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  • Two people walk passing grafitti along the towpath of Regents Canal. This area is known as a good site fro street art, although sometimes the grafitti is of a pretty low standard.
    20111210grafittiA.jpg
  • Grafitti artists at work on concrete at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc and anything hip hop art orientated.
    _MG_2548.jpg
  • Zippos circus truck having been subject to a grafitti comment that they are Animal Abusers. No doubt carried out by animal rights / welfare activists. London.
    05242011zippos animal abusersD.jpg
  • Grafitti artists at work on concrete at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc and anything hip hop art orientated.
    _MG_2552.jpg
  • Grafitti artists at work on concrete at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc and anything hip hop art orientated.
    _MG_2547.jpg
  • Men walk past a hoarding covered in Grafitti at Elephant and Castle in South London.
    _MG_0838.jpg
  • Men walk past a hoarding covered in Grafitti at Elephant and Castle in South London.
    _MG_0836.jpg
  • Person walking alongside a grafitti covered wall beside a canal in East London.
    20100814canal grafittiA.jpg
  • Truman Brewery grafitti. A patchwork of spray paint, stencils and a collage of flyers. Spitalfields, London.
    20100411spitalfieldsP.jpg
  • Zippos circus truck having been subject to a grafitti comment that they are Animal Abusers. No doubt carried out by animal rights / welfare activists. London.
    05242011zippos animal abusersC.jpg
  • Truman Brewery grafitti. A patchwork of spray paint, stencils and a collage of flyers. Spitalfields, London.
    20100411spitalfieldsQ.jpg
  • Truman Brewery grafitti. A patchwork of spray paint, stencils and a collage of flyers. Spitalfields, London.
    20100411spitalfieldsO.jpg
  • Zippos circus truck having been subject to a grafitti comment that they are Animal Abusers. No doubt carried out by animal rights / welfare activists. London.
    05242011zippos animal abusersB.jpg
  • Someone has sprayed grafitti reading 'I love Sam' in an area by the refuse bins on a council estate in North London, UK. A declaration of love in unlikely surroundings.
    20141210_i love sam_B.jpg
  • Someone has sprayed grafitti reading 'I love Sam' in an area by the refuse bins on a council estate in North London, UK. A declaration of love in unlikely surroundings.
    20141210_i love sam_A.jpg
  • Zippos circus truck having been subject to a grafitti comment that they are Animal Abusers. No doubt carried out by animal rights / welfare activists. London.
    05242011zippos animal abusersA.jpg
  • Street art depicting the Kray twins as Superman and Spiderman in Shoreditch, London, UK. Reggie and Ronnie Kray were legendary East End gansters in the 1960s and in many minds still regarded as heroes as opposed to superheroes by some locals. Others despise the idea of the gangster culture, and subsequently the faces of the Krays in this grafitti were defaced.
    20151230_kray twins street art_A.jpg
  • Two people a man and a woman look at the Lennon wall with grafitti all over it in memory of John Lennon, Prague, Czech Republic. .
    _MG_1932.jpg
  • Grafitti on a wall near Brick Lane Sunday Market. This site is kept as a place for local artists to show off their work.
    2009_08_09_Brick Lane-9.jpg
  • Grafitti on a wall near Brick Lane Sunday Market. This site is kept as a place for local artists to show off their work.
    2009_08_09_Brick Lane-11.jpg
  • Grafitti on a wall near Brick Lane Sunday Market. This site is kept as a place for local artists to show off their work.
    2009_08_09_Brick Lane-10.jpg
  • Family walk past grafitti at Brick Lane for the Sunday Market. Many people come to sell their cast-off clothes and belongings to raise some cash. Official stalls selling clothers, food and all manner of crafts and junk make up the mainstay of the market though. These unofficial sellers though give the market it's unique atmosphere. This market is a weekly event in London's East End.
    2009_08_09_Brick Lane-7.jpg
  • Skateboarders film each others tricks and skills at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc. and anything hip hop art / grafitti orientated.
    _MG_2561.jpg
  • Skateboarders film each others tricks and skills at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc. and anything hip hop art / grafitti orientated.
    _MG_2562.jpg
  • Skateboarders film each others tricks and skills at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc. and anything hip hop art / grafitti orientated.
    _MG_2538.jpg
  • Skateboarders film each others tricks and skills at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc. and anything hip hop art / grafitti orientated.
    _MG_2543.jpg
  • Skateboarders film each others tricks and skills at the Southbank. This area is set aside for skateboarding, BMX bikes etc. and anything hip hop art / grafitti orientated.
    _MG_2540.jpg
  • View from Hackney Wick looking East towards the Olympic site over grafitti and waste ground.
    20111028hackney wickB.jpg
  • View from Hackney Wick looking East towards the Olympic site over grafitti and waste ground.
    20111028hackney wickA.jpg
  • Street art depicting the Kray twins as Superman and Spiderman in Shoreditch, London, UK. Reggie and Ronnie Kray were legendary East End gansters in the 1960s and in many minds still regarded as heroes as opposed to superheroes by some locals. Others despise the idea of the gangster culture, and subsequently the faces of the Krays in this grafitti were defaced.
    20151230_kray twins street art_C.jpg
  • Street art depicting the Kray twins as Superman and Spiderman in Shoreditch, London, UK. Reggie and Ronnie Kray were legendary East End gansters in the 1960s and in many minds still regarded as heroes as opposed to superheroes by some locals. Others despise the idea of the gangster culture, and subsequently the faces of the Krays in this grafitti were defaced.
    20151230_kray twins street art_B.jpg
  • Young small girl standing in a window with grafitti next to it, in Vila Valquiere, West Zone Zona Oueste, Rio de Janeiro
    _MG_9319_1.jpg
  • Woman and son holding hands, walking down the street in Havana old town, with a crumbling wall with grafitti on it in the background.
    _MG_0023_1.jpg
  • France. Calais Port. White paint grafitti on pavement with words 'Open Now'.
    cal_1088_1.jpg
  • Street art political grafitti in Havana new town Vedado
    _MG_3641_1 1.jpg
  • A large scale advertisement for a computer gaming system is painted onto a wall on Old Street in East London. The advert depicts two cars that have crashed through the wall. It will be up for a few days before being cleaned off.
    20100523old st grafittiB.jpg
  • A large scale advertisement for a computer gaming system is painted onto a wall on Old Street in East London. The advert depicts two cars that have crashed through the wall. It will be up for a few days before being cleaned off.
    20100523old st grafittiC.jpg
  • A large scale advertisement for a computer gaming system is painted onto a wall on Old Street in East London. The advert depicts two cars that have crashed through the wall. It will be up for a few days before being cleaned off.
    20100523old st grafittiA.jpg
  • Graffiti in the area around Omonia in support of Greek football team Panathinaikos. The name and symbol 'Triffili' (also Trifylli) is seen all over Athens as are the names of the other main Athenian soccer teams. It is essentially a green shamrock symbol. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110921panathinaikos graffitiD.jpg
  • Graffiti in the area around Omonia in support of Greek football team Panathinaikos. The name and symbol 'Triffili' (also Trifylli) is seen all over Athens as are the names of the other main Athenian soccer teams. It is essentially a green shamrock symbol. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110921panathinaikos graffitiC.jpg
  • Graffiti in the area around Omonia in support of Greek football team Panathinaikos. The name and symbol 'Triffili' (also Trifylli) is seen all over Athens as are the names of the other main Athenian soccer teams. It is essentially a green shamrock symbol. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110919panathinaikos graffitiA.jpg
  • Graffiti in the area around Omonia in support of Greek football team Panathinaikos. The name and symbol 'Triffili' (also Trifylli) is seen all over Athens as are the names of the other main Athenian soccer teams. It is essentially a green shamrock symbol. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110919panathinaikos graffitiB.jpg
  • Street art on the back of a delivery lorry as people pass in Whitechapel, east London
    02032011whitechapel grafittiA.jpg
  • A large scale advertisement for a computer gaming system is painted onto a wall on Old Street in East London. The advert depicts two cars that have crashed through the wall. It will be up for a few days before being cleaned off.
    20100526old st grafittiA.jpg
  • Female graffiti artist spray painting a wall at the Southbank, London. This area is popular for street arts.
    20100507graffiti artistB.jpg
  • Graffiti on a wall in the area of Exarhia. Exarcheia, alternatively spelled as Exarchia, Exarheia and Exarhia, is the name of a neighborhood in downtown Athens, Greece close to the historical building of the National Technical University of Athens. The Exarcheia region is famous as a stomping ground for Greek anarchists. It took the name from a merchant named Exarchos who opened a large general store there. Now this graffiti covered area is known as a home for students and members of the anarchist movement and a kind of no go area for tourists. Visitors to Athens can't help but notice the amount of graffiti in the city. Any surface that can be sprayed upon is covered with a maddening number of signatures and designs. Beautifully restored neo-classic houses from the late 19th Century usually have a few days or weeks before they are covered in graffiti and owners find themselves in a war that they eventually lose and surrender to the kids. Graffiti in Athens is as old as the city itself. In ancient times graffiti was carved into buildings, in fact the word comes from the Greek graphi which means to write. The most disturbing aspect of the graffiti besides the volume of it, is the way some of the kids whose artistic ability begins and ends with their names (tags), have defaced some of the real works of art. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110922graffiti exarhia athensD.jpg
  • Graffiti on a wall in the area of Kolonaki. Kolonaki is a wealthy, chic and upmarket district, and a fashionable meeting area. As one of the capital's leading shopping areas, it includes a number of high-end boutiques from young adult to casual fashion to prestigious haute couture from Greek and international designers. Visitors to Athens can't help but notice the amount of graffiti in the city. Any surface that can be sprayed upon is covered with a maddening number of signatures and designs. Beautifully restored neo-classic houses from the late 19th Century usually have a few days or weeks before they are covered in graffiti and owners find themselves in a war that they eventually lose and surrender to the kids. Graffiti in Athens is as old as the city itself. In ancient times graffiti was carved into buildings, in fact the word comes from the Greek graphi which means to write. The most disturbing aspect of the graffiti besides the volume of it, is the way some of the kids whose artistic ability begins and ends with their names (tags), have defaced some of the real works of art. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110921graffiti in athensS.jpg
  • Graffiti on a wall in the area of Plaka reads Athens Burns. Plaka is the old historical neighborhood of Athens, clustered around the northern and eastern slopes of the Acropolis, and incorporating labyrinthine streets and neoclassical architecture. Plaka is built on top of the residential areas of the ancient town of Athens. It is known as the 'Neighbourhood of the Gods' due to its proximity to the Acropolis and its many archaeological sites. Visitors to Athens can't help but notice the amount of graffiti in the city. Any surface that can be sprayed upon is covered with a maddening number of signatures and designs. Beautifully restored neo-classic houses from the late 19th Century usually have a few days or weeks before they are covered in graffiti and owners find themselves in a war that they eventually lose and surrender to the kids. Graffiti in Athens is as old as the city itself. In ancient times graffiti was carved into buildings, in fact the word comes from the Greek graphi which means to write. The most disturbing aspect of the graffiti besides the volume of it, is the way some of the kids whose artistic ability begins and ends with their names (tags), have defaced some of the real works of art. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920graffiti plaka athensH.jpg
  • Graffiti on a wall in the area of Plaka. Plaka is the old historical neighborhood of Athens, clustered around the northern and eastern slopes of the Acropolis, and incorporating labyrinthine streets and neoclassical architecture. Plaka is built on top of the residential areas of the ancient town of Athens. It is known as the 'Neighbourhood of the Gods' due to its proximity to the Acropolis and its many archaeological sites. Visitors to Athens can't help but notice the amount of graffiti in the city. Any surface that can be sprayed upon is covered with a maddening number of signatures and designs. Beautifully restored neo-classic houses from the late 19th Century usually have a few days or weeks before they are covered in graffiti and owners find themselves in a war that they eventually lose and surrender to the kids. Graffiti in Athens is as old as the city itself. In ancient times graffiti was carved into buildings, in fact the word comes from the Greek graphi which means to write. The most disturbing aspect of the graffiti besides the volume of it, is the way some of the kids whose artistic ability begins and ends with their names (tags), have defaced some of the real works of art. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110920graffiti plaka athensE.jpg
  • Graffiti on the side of an Athens Metro train. Visitors to Athens can't help but notice the amount of graffiti in the city. Any surface that can be sprayed upon is covered with a maddening number of signatures and designs. Beautifully restored neo-classic houses from the late 19th Century usually have a few days or weeks before they are covered in graffiti and owners find themselves in a war that they eventually lose and surrender to the kids. Graffiti in Athens is as old as the city itself. In ancient times graffiti was carved into buildings, in fact the word comes from the Greek graphi which means to write. The most disturbing aspect of the graffiti besides the volume of it, is the way some of the kids whose artistic ability begins and ends with their names (tags), have defaced some of the real works of art. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110919graffiti metro trainA.jpg
  • 1 year on skateboard jam at the Undercroft to celebrate the first 12 months of the Long Live South Bank campaign. The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20140504_south bank skateboard jam_I.jpg
  • 1 year on skateboard jam at the Undercroft to celebrate the first 12 months of the Long Live South Bank campaign. The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20140504_south bank skateboard jam_K.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMX riders, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped.
    20140301_south bank skaters_A.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_C.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_D.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_A.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition (inside 16 boxes seen here) to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank petiti...jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsB.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsA.jpg
  • Olympic birdz graffiti by artist Ronzo. This subversive street art painting near Brick Lane in East London, UK, shows a pigeon defecating on the Olympic rings.
    20120808ronzo birdz graffiti_A.jpg
  • Roa is a Belgian street artist renowned for his giant black and white animals which can be found on walls and shutters in varying states of decay. Biggest of them all is the Roa Crane on Hanbury Street which was put up in 2010. There are also a few Rats and Birds which reside on shop shutters along Brick Lane.<br />
<br />
Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120402street art roa crane_D.jpg
  • Love Will Tear us Apart. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120420street art love_A.jpg
  • Political mural of two shouting heads off Brick Lane. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120328street art_CO.jpg
  • Street art by Ben Eine spells the word 'Happy' in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages. Ben Eine is best known for the vibrant typographical letters that have popped up all over East London over the past half of the decade. These letters can appear on their own on shop shutters or can spell whole words across East London walls like “Scary”, “Exciting”, “Vandalism”, “Change” and “Calculate”.
    20120329street art_DD.jpg
  • Roa is a Belgian street artist renowned for his giant black and white animals which can be found on walls and shutters in varying states of decay. Seen here is his famous hare character on Hackney Road. The council wanted to remove this piece but it has stayed due to public opinion. There are also a few Rats and Birds which reside on shop shutters along Brick Lane.<br />
<br />
Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120319street art roa hare_C.jpg
  • Canary Flavour artwork on Great Eastern Street. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120315street art_BO.jpg
  • Street art by Ben Eine spells the phrase 'Home Sweet Home Less' in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages. Ben Eine is best known for the vibrant typographical letters that have popped up all over East London over the past half of the decade. These letters can appear on their own on shop shutters or can spell whole words across East London walls like “Scary”, “Exciting”, “Vandalism”, “Change” and “Calculate”.
    20120315street art_BM.jpg
  • New work by street artist Jo Peel on Holywell Lane, Shoreditch. Jo Peel is a member of internationally acclaimed Scrawl Collective and spends her time documenting in great detail her fascination with everyday scenes and scenarios.  Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120315street art jo peel_A.jpg
  • Most Londoners are familiar with the work of Stik for his ‘Stik People’ are to be found all over East London hanging around on the walls of derelict buildings and sleeping on shop shutters and doorways. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120313street art_AM.jpg
  • Roa is a Belgian street artist renowned for his giant black and white animals which can be found on walls and shutters in varying states of decay. Seen here is his pig in a shop doorway on Bacon Street just off Brick Lane. There are also a few Rats and Birds which reside on shop shutters along Brick Lane.<br />
<br />
Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120313street art roa pig_A.jpg
  • Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120301street art_W.jpg
  • Teeth and gums work by Sweet Toof, whose work is seen all over London. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120301street art sweet toof_A.jpg
  • Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20120301street art_I.jpg
  • Two girls and a dog outside a painted shutters on Brick Lane in the East End of London, UK. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20141129_street art shoreditch_C.jpg
  • Wet day on Brick Lane in the East End of London, UK.
    20141123_wet day brick lane_L.jpg
  • Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20140830_street art london_B.jpg
  • Audio Surveillance Zone street art near Brick Lane in the East End of London. This is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20140225_brick lane street art_I.jpg
  • Japanese character street art near Brick Lane in the East End of London. This is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20140225_brick lane street art_L.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_T.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_Z.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_K.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_AG.jpg
  • Long Live South Bank event held at the South Bank Undercroft prior to a petition to save the site, signed by 23,000 people was taken to Lambeth Council. The Undercroft on the South Bank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, and others. It is proposed that the area be redeveloped for retail spaces.
    20140102_long live south bank_E.jpg
  • Scene along the Lea Navigational Canal in East London, UK. The River Lea is a major tributary of the River Thames. Much of the Lee Navigation is within Lea Valley Park, a multi-county regional park and open space preserve. Street are and graffiti is a regular sight along the canal.
    20100814_lea navigational canal_I.jpg
  • Future mural in Shoreditch in London, United Kingdom. Street art in the East End of London is an ever changing visual enigma, as the artworks constantly change, as councils clean some walls or new works go up in place of others. While some consider this vandalism or graffiti, these artworks are very popular among local people and visitors alike, as a sense of poignancy remains in the work, many of which have subtle messages.
    20190211_future street art_001.jpg
  • DJ TR and Bruno Rafael stand and talk in front of a mural, they are currently making a film to mark 50 years of CDD conmunity. Cidade de Deus / City of God favela in Rio de Janeiro, made infamous by the film of the same name, is a bustling community of close to 100,000 inhabitants, with numerous cultural and social projects.
    _MG_8893.jpg
  • The bearpit. The Stokes Croft area of Bristol is just out of the city centre, and is now regarded as a alternative / underground cultural centre in the city, known for artists studios, music venues, bars and eateries. It is also seen as one of the citys and indeed the countrys centres for street art, with many tolerated walls with an often and informally changing rota of artworks, Bristol, UK.
    _MG_5980_1.jpg
  • Trenchtown, Kingston, Jamaica.
    _MG_0521.jpg
  • Graffiti & stencil art cover a building on Brick Lane, East London.
    _F3A2687.jpg
  • Graffiti wall on construction hoarding in Great Eastern Street East London.
    _F3A2592.jpg
  • Man walking past graffiti wall made by the graffiti writers Lovepusher and Ink Fetish on construction hoarding in Great Eastern Street IN Shoreditch, London, United Kingdom. This was put up with support from Global Street Art as part of their ongoing Walls Project.
    _F3A2568.jpg
  • Polka dot covered trees on the Southbank. Yayoi Kusama, the artist is responsible for the surreal transformation, has been influenced by hallucinations she’s been experiencing since her childhood. Hence the title of the exhibition: Walking In My Mind.
    _MG_2534.jpg
  • Polka dot covered trees on the Southbank. Yayoi Kusama, the artist is responsible for the surreal transformation, has been influenced by hallucinations she’s been experiencing since her childhood. Hence the title of the exhibition: Walking In My Mind.
    _MG_2531.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsB.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsC.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsE.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsD.jpg
  • The undercroft of the foyer building of the Queen Elizabeth Hall on the Southbank has been popular with skateboarders since the early 70's and it is widely acknowledged to be London's most distinctive and popular skateboarding area. The area is used by skateboarders, BMXers, graffiti artists, taggers, photographers, buskers, and performance artists, among others. Although this informal activity, social and arts scene is a distinctive feature of the Southbank Centre site, it was proposed that the area would be redeveloped. However a statement from the Prime Minister's office may save the undercroft for these uses.
    20100724southbank skate kidsA.jpg
  • Female graffiti artist spray painting a wall at the Southbank, London. This area is popular for street arts.
    20100507graffiti artistC.jpg
  • Female graffiti artist spray painting a wall at the Southbank, London. This area is popular for street arts.
    20100507graffiti artistA.jpg
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