"...en onopgemerkt, in onopvallende kledij rondlopen en door iedereen met rust gelaten worden, dat is prachtig. Met al je zenuwen en al je gevoeligheid."
Gerard Reve

New Street Art revisited


As next week (Wednesday, June 1, 2016) the second edition of New Street Art by Claude Crommelin will be officially presented (Brick Lane Bookshop, London),  I thought it helpful to translate my review of the first edition (New Street Art, April 6, 2013) into English. So that more people may share my enthousiasm for this inspirational book.


The street, always the street, that unpredictable combination of purpose and blunder. Newspaper flies over sidewalk,  tree drops some leaves exposing accidental bird, car bumps softly into lamppost -  lamp lights up and a man carefully focusses his camera on the wildly painted wall,  the famous actrice patters by on the exact moment he presses the button. The street is stage for improvisation on the theme intention versus coincidence.

In 2008 the Amsterdam photographer Claude Crommelin moved to London. As soon as he started scouting-out his new neighbourhood, he stumbled on a surprising quantity of high-level street art. He bought a tiny digital camera and on almost daily expeditions began to photograph every piece he liked. Then he decided to put these pictures together on flickr, http://www.flickr.com/photos/claudelondon/.  Being a persistent guy he built a large collection of pieces and an extensive documentation on London street-artists to boot.  Now, five years later, his book is here: NEW STREET ART,  by Claudelondon.


It is a sturdy, square shaped (211 x 211 x 22 mm.) book, that I have trouble putting aside ever since I layed my  eager hands on it.  The selection of the pieces is of great quality, the pictures are clear and subtle, the ostensibly modest bits of text hide a treasure of information.  Of course the bookdesign gives the pictures priority - each of the 272 pages  has one or more splendidly reproduced. But in the margin Claudelondon manages to tell a lot about the makers and their work,  to investigate the mores  in street art and to relate the   often comical – incidents that occurred while hunting the volatile street-artists. Thus he intertwines the personal histories of artists coming from all corners of the world with his own story - vagrant birds of a feather.

To read this book is like being on a hunt with him through the streets of Shoreditch;  again and again with a stir of anticipation I turn the page, as if I turn a corner to see what the next street has to offer. Hasty, since many a piece is granted only a short life. Which for me is precisely the essence of this artform: the whithering of a piece through time  makes it an ode to the transience of the street.

Since I have known Claudelondon as a avid birder, I expected his book to sport at least a folding map of the burrow covered by a colourful confetty of cyphers indicating pieces by location, overlapping circles (breeding grounds) and patterns of artist migration. And of course the unavoidable app to facilitate the reader who wants to tour East London guided as in a museum. But non of this is here - and I do not miss it at all. The city street is ever changing;  pavement gets broken up, new lampposts appear, walls are torn down. Street art is simply part of street life and many an artist turns out to be more elusive than a bird ever was.

The non-organized or rather the untamed character is street arts’ hallmark. It is an expression from below, literally: from the streets. As such it is the exact opposite of the topdown organised urban embellishment project. Even though a singular street artist who has made a name for himself takes money from the authorities to paint the fences around a disputed construction-site (as  Shepard Fairey aka Obey did at the Central Station in Amsterdam).

That is why my favourite part of NEW STREET ART is the grey coloured section in the back, called The unknown artists. It contains the persistantly anonymous pieces whose makers even the fanatic Claudelondon has not managed to trace down. They remain as anonymous as a kerb, a streetlamp, a passing cat. But they are just as undeniably there. For me that is hard-core street art. And I am glad this twitcher also mentions the birds he saw but could not put a name to. Way to go, BrunaDude!







May 29, 2016