art at Matter
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Nov. 23, 2016
“Vidigal Favela” graffiti art by eL Seed, photo courtesy Matter. |
Originally published in the Weekly Volcano
The Tacoma design
showroom and gallery, Matter:Tacoma made modern, is offering a rare opportunity
to see the work of French-Tunisian graffiti artist and TED Fellow, eL Seed. His
global initiative to share the message of peace through graffiti art is more
urgent now than ever. eL Seed has given permission
to show photographs of his work at Matter,
with a portion of the proceeds going to support the work of Doctors
Without Borders. This is part one of a three-part series called Art Without Borders.”
The art of this world-renowned graffiti artist is
essentially fine calligraphy writ large on the walls of buildings and other
structures. It is a far cry from mere tagging.
Matter
co-director Lisa Kinoshita wrote: “(eL Seed) has developed a signature
form of art combining the fluid lines of Arabic calligraphy
with the street dynamism of Western graffiti — in a style he calls,
“calligraffti.” With stunning originality and vibrancy, eL Seed has created
messages of peace on streets and buildings in the capitols of Europe, the U.S.,
the Middle East, and around the world. His artwork, which came to international
attention after the birth of the Arab Spring in Tunisia, holds a universal call
for peace and goodwill, as well as specific relevance for the places and
cultures in which it appears.”
In “Didouche Mourad”, located in Algeria, Arabic
writing forms a circle on the side of a white building approximately five
stories high (as I deduced by counting the windows in the photograph). A wall
label explains that it is a line from an Algerian song: “How could I forget the
land of good? How could my heart be in peace?”
“Vidigal Favela” is writing in pink outlined in black
on the roof of a building. It is nestled on the side of a mountain above a town
on a calm bay. The photograph is taken from a vantage point even higher above showing
the town, the bay and the surrounding mountains. The artist said of it,
"At the top of the hill, I see this amazing rooftop — brand new, white.
You never find a white rooftop. I started painting this poem from this writer
from one of the favelas, Gabriela Torres Barbosa, I did my piece, took my
picture and left." Later he found out the building was a new art school.
Pont des Arts in Paris is a bridge built by Napoleon in
1802. Thousands of modern visitors have left padlocks as tokens of love. Recently
the locks were removed because there were so many that they thought the bridge
would inevitably fall into the Seine, and eL Seed was invited to paint the
structure. He chose the words of Balzac: "Paris is in truth an ocean: you
can plumb it but you'll never know its depths."
It would be nice if these and the other works shown at
Matter could be seen on site, but we’re lucky to have the photos Also showing are photographs of works by Paris-based artist,
Jean Faucheur, a seminal figure in the Paris street-art movement of the 1980s.
He tagged in New York with Keith Haring and showed at the Tony Shafrazi
Gallery. Today, he owns an art center in the Belleville section of Paris.
Art Without Borders Part One, noon to
6 p.m., by chance and by appointment through Dec. 15, Saturdays and by
appointment; for appointment call Lisa Kinoshita 253.961.5220, Matter, 821
Pacific Ave., Tacoma, 253.879.3701. mattertacoma.com