"Richard Hambleton has been called the
godfather of street art. He began producing what he called ‘public art’
in New York City in the 1970s.He’s known for the black figures he first
painted on the buildings of New York’s Lower East Side, which he called
Shadowmen. The Shadowmen arrived in the early 1980s, and shocked many a
denizen of that city who walked the streets at night. In 1981 and 1982
he populated the Lower East Side with these unnerving figures.A
reclusive man, physically gaunt (somewhat creepy-looking himself),
Hambleton had undertaken work of a similar bent before. In his Mass
Murder project in the late 1970s, he drew crime-scene outlines of dead
bodies on the street and had volunteers play homicide victims. Passersby
mistook the installations for the aftermaths of real murders.Both these
projects spoke to the zeitgeist, as US urban crime panics shook the
nation in those decades. The Shadow men would shock passersby, who often
mistook them for shadows of real people, possible assailants. Many
people who lived in NYC around that time have stories of the moment they
were petrified by a Shadowman and these stories seem to be almost a
badge of honour top the artist with a distinctly morbid streak. For
Hambleton audience reaction was integral to the artwork itself.He
said:“Other artists put their work on the city, but what I paint on the
walls is only part of the picture. The city psychologically completes
the rest. People experience my paintings. They aren’t simply exposed to
them.”His art was apparently inspired by the shadows left on the sides
of buildings by victims of the atomic blast on Hiroshima. In an age of
Cold War anxiety, perhaps his work pointed at the way people’s lives
seemed to rest on a knife edge.The Shadowmen drew in other urban
artists, who daubed over the black figures with their own work. Indeed,
Hambleton was not a lone wolf. With Keith Haring and Jean-Michel
Basquiat, he was one of a legendary trio of New York artists at the
forefront of the street art boom. The three regularly met to discuss
their work with one another, and sometimes collaborated.His work began
to pop up all over the globe. Shadowmen even appeared on the Berlin Wall
in 1984, when he painted 17 life-size figures on its eastern side. His
Shadowman paintings have been documented by photographer Hank
O’Neal."(artpie.co.uk)
Painting is like silent poem, said Simonides, poet from ancient Greece.Paintings are icons, doors to the Platonian world above the heavens. Paintings on my blog are just those icons, which lead a viewer into the magic world of harmony and beauty. Artists who present their achievements on my blog have a very different cultural and national background, they represent variety of artistic traditions and schools
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