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Vandalism....

Where I used to live they were waaaaay past mailbox baseball. Nothing less than actual explosions would do. A lot of people myself included, just had a metal box on the ground for their mailbox. You did NOT want to have anything pretty, fancy or even upright :lol:
 
The worst I ever did was when I was a kid, age eleven or so. We lived in a small town outside Seattle for a couple years, called Bothell. The town's sign said "Welcome to Bothell, for a day or a lifetime". We used to regularly go and paint over the "Bot".
Not far from my house there was a sign with raised letters for a subdivision called Bateman Estates. Kids would regularly break off the "e" in Bateman. Finally the subdivision got wise and used a painted sign. But I laughed every time I went past Bat_man Estates.
 
I always saw graffiti with greater artistic skills than mine; but as a muralist, I got paid for every dab of paint on every wall. How? Well, I had the luck of being able to communicate verbally with people who wanted wall art for their business and home. And ask for a fee in their budget. Best job ever, put me through college. Could have just done this and made it work as a career.

I guess some people like to revel in social exile. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy though.

As to my own struggling ability - I attribute it more to conscientiousness and a lot of unnecessary hard work a better artist could have done better in a fraction of the time. Fortunately for my clients I charged by the project, not the time. And I actually turned down opportunities in grand government halls - knowing I just wasn't there yet as an artist; but with persistance, the work found me. This is the message I'd offer to any would-be street artists out there, wondering if an art career is possible. The answer is yes, absolutely, (but part time at first, until one day it is not, and that's all there is to that).

In public spaces, I garnered a lot of passing attention. Some of it was really encouraging and awed, some was unfavorable. Not one critic, though, ever took the brush I offered them.

This is a great era for graphic communication. But you've got to either be good, or dogged, or both.
 
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I think some graffiti can be very good, I believe Bristol even dedicates an area to it each year for a small period.

Baltimore has a block in an arts district where graffiti is officially allowed.
In New Jersey we have Goosey Night, it's the night before Halloween. It's when you're supposed to do little mischievous things...

When I was growing up in NJ, we called it Cabbage Night.

The only time I ever vandalized something was in college. One Cabbage Night, my boyfriend and I painted faces on a couple of the fire hydrants on campus.
 
Baltimore has a block in an arts district where graffiti is officially allowed.


When I was growing up in NJ, we called it Cabbage Night.

The only time I ever vandalized something was in college. One Cabbage Night, my boyfriend and I painted faces on a couple of the fire hydrants on campus.

Yeah it has a couple different names depending on the town you lived in. There was even a big argument on FB about what it was called, we called it Goosey Night. I've heard Cabbage Night and Mischief Night as well.
 
During Cabbage Night, a pair of lovers wanted to secretly run off and get married, but they decided they cantaloupe.

Kor
 
Yeah it has a couple different names depending on the town you lived in. There was even a big argument on FB about what it was called, we called it Goosey Night. I've heard Cabbage Night and Mischief Night as well.

Around here, it's called Devil's Night.
 
Grew up in Georgia, lived in STL, now in Alabama, never heard of any of these pre-Halloween "festivities". :shrug:
 
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