Cool Infomatique Graffiti images
A few nice Infomatique Graffiti images I found:
Dublin Street Art And Graffiti

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A few nice Infomatique Graffiti images I found:
Dublin Street Art And Graffiti

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Casting “Don’t Leave Me Hanging”

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Please visit me at www.streetsofdublin.com/U2-wall.htm
I NEVER NOTICED THIS PLACE BEFORE

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GRAFFITI IN RANELAGH

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Ranelagh is a residential area and urban village on the southside of Dublin city, Ireland. It is in the postal district of Dublin 6. The district was originally a village just outside Dublin city until it was swallowed up by the expanding city more than a century ago. It still has a village-like atmosphere with many small family-run shops, especially around the triangular intersection ("the Triangle") that marks its centre. There are several primary (including an Educate Together facility) and secondary schools in the area, including Gonzaga College and Sandford Park.
The area was named after a park in London, Ranelagh Gardens, or possibly after the park of Willbrook House, now demolished. Part of the old Ranelagh Gardens now survive in the park of the same name.
Ranelagh is sometimes referenced as one of Dublin’s more exclusive residential areas, with house prices second only to Dublin 4, and Victorian townhouses.
The green Luas line passes through, and stops at, Ranelagh.
Ranelagh is in the local government electoral area of Rathmines and the Dail Constituency of Dublin South-East.
Former World snooker champion Ken Doherty is from the area and used to practice in Jason’s. (As of 2006, Jason’s (as a snooker club) no longer exists.)
The area is also the home for some of Irelands leading politicians. Dr. Garret Fitzgerald, who was Taoiseach (Prime Minister) of Ireland intermittently from 1981 to 1987 has his home at Annavilla in Ranelagh. Former Tanaiste and Minister for Justice Michael McDowell also lives in Ranelagh off the triangle. Former President of Ireland and UN High Commissioner Mary Robinson was also a resident of the area.
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City streets abound with billboards, posters, and corporate advertising that almost invite a subversive response ...and increasingly are getting one. Many of today's graffiti artists have adopted the stencil and spray can, and are using the street as a giant creative forum for their arresting artwork. "The image," says San Diego artist Shepard Fairey, "is integrated with the texture of the street." This book showcases the work of the originators, the innovators, and the new generation who, as UK artist Nylon puts it, are "breathing life into derelict spaces." Stencil graffiti is beginning to filter off the street too, as artists are inspired to use stencils on canvas, clothing, and metal. Tristan Manco has chosen over 400 of the most visually exuberant, subtle, and creative examples of the genre from cities all over the world. With subject matter ranging from the political to the poetic, from the funky to the frankly curious, stencil graffiti is graphic innovation on an international scale. Inspirational in form and content, this book is an essential record for everyone with an interest in design or in contemporary urban culture. 405 illustrations, 400 in color.
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The collected works of Britains most wanted artist.
Artistic genius, political activist, painter and decorator, mythic legend or notorious graffiti artist? The work of Banksy is unmistakable (except maybe when its squatting in the New Yorks Metropolitan Museum or Museum of Modern Art.) Banksy is responsible for decorating the streets, walls, bridges and zoos of towns and cites throughout the world.
Witty and subversive, his stencils show monkeys with weapons of mass destruction, policeman with smiley faces, rats with drills and umbrellas. If you look hard enough youll find your own. His statements, incitements, ironies and epigrams are by turns intelligent and witty comments on everything from the monarchy and capitalism to the war in Iraq and farm animals.
His identity remains unknown, but his work is prolific. And now for the first time, hes putting together the best of his workold and newin a fully illustrated color volume.
Banksy, real name unknown, was born in Bristol, England.
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A few nice Infomatique Graffiti images I found:
GRAFFITI – NO TO LISBON

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Grand Canal Dock Area – Dublin
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Brussels – Graffiti, Street Art and Skateboarding

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The centre of the skateboarders universe in Brussels is the specially-built Ursulines Skate Park, with its big curves and banks
A few nice Infomatique Graffiti images I found:
SCHOOL FOR STREET ARTISTS – BEGINNERS CLASS

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Obviously they had a very limited selection of materials … one bottle of Tipp-Ex correction fluid.
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Dublin Docklands

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Brussels – Area Surrounding The The Congress Column

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Brussels, officially the Brussels Region or Brussels-Capital Region[, is the de facto capital city of the European Union (EU) and the largest urban area in Belgium. It comprises 19 municipalities, including the City of Brussels proper, which is the constitutional capital of Belgium, the French Community of Belgium, as well as Flanders and the Flemish Community.
Since the end of the Second World War, Brussels has been a main centre for international politics. Its hosting of principal EU institutions as well as the headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has made the city a polyglot home of numerous international organisations, politicians, diplomats and civil servants.
Although historically Dutch-speaking, Brussels became increasingly French-speaking over the 19th and 20th centuries. Today a majority of inhabitants are native French-speakers, although both languages have official status. Linguistic tensions remain, and the language laws of the municipalities surrounding Brussels are an issue of much controversy in Belgium.
U2 IS MY GOD

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