Article 6XSSV I love the graffiti I see in Paris – but tagging is just visual manspreading | Alexander Hurst

I love the graffiti I see in Paris – but tagging is just visual manspreading | Alexander Hurst

by
Alexander Hurst
from on (#6XSSV)

Call me a middle-class bobo', but inspired street art has nothing in common with sprayed-on assertions of me, me, me'

Among the layers of life in Paris that energise me, I might list: peeling back the city's music scene all the way to figuring out where, and when, the musicians go to jam together; the unassuming flair of even a basic brasserie; the way one can pivot, in the span of a week, from an art gallery opening to a friend's concert to another friend's restaurant to discover his Corsican-influenced menu, and end it by lingering on a terrace, remaking the world" with others who challenge you - calmly - to see something a different way.

Among the things about this city that exhaust me are the people who cram their way into the Metro without letting you step out first (seriously, what neurons are misfiring in the heads of these people?), and the sheer prevalence of tags. It's when you leave Paris for a bit and come back that you realise how many tags there are. How swaths of a city that is otherwise arrestingly beautiful look as if a giant toddler high on methamphetamines stumbled through them, scribbling on everything in sight with a giant Sharpie.

Continue reading...
External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.theguardian.com/theguardian/environment/rss
Feed Title
Feed Link http://feeds.theguardian.com/
Reply 0 comments