One of the main reasons that people put work up on the streets is that it's so accessible for artists and is one of the best vectors for work to be shown publicly. The work reaches people who don't normally visit galleries and museums, and has a much different aura than those facilities as well. A really nice aspect of seeing work on the streets is that it's sort of like a discovery when you first notice it, and if it's nothing you're interested in, then you simply move on. The same thing happens in a museum setting, but you're bombarded with such a large amount of work and it's very tiring and numbing to sift through all of it. Many street artists now create work for both the gallery and the street.
Elbow Toe gives us some insight on this matter, and how they relate to his own work in an interview given by Drago Lab.
3. Do you have a preference for studio or street? Are you inclined to work more on pieces for one or the other?
I appreciate aspects of both disciplines. When I work on the street there is the instant gratification that I will have the opportunity to impose my art in an environment where the unsuspecting viewer will be brought into contact with it. Also, as I have said before, I like the idea of being able to transform a spot so that people can’t help but think of that space and the piece as one, as though it has and should have always been there. My work on both fronts requires time to be with; it is always meant to sit in the brain and percolate. I feel that when presented in a gallery, the environment itself asks the viewer to slow down and be with the work in a way that the urban environment does not. Because of that I feel it offers me the opportunity to go deeper on the work that I am presenting indoors. This has encouraged me to pursue very subtle narrative frameworks that mix allegory, personal experience and pretty much anything else that catches my interest. Ultimately I just appreciate the chance to make images that fascinate me and to get
them out to the public in any way I can.
4. How do you feel when you see a piece on the street versus in a gallery? Is there a different sense of accomplishment?
There is absolutely a different sense of accomplishment because my goals for each are completely different, p
articularly now. It took me a couple of years to find my own voice, so I had the habit of making work on the streets and trying to imitate that vision in my own way in gallery work. And it never really felt right to me. I now know what I want out of my gallery work, and I know what I want out of my street work. The goals are separating and to be honest it is quite liberating.
5. Is there subject matter that you approach exclusively for one or the other?
I would not say the subject matter is th
at different, but in my gallery pieces I get to develop my own environment for the narratives to take place. On the street I have to integrate with the environments where I am installing the work.
The work above is a studio piece, while the one below was placed in the streets. It's interesting to see how the work maintains its distance between studio and street practice, while still being connected in a way.
This guy makes some really nice work. Check out his stuff right here:
http://elbow-toe.com/