{"id":341,"date":"2021-03-17T20:06:59","date_gmt":"2021-03-17T20:06:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/?p=341"},"modified":"2021-03-18T16:18:24","modified_gmt":"2021-03-18T16:18:24","slug":"new-york-citys-war-on-graffiti","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/uncategorized\/new-york-citys-war-on-graffiti\/","title":{"rendered":"New York City\u2019s War on Graffiti"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; disabled_on=&#8221;on|off|off&#8221; admin_label=&#8221;DESKTOP\/TABLET HEADER&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; use_background_color_gradient=&#8221;on&#8221; background_color_gradient_start=&#8221;#ffffff&#8221; background_color_gradient_end=&#8221;rgba(255,255,255,0)&#8221; background_color_gradient_direction=&#8221;188deg&#8221; background_color_gradient_start_position=&#8221;25%&#8221; background_image=&#8221;https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/top-background-2021.jpg&#8221; background_size=&#8221;contain&#8221; background_position=&#8221;top_left&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width_tablet=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_phone=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_last_edited=&#8221;on|desktop&#8221; module_alignment=&#8221;center&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||||true|false&#8221; saved_tabs=&#8221;all&#8221; collapsed=&#8221;off&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; module_alignment=&#8221;center&#8221; min_height=&#8221;375px&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;||||true|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||||true|false&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; disabled_on=&#8221;off|on|on&#8221; admin_label=&#8221;MOBILE HEADER&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; use_background_color_gradient=&#8221;on&#8221; background_color_gradient_start=&#8221;#ffffff&#8221; background_color_gradient_end=&#8221;rgba(255,255,255,0)&#8221; background_color_gradient_direction=&#8221;188deg&#8221; background_color_gradient_start_position=&#8221;25%&#8221; background_image=&#8221;https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/top-background-2021.jpg&#8221; background_size=&#8221;contain&#8221; background_position=&#8221;top_left&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width_tablet=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_phone=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_last_edited=&#8221;on|desktop&#8221; module_alignment=&#8221;center&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;||0px||false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px||true|false&#8221; collapsed=&#8221;off&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; module_alignment=&#8221;center&#8221; min_height=&#8221;140px&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;0px||0px||true|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px||true|false&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; admin_label=&#8221;About&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; background_image=&#8221;https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/content-mainbg.jpg&#8221; background_position=&#8221;top_center&#8221; background_repeat=&#8221;repeat-y&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;5px||||false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||||false|false&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; custom_margin=&#8221;0px||||false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||||false|false&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;3.25&#8243; custom_padding=&#8221;|||&#8221; custom_padding__hover=&#8221;|||&#8221;][et_pb_image src=&#8221;https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/NYG_Trains_1288.jpg&#8221; title_text=&#8221;NYG_Trains_1288&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][\/et_pb_image][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h1 id=\"post-title\">New York City\u2019s War on Graffiti<\/h1>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.com\/adam-mansbach\/nyc-graffiti_b_2527074.html\">http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.com\/adam-mansbach\/nyc-graffiti_b_2527074.html<\/a><\/p>\n<p>by <a href=\"http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.com\/adam-mansbach\" rel=\"author\">Adam Mansbach<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Thirty years ago \u2014 at the height of New York City\u2019s \u201cWar on Graffiti,\u201d and in an act of faith utterly incommensurate with the city\u2019s public demonization of graffiti writers \u2014 a group of teenagers named SHY 147, DAZE, MIN and DURO met with MTA official Richard Ravitch, and proposed a deal. Give the writers of New York City one train line to adorn with their vibrant aerosol murals, and they would leave the rest alone. Let them paint for six months, then let the public vote on the merits of their contribution.<\/p>\n<p>Ravitch suggested that if the writers want to contribute, he would give them all brooms, and hostilities resumed. The subway\u2019s exteriors have been art-free since 1989, but the war has never really ended. New York City remains rigidly opposed to the very <em>aesthetic<\/em> of graffiti \u2014 even if the art in question is perfectly legal.<\/p>\n<p>Today, advertisers have learned to faithfully, if flavorlessly, appropriate graffiti\u2019s ethos of logo repetition, as anyone who has ridden the train lately can confirm. In the city that incubated the most important popular art movement of the 20<sup>th<\/sup> century, the message is clear: public space can be yours, if you pay for it.<\/p>\n<p>Unless what you put there reminds them of graffiti, that is. I learned this last week, when I tried to buy space to advertise my new novel. The silver walls where \u201cburners\u201d used to blaze are now for rent; anyone willing to pay fifty thousand dollars to a company called CBS Outdoor can buy advertising \u201cstripes\u201d for a month. For considerably more, one can \u201cwrap\u201d an entire train in product messaging.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cThe issue,\u201d CBS Outdoor wrote in an email, explaining why my proposal had been rejected, \u201cis the style of writing. The MTA wants nothing that looks like graffiti.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Admittedly, my book title is rendered in colorful, flowing letters, by the Brooklyn artist Blake Lethem. Admittedly, this would not have been the first time Mr. Lethem\u2019s work had graced a train. But what exactly is the rubric by which the MTA judges a letter\u2019s graffiti-ness? At what stylistic tipping point does a word becomes impermissible to the same entity that has approved liquor adverts depicting naked women in dog collars, and bus placards featuring rhetoric widely condemned as hate speech against Palestinians? And if the NYPD defines graffiti as \u201cetching, painting, covering or otherwise placing a mark upon public or private property, with the intent to damage,\u201d isn\u2019t a graffiti-style letter kind of like a robbery-style purchase?<\/p>\n<p>All this might seem trivial, except that the War on Graffiti\u2019s tactics presaged a generation\u2019s experience of law enforcement and personal freedom. Mayor John Lindsay first declared war in 1972, and over the next seventeen years, the city would spend three hundred million dollars attempting to run graffiti-free trains \u2014 this, during a period when the subway barely functioned and the city teetered on the brink of insolvency. Clearly, there was more at stake than aesthetics.<\/p>\n<p>Those stakes become clearer when one examines law enforcement\u2019s public profiling of graffiti writers. They were described as \u201cblack, brown, or other, in that order,\u201d and vilified as sociopaths, drug addicts, and monsters. This was a fight over public space, and we would do well to remember that at the time the fight began, teenagers were also being arrested for breakdancing in subway stations, and throwing un-permited parties in the asphalt schoolyards of the Bronx. Taken collectively, these three activities also represent the birth of hip-hop, the single most influential sub-culture created in this or any country in the last half-century.<\/p>\n<p>As historian Jeff Chang writes, the early seventies saw the politics of abandonment give way to the politics of containment in communities of color. The War on Graffiti is a prime example, and it midwifed today\u2019s era of epic incarceration, quality of life offenses, zero tolerance policies, prejudicial gang databases, and three-strike laws. The War on Graffiti turned misdemeanors into felonies, community service into jail time. It put German Shepherds to work patrolling the train yards; Mayor Koch once suggested an upgrade to wolves. Today, the city prosecutes hundreds of graffiti cases each year, and maintains a dedicated Citywide Vandals Task Force. Nationally, writers have been sentenced to prison terms as long as eight years, and ordered to pay six-figure restitutions. In other words, the war rages on.<\/p>\n<p>One cannot help but wonder what might have happened if New York City had agreed to the na\u00efve, visionary truce those four teenagers offered, thirty years ago now. With a handful of scholarships and a press release, might the \u201cgraffiti plague\u201d have been alchemized into a landmark public art program, to be adapted by other cities with the same zeal that zero tolerance has been? Could thousands of lives have been altered, hundreds of millions of dollars better spent?<\/p>\n<p>We\u2019ll never know, because the city didn\u2019t listen to its young people then. It didn\u2019t recognize graffiti as an outpouring of creativity and frustration, a simultaneous urge to beautify and destroy, to hide and be seen, that\u2019s every bit as complicated as being shunted to the margins of the American dream. Kids are still writing graffiti today, beautifully and badly, in every city in the world; New Yorkers taught them how to do it, but they\u2019ve always understood why. It\u2019s not too late to listen to them now.<\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][et_pb_post_nav _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;][\/et_pb_post_nav][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; admin_label=&#8221;Footer&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; background_color_gradient_direction=&#8221;90deg&#8221; background_image=&#8221;https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/footer-bottom.jpg&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width_tablet=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_phone=&#8221;&#8221; max_width_last_edited=&#8221;on|desktop&#8221; min_height=&#8221;200px&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;||0px||false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px||true|false&#8221; global_module=&#8221;218&#8243; saved_tabs=&#8221;all&#8221; locked=&#8221;off&#8221;][et_pb_row custom_padding_last_edited=&#8221;on|tablet&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; background_position=&#8221;bottom_center&#8221; width=&#8221;100%&#8221; max_width=&#8221;100%&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;||0px||false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||5vw||false&#8221; custom_padding_tablet=&#8221;||0vw||false|false&#8221; custom_padding_phone=&#8221;&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; custom_padding=&#8221;|||&#8221; custom_padding__hover=&#8221;|||&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.9.2&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p id=\"copyright\" style=\"padding:50px 20% 0 20%\">Powered by  <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20201201232515\/http:\/\/www.wordpress.com\/\">WordPress<\/a><br \/>Send All Photos &amp; Questions to <a href=\"https:\/\/web.archive.org\/web\/20201201232515\/mailto:artists@newyorkgraffiti.com\">artists@newyorkgraffiti.com<\/a><\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>New York City\u2019s War on Graffiti http:\/\/www.huffingtonpost.com\/adam-mansbach\/nyc-graffiti_b_2527074.html by Adam Mansbach Thirty years ago \u2014 at the height of New York City\u2019s \u201cWar on Graffiti,\u201d and in an act of faith utterly incommensurate with the city\u2019s public demonization of graffiti writers \u2014 a group of teenagers named SHY 147, DAZE, MIN and DURO met with MTA [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"on","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[8,1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-341","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-blog-posts","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/341","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=341"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/341\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":558,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/341\/revisions\/558"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=341"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=341"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/newyorkgraffiti.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=341"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}