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Look at Me!

It blends in just like the sticker we reported on a couple weeks ago! Unlike that one, though, the text of the sticker above begs for attention. “Look at me” it demands. Even if you do look at it, you might miss the really small web address on the bottom right corner. Lookatmenyc.com is the site, which includes a photo slideshow of “look at me” stickers placed around the city and a form to leave a comment. That’s it. Pretty cryptic.

Photo by Jen Taclas.

Tuesday Tag: 3ESS

I’m excited to unveil a new feature on Subway Art Blog. There is a whole subset of subway art that has been underrepresented here on the blog and I hope to rectify this problem starting now.

Over the past several months I have been documenting all sorts of graffiti that I find in and around the subway. At first I was just doing it for fun; documenting Jim Joe’s work made me start paying closer attention to graffiti. For quite a while I had not posted these photos anywhere, but then decided the SAB flickr page was a perfect venue for them. Now that the casual flicks have turned into a larger collection of work, I think it is the right time to start showing them on the main page.

So this post will be the first in a series of graffiti features called “Tuesday Tag.”

It is fitting that the Subway Art Blog should have a regular feature on graffiti being that the New York City subway system is, in a lot of ways, the birthplace of this art movement.

And so I begin the Tuesday Tag with one of my favorite writers that I have never written about on the blog: 3ESS.

3ESS’s highly stylized, complex designs first caught my eye with a gold sticker placed on a trash can in the Marcy Avenue station. I had never seen so much effort put into a sticker before. It was made out of metallic gold paper and cut along the edges to match the shape of the tag.

3ESS has also done spray work in the subway. Quick throwups like the tag above can be found along the J train.

One thing I find interesting about 3ESS’s tag and a lot of other current graffiti writers’ is the blurring of the line between letters and numbers. Many seem to be interchangeable like 3 and B, 5 and S, 7 and T. I interpret the 3 in 3ESS as a B, so that would make it pronounced ‘Bess,’ which I imagine is short for ‘best.’ Since he is the first person to go by this name, that would make him “Best One.”

Courtesy of 3ess.hw.*'s flickr

The artist has done larger scale work on walls, tunnels, rooftops, trucks, freight trains, and more. You can find a ton more of his work on flickr: 3ess.hw.*

Priorities

The MTA has many problems, but getting you where you need to go on time ain’t one!

Photo by awesome graffiti photographer Luna Park. Taken at Spring Street on the 6 line.

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Roberta Thorn at West 4th

Kings by Katie Shelly

Katie Shelly is a visual artist based in Queens. Her pyramid-head “kings” appear in much of her work across various media. Most recently the little creatures took the form of these little stickers, exploring the subway. See videos, stills and much more at Katie’s website.

Block Head Strikes Back

Here are a few of the latest works we’ve seen by the subway artist we call Block Head.

Photos by Halston Bruce.

Tourist Attractions

Courtesy Halston Bruce

Yet another prankster has been posting quirky stickers on ads in the subway. Roberta Thorn, whom I believe is the artist behind this work, has countless photos of stickers in the same style as this one on her Flickr. The majority of these seem to include bits of commentary on the art world, but some also have a more political flavor.

It seems we have covered her handiwork before, unknowingly. Her repertoire includes subway ad alterations, fun graffiti and a whole lot more. She definitely seems to be one to watch.

Yet Another Lego Crossover Video Game

Rockettes Legos

Lego Star Wars, Lego Indiana Jones, Lego Harry Potter, Lego Rock Band and now this? Nothing is safe from the plastic block virus.

Halston rocks.