Bad Monkey Designs is all about the entire graffiti movement. However, looking at our collection, one can see a certain lean toward a particular style. While the
Wild Style murals of this urban art form are truly amazing. We've always had particular interest in the stencils, stickers (or, slaptags) and scrawlings of those artists that have a message.
Take, for instance, a series of messages painted throughout New Jersey's Hudson County. This unknown artist has taken to quoting
Bob Dylan and obscure foreign films. Some of his more prolific include, "Your Days of Plenty are Numbered" and "Dear Hoboken, don't follow leaders, watch your parking meters". While cryptic, it also gives one cause to stop, think and interpret the real meaning of the message -
question authority? stick it to the man? wake up, people? No one is quite sure. For
Bad Monkey Designs, this is the appeal. You can read more about this artist at the
Cliffview Pilot website.
After reading the article from the Cliffview, it was a reminder of other taggers that have been responsible for these "campaigns of thought".
Borf was a graffiti movement started in 2004 in Washington, D.C. by art student John Tsombikos. It is said that his series of tags were inspired by the suicide of a very close friend. The "Borf Brigade" later claimed that "capitalism and the culture of aesthetics created the alienation and feelings of worthlessness that caused the 16-year-old to commit suicide" Phrases and murals with tags like "Grown Ups are Obsolete" and "Borf Writes Letter to Your Children" were seen everywhere in the D.C. area for almost two years.
It's artists such as these that have become part of the core inspiration to
Bad Monkey Designs' collection of graffiti inspired urban wear. Creative minds like Borf and others before him make the average passer-by stop and think. While most people look at graffiti artists as vandals, there are others that see many as talented minds and "urban prophets". For those that question, just look at how different graffiti styles have become more and more mainstream. The
Obey campaign, started by
Shepard Fairey has become one of the most popular (and commercially successful) urban art "exhibits" while the works of
Bansky have sold for tens of thousands of dollars all over the world.
Whether commercially successful or not, all of these taggers started with one common goal - to make people think....to make people question....to make people wake up. These artisits, and others like them, continue to inspire us and thousands of others. So, while communities continue to "battle graffiti" there will always be an underground movement that believe "
Art is Not a Crime".
Bad Monkey Designs
Graffiti Inspired Urban Wear and More
www.bmdez.com