Guus Ter Beek and Tayfun Serier’s “Street Eraser” project makes public spaces look like they’ve been photoshopped. The pair use what look like vinyl-cut stickers to emblazon the checkered pattern associated with Adobe’s image-editing software on street art and advertising, adding a bit of whimsy to the urban environment. That both men are advertising creatives by day kinda sorta complicates any subversive edge it might have otherwise had — but hey, it’s fun to look at, isn’t it?. They’ve published their exploits, of course, on Tumblr.
In Egypt, a radical street art collective called Women on Walls (WOW) has emerged from the chaos of revolution to publicize the struggles that the country's female population endures regularly. Since WOW was launched in December 2012 by activists Mia Grondahl and Angie Bagela, it has nearly tripled in size:…
The very popular television show about a high school chemistry teacher-turned-drug king pin ended last night. So, what are Breaking Bad addicts to do, now that they've been cut off... forever? Well, they could head over to the corner of Dekalb and Spencer, where artist London Kaye O'Donnell, who has been crocheting her…
Your chance to be featured in one of JR's signature wheatpaste pieces has finally arrived, and you don't even have to travel to a developing nation to do it. From now until May 10, a mobile photo booth will be stationed in Times Square, taking portraits of passersby and printing…