The Ironlak team in North America recently got together to create a production wall. This well documented video follows the writers as they paint. The graffiti writers featured in the video were: Augor, Enue, Rime, Ewok, Jaes, and Pose. The final wall looks great.
Archive for the ‘Video’ Category
WK Interact from “The Run Up” on Walrus TV
Follow WK Interact as he takes Walrus TV on a tour of his art in New York City. WK Interact explains his choice of the placement of his art and how it interacts with it’s surroundings.
Stealth Ink
We’ve seen all types of specialty inks, this one in particular is very unique. The Stealth Ink goes on invisible and changes color in the sunlight. The sun changes the inks color and permanently dyes the surface a dark brown. The ink is not only applied invisible but it’s very permanent and hard to buff. The video above is a demonstration of the ink put in action by Oink Art Ltd.

Norm paints Erwin Hotel in Venice, CA
The MSK graffiti writer, Norm paints a piece for the Erwin Hotel in Venice, California.
Retna American Revolutionaries Campaign for Ovation TV

The LA graffiti writer, Retna has recently been commissioned to do the American Revolutionaries campaign for Ovation TV. These are a few video clips of Retna creating his artwork for the pieces used throughout the campaign.

Source: Known Gallery
Street Art Comes Alive
This is an interesting and almost creepy animated piece that was commissioned by Levi’s. They may not mention anything about jeans but they do tackle street art and display it coming to life in the video. The artists that were involved in the project were: Will Barras, Stephen Smith, Morcky Troubles, Abner Priceless, Wayne Horse and Boghe Fellini.
Source: Juxtapoz
Katsu Graffiti Scale Paintings
The New York graffiti writer, Katsu is known for his large fire extinguisher tags, as well as his skull grinning character. In this video it shows Katsu creating the skull character at all different scales, from small to ginormous.
Posterchild’s 21063-B Betabot
The Toronto street artist, Posterchild has created a new Betabot. He calls it, 21063-B. 21063-B is partner to Posterchild’s 21063-A.
Posterchild explains the functionality:
An observer begins the process by selecting an emotion. They do this by pressing one of 21063-A’s five available buttons: Tranquillity, Ardor, Animosity, Melancholy, and Flippancy. 21063-A understands this to be the observer communicating it’s current emotional state to 21063-A. In turn, 21063-A communicates it’s current “emotional state” to 21063-B. In lab trials, thus far, 21063-A has proven to be a emotional chameleon. It will mimic whatever emotion the observer selects, no matter how wildly or quickly the observer changes his or her emotional state. Nonetheless, we are excited to see how things will progress, and doubtlessly change, during field-testing. It has been our experience in the past that Betabots tend not to get “emotional” until a test has stretched into many long hours.
Once 21063-A has communicated it’s emotional state to 21063-B, 21063-B in turn communicates it’s own emotional state back to the observer, completing the “Emotional Telephone Game”. It achieves this communication by way of its LED display panel, with which it pantomimes a humanoid face in one of the five available emotional states. Like 21063-A, 21063-B has thus far selected whatever emotional state has been communicated to it. If 21063-A says it is flippant, 21063-B says it is flippant as well.
See More of the 21063-B Betabot.


