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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by manty on Apr 8, 2010 20:32:03 GMT 1, No one remembers a runner up and it depends on what you like, for me it constantly changes as i change. What im more interested in is the next artist to overtake banksy and bring through a whole new movement that people believe in and not who's underneath him. Whether that movement be urban, contemporary, minimalism or hopefully something completely new and fitting for the decade ahead and not some pastische, who cares who's second i like all my art equally At the time Raphael was held in high esteem as "the artist" at the Vatican, then some upstart named Michelangelo went and painted a ceiling.
That was when there was proper art, and not the shit they call art produced today :-)
No one remembers a runner up and it depends on what you like, for me it constantly changes as i change. What im more interested in is the next artist to overtake banksy and bring through a whole new movement that people believe in and not who's underneath him. Whether that movement be urban, contemporary, minimalism or hopefully something completely new and fitting for the decade ahead and not some pastische, who cares who's second i like all my art equally At the time Raphael was held in high esteem as "the artist" at the Vatican, then some upstart named Michelangelo went and painted a ceiling. That was when there was proper art, and not the shit they call art produced today :-)
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Jul 11, 2010 21:21:18 GMT 1, Bit of fun for you for a Friday. I am assuming that we all agree that Mr B is the numero uno artist in the scene today but who would be your second biggest? I'll leave it up to you whether you would include pseudo-street artists like Micallef or Baldwin. So who would it be: Faile, DFace, Neate, someone else?
This thread was first started back in 2007 So do think think your number two has changed over that time?
Bit of fun for you for a Friday. I am assuming that we all agree that Mr B is the numero uno artist in the scene today but who would be your second biggest? I'll leave it up to you whether you would include pseudo-street artists like Micallef or Baldwin. So who would it be: Faile, DFace, Neate, someone else? This thread was first started back in 2007 So do think think your number two has changed over that time?
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by discoduster on Jul 11, 2010 21:34:31 GMT 1, Shep/Obey is a very different animal than Banksy or any of the other Artists being talked about on this thread. Its more of a Brand with its Prints, Posters, Clothing, Magazine, Toys Its sort of like a campaign rather than an Artist in the sense we all know. What Silky doesn't recall-- or doesn't know or chooses to ignore (and I'm not calling him out)-- is that Shepard took his cues from pop artists like Warhol and Lichtenstein. Warhol was doing much more than "art." Warhol was creating a "Warhol brand," with products such as films, music and music production (Velvet Underground), multi-media shows, licensed products, books, photography, paid television appearances, modeling, etc. At the time of his death, there wasn't so much a man named Andy Warhol as there was a franchise named Andy Warhol. Lichtenstein, for his part, licensed his art to appear on everything from umbrellas to paper plates-- cheap (or inexpensive, however you want to define it) consumer products. I'm sure, had he lived longer, the list would have continued to grow. Both of these artists-- and I challenge anyone to call Warhol and Lichtenstein anything BUT artists-- were, like Shepard, heavily influenced by advertising. Warhol even worked IN advertising as an illustrator (and Shepard has an advertising design studio). People who work in or study advertising-- at least all of the ones I've been around, and that's been more than a few-- understand brand building and the power of brand extension, both in terms of "getting the message out" and in terms of profit potential. Shepard had the upper hand in coming after Warhol and Lichtenstein, and learning and studying their methods and career trajectories. Both Warhol and Lichtenstein got to the "brand extension" party relatively late in their careers (or at least late middle in Warhol's case). Shepard, in his studies, saw the potential and plowed ahead early on so that now, in his late 30's, he's a magnitude or more ahead of where Warhol was in regards to empire building at that stage of his career. So Shepard has prints, posters, a clothing line, a magazine, toys and a record label. That doesn't make him "different" or any less of an artist. It simply makes him a magnificently smart one.
ditto
Shep/Obey is a very different animal than Banksy or any of the other Artists being talked about on this thread. Its more of a Brand with its Prints, Posters, Clothing, Magazine, Toys Its sort of like a campaign rather than an Artist in the sense we all know. What Silky doesn't recall-- or doesn't know or chooses to ignore (and I'm not calling him out)-- is that Shepard took his cues from pop artists like Warhol and Lichtenstein. Warhol was doing much more than "art." Warhol was creating a "Warhol brand," with products such as films, music and music production (Velvet Underground), multi-media shows, licensed products, books, photography, paid television appearances, modeling, etc. At the time of his death, there wasn't so much a man named Andy Warhol as there was a franchise named Andy Warhol. Lichtenstein, for his part, licensed his art to appear on everything from umbrellas to paper plates-- cheap (or inexpensive, however you want to define it) consumer products. I'm sure, had he lived longer, the list would have continued to grow. Both of these artists-- and I challenge anyone to call Warhol and Lichtenstein anything BUT artists-- were, like Shepard, heavily influenced by advertising. Warhol even worked IN advertising as an illustrator (and Shepard has an advertising design studio). People who work in or study advertising-- at least all of the ones I've been around, and that's been more than a few-- understand brand building and the power of brand extension, both in terms of "getting the message out" and in terms of profit potential. Shepard had the upper hand in coming after Warhol and Lichtenstein, and learning and studying their methods and career trajectories. Both Warhol and Lichtenstein got to the "brand extension" party relatively late in their careers (or at least late middle in Warhol's case). Shepard, in his studies, saw the potential and plowed ahead early on so that now, in his late 30's, he's a magnitude or more ahead of where Warhol was in regards to empire building at that stage of his career. So Shepard has prints, posters, a clothing line, a magazine, toys and a record label. That doesn't make him "different" or any less of an artist. It simply makes him a magnificently smart one. ditto
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meatbag
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by meatbag on Jul 12, 2010 1:20:24 GMT 1, Another example would be Takashi Murakami who is considered one of the top 10 contemporary artists of all time and is also one of the most successful art/brands going today.
I am definitely in the camp that feels it takes way more then just talent to make it.
Another example would be Takashi Murakami who is considered one of the top 10 contemporary artists of all time and is also one of the most successful art/brands going today.
I am definitely in the camp that feels it takes way more then just talent to make it.
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Ottomatik
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Ottomatik on Jul 12, 2010 1:48:04 GMT 1, It should be Miss Bugs!
It should be Miss Bugs!
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otomi
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by otomi on Jul 12, 2010 5:33:47 GMT 1, I like the expression "top 10 contemporary artists of all time" ;D
Another example would be Takashi Murakami who is considered one of the top 10 contemporary artists of all time and is also one of the most successful art/brands going today. I am definitely in the camp that feels it takes way more then just talent to make it.
I like the expression "top 10 contemporary artists of all time" ;D Another example would be Takashi Murakami who is considered one of the top 10 contemporary artists of all time and is also one of the most successful art/brands going today. I am definitely in the camp that feels it takes way more then just talent to make it.
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Jul 28, 2010 20:46:12 GMT 1, Who is the second biggest artist in the scene?
Eine (runs for cover) ;D
Who is the second biggest artist in the scene? Eine (runs for cover) ;D
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by publicsquare on Jul 28, 2010 23:39:48 GMT 1, While the topic at hand is poorly phrased, it certainly has prompted a very interesting discussion. For my mind, current popularity, secondary market sales don't get to the heart of the matter. Just as most art in the early 20th century was lumped under the "cubism" banner and was only later broken down into different art movements; "street" or "urban" art will be likewise digested over time. Just browsing the “Beyond the Streets” book, you can start to see those different movements and the overlapping themes and strategies they use. I think we all know that many artists around now will amount to little more than art historical footnotes. The work that will remain is art that reflects our time and has the greatest impact on future artists. Thus, I think judging right now is premature to say the least. For the sake of participation, I will say this. The impact Shepard's Hope poster had on Obama's election (and the ensuing copyright lawsuit) easily secures his place in the books. Banksy's anonymous notoriety and high profile stunts have equally nailed down a page or two. Both artists work uses remix culture with old aesthetics (agit-prop with Shepard, pop art with Banksy), which will certainly be part of the story. However, I think in the end it will be the graffiti parts of this movement that will shine the brightest. In many ways it is the engine that drove work on the street, and the only part that pushes really new visuals, devoid of a lot of remix or cultural reference. I guess that’s why I think the Janson’s of the future will likely contain entries for Saber and Retna.
While the topic at hand is poorly phrased, it certainly has prompted a very interesting discussion. For my mind, current popularity, secondary market sales don't get to the heart of the matter. Just as most art in the early 20th century was lumped under the "cubism" banner and was only later broken down into different art movements; "street" or "urban" art will be likewise digested over time. Just browsing the “Beyond the Streets” book, you can start to see those different movements and the overlapping themes and strategies they use. I think we all know that many artists around now will amount to little more than art historical footnotes. The work that will remain is art that reflects our time and has the greatest impact on future artists. Thus, I think judging right now is premature to say the least. For the sake of participation, I will say this. The impact Shepard's Hope poster had on Obama's election (and the ensuing copyright lawsuit) easily secures his place in the books. Banksy's anonymous notoriety and high profile stunts have equally nailed down a page or two. Both artists work uses remix culture with old aesthetics (agit-prop with Shepard, pop art with Banksy), which will certainly be part of the story. However, I think in the end it will be the graffiti parts of this movement that will shine the brightest. In many ways it is the engine that drove work on the street, and the only part that pushes really new visuals, devoid of a lot of remix or cultural reference. I guess that’s why I think the Janson’s of the future will likely contain entries for Saber and Retna.
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linkd95
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by linkd95 on Jul 30, 2010 22:36:57 GMT 1, For me probably KAWS or Neate
For me probably KAWS or Neate
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by wilfsboy on Jul 31, 2010 0:00:26 GMT 1, Nice post publicsquare...
I also think invader will achieve a page too..
Nice post publicsquare...
I also think invader will achieve a page too..
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by krevice on Aug 2, 2010 3:09:06 GMT 1, Rob Sato...i will post some pics
Rob Sato...i will post some pics
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Collection 1 on Aug 2, 2010 20:45:42 GMT 1, Matt Small and JR!
Matt Small and JR!
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by publicsquare on Aug 12, 2010 2:55:37 GMT 1, Nice post publicsquare... I also think invader will achieve a page too..
Thanks wilfsboy! It's so nice to get a response to what I've been thinking about.
Nice post publicsquare... I also think invader will achieve a page too.. Thanks wilfsboy! It's so nice to get a response to what I've been thinking about.
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a11ad1n
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by a11ad1n on Aug 12, 2010 9:07:26 GMT 1, 3 years of thread, do not deserve a trend ? I am too lazy to make it !!
3 years of thread, do not deserve a trend ? I am too lazy to make it !!
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a11ad1n
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by a11ad1n on Aug 12, 2010 10:51:19 GMT 1, ... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1
That's all ...
... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1
That's all ...
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by walshy on Aug 12, 2010 11:00:25 GMT 1, hutch 7, mcgee 3, os gemos 6, kaws 4
All that proves is its an old thread, or people dont really take the voting seriously
hutch 7, mcgee 3, os gemos 6, kaws 4 All that proves is its an old thread, or people dont really take the voting seriously
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Aug 12, 2010 11:05:08 GMT 1, ... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1 That's all ...
Interesting! That looks a pretty accurate result I would say. Maybe slightly out of date
... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1 That's all ... Interesting! That looks a pretty accurate result I would say. Maybe slightly out of date
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Aug 12, 2010 11:12:22 GMT 1, Question -
Who do you think has gone UP or DOWN in that list if it was done today?
Question -
Who do you think has gone UP or DOWN in that list if it was done today?
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by walshy on Aug 12, 2010 11:17:27 GMT 1, Os gemeos, kaws, swoon, JR and Mcgee need moving up with out a doubt
Os gemeos, kaws, swoon, JR and Mcgee need moving up with out a doubt
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threenine
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by threenine on Aug 12, 2010 17:51:38 GMT 1, Os gemeos do it for me & maybe not considered a 'Street Artist' but Soto has the good stuff.
Os gemeos do it for me & maybe not considered a 'Street Artist' but Soto has the good stuff.
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by snausages on Sept 7, 2010 4:21:54 GMT 1, What Silky doesn't recall-- or doesn't know or chooses to ignore (and I'm not calling him out)-- is that Shepard took his cues from pop artists like Warhol and Lichtenstein. Warhol was doing much more than "art." Warhol was creating a "Warhol brand," with products such as films, music and music production (Velvet Underground), multi-media shows, licensed products, books, photography, paid television appearances, modeling, etc. At the time of his death, there wasn't so much a man named Andy Warhol as there was a franchise named Andy Warhol. Lichtenstein, for his part, licensed his art to appear on everything from umbrellas to paper plates-- cheap (or inexpensive, however you want to define it) consumer products. I'm sure, had he lived longer, the list would have continued to grow. Both of these artists-- and I challenge anyone to call Warhol and Lichtenstein anything BUT artists-- were, like Shepard, heavily influenced by advertising. Warhol even worked IN advertising as an illustrator (and Shepard has an advertising design studio). People who work in or study advertising-- at least all of the ones I've been around, and that's been more than a few-- understand brand building and the power of brand extension, both in terms of "getting the message out" and in terms of profit potential. Shepard had the upper hand in coming after Warhol and Lichtenstein, and learning and studying their methods and career trajectories. Both Warhol and Lichtenstein got to the "brand extension" party relatively late in their careers (or at least late middle in Warhol's case). Shepard, in his studies, saw the potential and plowed ahead early on so that now, in his late 30's, he's a magnitude or more ahead of where Warhol was in regards to empire building at that stage of his career. So Shepard has prints, posters, a clothing line, a magazine, toys and a record label.
That doesn't make him "different" or any less of an artist.
It simply makes him a magnificently smart one.ditto Yeah it also makes him a total hypocrite when he made a name off of anti consumerist and anti capitalistic imagery.
Beyond that this whole post is bullcocky. He's saying Warhol was influenced by advertising, Shepard Fairey is influenced by advertising so Fairey's work must be great! This is the loose association style of argument idiots like Glenn Beck use.
This argument reeks of defensiveness and justification too, which is never a good sign. See, it's like totally ok, that Fairey rips all this crap off because Warhol and Lichtenstein ripped things off too! What Fairey has going for him is that, although not an originator, he was a pioneer of the paste up and stencil street art movement. And although there are a number of academic weaknesses in his work he still has a very distinctive recognizable style. Good things. The bad thing is that beyond the hypocrisy in it, his work has the intellectual depth of a peter max painting and his creative thought is pretty weak.
But he has made some images that are iconic for the movement and even our times so good on him there. But if this is the best that this movement can offer lord help it. I enjoy some street art. But the intellectual depth of this movement really isn't that impressive.
What Silky doesn't recall-- or doesn't know or chooses to ignore (and I'm not calling him out)-- is that Shepard took his cues from pop artists like Warhol and Lichtenstein. Warhol was doing much more than "art." Warhol was creating a "Warhol brand," with products such as films, music and music production (Velvet Underground), multi-media shows, licensed products, books, photography, paid television appearances, modeling, etc. At the time of his death, there wasn't so much a man named Andy Warhol as there was a franchise named Andy Warhol. Lichtenstein, for his part, licensed his art to appear on everything from umbrellas to paper plates-- cheap (or inexpensive, however you want to define it) consumer products. I'm sure, had he lived longer, the list would have continued to grow. Both of these artists-- and I challenge anyone to call Warhol and Lichtenstein anything BUT artists-- were, like Shepard, heavily influenced by advertising. Warhol even worked IN advertising as an illustrator (and Shepard has an advertising design studio). People who work in or study advertising-- at least all of the ones I've been around, and that's been more than a few-- understand brand building and the power of brand extension, both in terms of "getting the message out" and in terms of profit potential. Shepard had the upper hand in coming after Warhol and Lichtenstein, and learning and studying their methods and career trajectories. Both Warhol and Lichtenstein got to the "brand extension" party relatively late in their careers (or at least late middle in Warhol's case). Shepard, in his studies, saw the potential and plowed ahead early on so that now, in his late 30's, he's a magnitude or more ahead of where Warhol was in regards to empire building at that stage of his career. So Shepard has prints, posters, a clothing line, a magazine, toys and a record label.
That doesn't make him "different" or any less of an artist.
It simply makes him a magnificently smart one.ditto Yeah it also makes him a total hypocrite when he made a name off of anti consumerist and anti capitalistic imagery. Beyond that this whole post is bullcocky. He's saying Warhol was influenced by advertising, Shepard Fairey is influenced by advertising so Fairey's work must be great! This is the loose association style of argument idiots like Glenn Beck use. This argument reeks of defensiveness and justification too, which is never a good sign. See, it's like totally ok, that Fairey rips all this crap off because Warhol and Lichtenstein ripped things off too! What Fairey has going for him is that, although not an originator, he was a pioneer of the paste up and stencil street art movement. And although there are a number of academic weaknesses in his work he still has a very distinctive recognizable style. Good things. The bad thing is that beyond the hypocrisy in it, his work has the intellectual depth of a peter max painting and his creative thought is pretty weak. But he has made some images that are iconic for the movement and even our times so good on him there. But if this is the best that this movement can offer lord help it. I enjoy some street art. But the intellectual depth of this movement really isn't that impressive.
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by snausages on Sept 7, 2010 4:25:40 GMT 1, And I understand that this forum is UK centric but the fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists is a joke.
And I understand that this forum is UK centric but the fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists is a joke.
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pezlow
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by pezlow on Sept 7, 2010 6:27:18 GMT 1, And I understand that this forum is UK centric but this thread is such a joke. The fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists reveals that.
Maybe people don't think of them as street artists.
And I understand that this forum is UK centric but this thread is such a joke. The fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists reveals that. Maybe people don't think of them as street artists.
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by wizzy on Sept 7, 2010 8:24:14 GMT 1, Does "Biggest" refer to most prolific / influential / commercially successful or is it just Biggest?.
Does "Biggest" refer to most prolific / influential / commercially successful or is it just Biggest?.
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Sept 7, 2010 10:29:15 GMT 1, And I understand that this forum is UK centric but this thread is such a joke. The fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists reveals that.
Those artists just don't seem to be catching peoples interest much here at the moment Its interesting to look around the forum and see the number of threads and posts in different artists boards. Banksys so popular partly down to how his work has messages in them and encourages discussion, so does that make many of us ask similar questions about other artists work, that we might not have done so before?
And I understand that this forum is UK centric but this thread is such a joke. The fact that Mcgee (the most critically successful) and Kaws (the most critically promising) are both at the bottom of the list with and underneath very minor artists reveals that. Those artists just don't seem to be catching peoples interest much here at the moment Its interesting to look around the forum and see the number of threads and posts in different artists boards. Banksys so popular partly down to how his work has messages in them and encourages discussion, so does that make many of us ask similar questions about other artists work, that we might not have done so before?
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Daniel Silk on Sept 7, 2010 13:06:24 GMT 1, ... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1 That's all ...
Will be interesting to see how that list compares to the Awards results this year
... Okay, because it's raining outside and because I'm waiting for the postman and just for fun ... Here's THE MAJOR classification according to the number of times when every artist's name was quoted for each (well, I tried) member: Shep 33 Neate 32 Faile 30 DFace 14 Micaleff, Parla 12 BLU 11 Dolk 9 Nick Walker 8 Hutch 7 Choe, IMO, Os Gemeos 6 Sickboy, Swoon, Bleck le Rat 5 JR, Bast, Kaws, Beejoir 4 Harrington, Invader, Supine, Insect, Baldwin, English, Mc Gee 3 Xenz, Eine, Mr Brainwash, Miss Bugs, WK Interract Eelus 2 Sam Flores, Mantis, Kinsey, Futura, Murakami, SPQR, Small, Miss Vans, Soto, Sam3, Zeus, Herakut 1 That's all ... Will be interesting to see how that list compares to the Awards results this year
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Coach on Sept 8, 2010 22:09:34 GMT 1, Does "Biggest" refer to most prolific / influential / commercially successful or is it just Biggest?.
Hehehehehe!! - I am pleased you are back my friend.
Does "Biggest" refer to most prolific / influential / commercially successful or is it just Biggest?. Hehehehehe!! - I am pleased you are back my friend.
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vorzero
Artist
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by vorzero on Sept 9, 2010 5:39:43 GMT 1, 10 foot.
he'd have to be biggest... he might have even grown in the last 4 years since this thread began...
;D sorry....
10 foot.
he'd have to be biggest... he might have even grown in the last 4 years since this thread began...
;D sorry....
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by Urban Painting on Sept 10, 2010 12:03:11 GMT 1, Blu
Blu
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mace
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Who is the second biggest artist in the scene, by mace on Sept 13, 2010 11:26:58 GMT 1, Shep 34
Shep 34
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