Tag Archives: StolenSpace

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

DFace Shoreditch Stamping Ground Treasure Hunt

Last weekend saw fun, creativity and a bit of exercise for all the family thanks to local street artist DFace.   Being “Local” was particularly significant as DFace was celebrating decades of decoration on his stomping ground, the street of London.

DFace Stamping Ground image

image courtesy DFace Official mailing list

The idea was a treasure hunt.  Solve the clues, find the location, stamp your paper, create your own authorised legitimate collaborative DFace image.   The fun started at DFace’s Gallery, StolenSpace.   Put your paper in a hinged frame, ink up the stamp pad, press the stamp through the window in the frame, fret about whether you had properly stamped the colour onto your sheet and how long the ink would take to dry (not long) then on to the next clue.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Stamping Point Treasure Hunt Clues

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp First Stamp at StolenSpace

First Stamp at StolenSpace

Second stop on the treasure trail, after the StolenSpace Gallery, was Slam City Skates in the Old Truman Brewery.   DFace is known to be a skate fanatic.

 

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Blue Half Tone and mysterious blue streak added

Many may recall the old StolenSpace base in the Old Truman Brewery, hidden away in a loading dock DFace and friends Word To Mother and Ronzo had a skate ramp set up.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

From Slam City Skates the next stop is the epic DFace showcase at Art ‘Otel on the site of the former Foundry.  Digital animation installations, lenticular mural, sweeping DFace collages in the public spaces and a telephone box installation outside are among the reasons this location is now a major stop on the Shoreditch Street Art Tour.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Art ‘Otel, ready for the green ink

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Green stamp stamped!

The next location was the much storied Golden Heart pub on Commercial Street which has held out a welcome to local artists from Gilbert and George to DFace for years.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Pink hair and painted nails. Shoreditch norm.

Finally back to StolenSpace for the excitement of applying the 5th stamp and the grand reveal, the black outline which gave definition to the image .

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Check the registration

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

5 stamp DIY DFace print

Variations in the consistency of the inking, the distribution of smudges, vignettes in the corners from over enthusiastic unequal pressures, not to mention minute (or not so minute) discrepancies in registration (the alignment of the paper in the frame) pretty much guaranteed that no too images were identical.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp

Take your pick

 

All across Shoreditch families and familiar faces participating in the treasure hunt were super easy to spot, not least due to the distinctive pouches used to protect the paper while dashing from clue to clue.   I enjoyed the company of Brighton Street Art and we hooked up with artist Stubacca and a fun time was had, great company.   Then at each stamping station there were conversations to be had with staff and participants, works in progress to be compared not to mention clue checking. It was a lot about the social as well as the creation of a DFace artwork.  Technically I guess the finished stamped print could be regarded as an open time limited edition.  Everyone who completed the treasure hunt and printed all colours got a bonus screen printed and signed Certificate.

DFace street art treasure hunt stamp certificate

CoA

DFace is a globe trotting muralist, print maker and sticker artist.  This year I have seen major DFace murals in the 13th arrondissement in Paris as well as on the side of a building in Williamsburg, New York but London is not over-blessed with major DFace murals.  DFace painted a mural on the Camden/Kings Cross border for the 2020 London Mural Festival and has just recently painted a new mural at the same location for the 2024 edition.  Lo and behold, the #stampingground image turns out to be a miniature (reversed) souvenir of that stunning mural in Camden.

DFace mural for London Mural festival 2024

DFace Dog In Hand detail, Camden 2024

DFace mural for London Mural festival 2024

DFace Dog In Hand detail, Camden 2024

DFace mural for London Mural festival 2024

DFace Dog In Hand, Camden 2024

StolenSpace website

DFace instagram

London Mural Festival news

all photos: Dave Stuart


Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

D*Face, Kai and Sunny and Shepard Fairey London art show “Unity”

Massive queues, a packed opening night at a gallery – is this 2008 all over again?  Actually no, it’s D*Face collaborating with two of StolenSpace’s long term friends Kai and Sunny, a double act counting as one friend, and Shepard Fairey.

Many may recall that D*Face’s gallery StolenSpace has hosted three major Shep Fairey solo shows in the past (Nineteeneightyfouria 2007; Sound and Vision 2012 and Facing The Giant, 2019).  What may be less well known is that Kai and Sunny, described by the gallery as having a “shared college experience” with D*Face, have been exhibiting at StolenSpace since New Year 2009, pursuing a style which back then was way too “design” for my tastes, not “street” enough.  See also 2011, 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2020

View of Shepard Fairey's 2007 exhibition Nineteeneightyfouria at Old Truman brewery

NineteenEightyFouria by Shepard Fairey, London 2007

Kai and Sunny have also exhibited at Subliminal Projects in LA, founder….Shepard Fairey, so connections are tight.

Now that the free beer and artist in-person appearances of the opening night have passed there is time to peruse the art at leisure.  To appreciate who contributes what where, who combines with whom, it may be handy to really overgeneralise three massive careers in just three pairs of images.  D*Face does D*Dog characters with wings and corrupted pop art; Shepard Fairey does Andre The Giant and striking political illustrations, Kai and Sunny come from a gorgeous geometric op art and flower painting direction.

D*Dog sticker by D*Face on a love lock in Shoreditch

D*Face’s D*Dog love lock

Mural in Camden by street artist D*Face with Shepard Fairey sticker in foreground

D*Face mural from 2020 with Obey GIant and D*Dog stickers in foreground

Shepard Fairey Obey Giant sticker in shoreditch

Obey Giant Shepard Fairey

Shepard Fairey political paste ups on Brick Lane London in 2007 showing the strong propaganda illustration influence

Shepard Fairey, Brick Lane 2007

Kai and Sunny solo exhibition Shifting Times at Stolenspace Gallery in 2018

Kai and Sunny “Shifting Times”, StolenSpace 2018

With artistic collaborations there is usually one artist whose contribution dominates, who drives the idea and the collaborators “fill in”.   Great collaborators appreciate that sometimes they are the chief, other times they are the Indian.  I am indebted to City Kitty, or possibly Lunge Box (can’t tell them apart on their podcast) for this stolen and bastardised insight.   The online catalogue ducks the whole who collaborated on what intrigue by simply attributing one “lead artist” to each image.   Often what makes the art interesting, the “arty” or clever part of the art, is actually what’s added by the others.  With Unity Star No 3 below, the foreground is occupied by a D*Face winged Obey Giant but the piece is electrified by Kai and Sunny in the background

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Unity Star No 3

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Unity Star No 3 detail

A stand out feature is how Kai and Sunny absolutely illuminate a piece when their contribution appears to perhaps be the less significant.  I confessed earlier that a decade ago I really didn’t get their work, I am so pleased that recent shows and most notably this current one have opened my eyes to the flow in their art.

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Ghost D*Moon Flower

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Unity Obey Flower

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Unity Obey Flower (detail)

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Obey Rise Up (above), Ghost D*Moon Wave (below)

The whole notion of the catalogue of a show of collaborations, as in “not a group show”, attributing artworks on the basis of lead artist only does rather confound the concept of collaboration.  The collaborator redux appears to have challenged the compiler of the online catalogue as “Apply Unity” appears in both the D*Face section and the Shepard Fairey section.

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Apply Unity

More show images:

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Sure Shot Spray Can

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

D*Dog Icon

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Hope On The Tide

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Riot Everywhere

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

The D*Face Treatment

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Burning Brighter

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Burning Brighter Detail

The catalogue compiler has a curious concept of “lead artist”, “Magnified Unity” features Shephard Fairey’s Andre The Giant image but the main artistic device is the Lichtensein-esque benday dots and magnifying glass and which is a D*Faceification previously seen in his “Magnified Dog” painting in 2013.

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

Magnified Unity

So, dudes all get on, artistic friendships have been put to the creative test and the artworks are genuinely harmonious interactions between the styles of the collaborators regardless of the lead artist nonsense.  Back to the City Kitty/Lunge Box aphorism, justifiably large egos have been set aside to produce coherent beautiful art which is certainly worth popping in to enjoy.

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

D*Faced OG Sticker

Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London Collaborative art by Street artists D*Face and Shepard Fairey and painting duo Kai and Sunny at the "Unity" exhibition at StolenSpace, Whitechapel, London

StolenSpace Gallery
17 Osborn St, London E1 6TD
10 Sep – 3 October 2021

Links:

StolenSpace Gallery website

D*Face website

Shepard Fairey website

Kai and Sunny website

All photos: Dave Stuart


Shepard Fairey Facing The Giant

Shepard Fairey was in London in October celebrating 30 years of Andre The Giant Art with a two site exhibition hosted by StolenSpace.

Facing The Giant – Beats Residency space (October 2019)

Facing the Giant – StolenSpace (October 2019)

The exhibition was slated to close at the end of October but actually a great selection of art from the two site display has been consolidated and rehung at the StolenSpace Osbourn St site.

Facing the Giant – StolenSpace (November Rehang)

It looks just as spectacular and is well worth popping in to see if you missed it in October.

Facing the Giant – StolenSpace (November Rehang)

We raved about the exhibition on Graffoto, check it out HERE

Facing the Giant – StolenSpace (November Rehang)

LINKS:

Shepard Fairey Website (subscribe to his email)

StolenSpace Website

Graffoto “Shepard Fairey: Facing The Giant)”  Review