VULCAN Interview

vulcan-graffiti.jpg
(vulcan photo courtesy flickr user otherthings. check out his phenomenal site graffiti archeology.)

VULCAN is, obviously, a major inspiration to me, so I’m basically 100% obliged to share this interview:

Thirty years ago, when graffiti was withheld the respect of the subtitle “Art Form,” a twelve year-old Vulcan hit the subway cars of New York with his collection of wildly colored paintcans. Over thirty years — and countless walls, trains, and buses — later, the now San Francisco-based graffiti legend has made a smooth transition from street to START SOMA, where the artist-in-residence uses his decades of experience to continue doing what he’s done all along — create some of the most significant works of art, both street and otherwise, this side of 1973.

We chatted with Vulcan about his graffiti past and his gallery present, and came out the other side in agreement with the artist: Corporate or communal, gallery or ‘getting up’; art is art, and making it is what truly matters.

Read more: SpearTalks: Vulcan – Josh Spear

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