I say I’m a ‘bit obsessed with graffiti’. I may be slightly
underselling my feelings there. I’m more than a bit obsessed. I am consumed by
it. It started, a these things do innocently enough, with a bit of light
reading and the odd like and retweet. I liked it, but there were other ore
pressing matters at the time. Such as a blog about how my face melted in a
sauna in edgefield once.
As we know, my feelings changed. Quite quickly. Not overnight, but overday,
to be honest. Something shifted, clicked into place and I got graffiti. It made
sense to me. I felt as though I’d become fluent in a new mother tongue. I
hadn’t, as I now cringingly realise. With the zealous passion of a neophyte, I made pronouncements, went off on half-cocked tangents and made probably more
mistakes than things I got right. They’re all out there somewhere still,
testament to my early excitement. I could go out and cover over those errors
and embarrassments with the handy ‘delete?’ button, but I think we usually learn better from our mistakes, so have
something of distrust for those who maintain a façade of faultless, blameless
perfection. To err is human, to deny that is be dead behind the eyes. It’s
instructive too, to go back and see the younger me, on the right track, trying
out this new language, even if my lack of knowledge meant that sometimes my
hovercraft was full of eels.
But what graffiti meant to me then, and always will, is
communication. It’s the impulse that causes someone to create it, whether
that’s medieval daisywheel, a 17th century memorial, or a tag on an
underpass. All graffiti is created with the intention of being seen. That is
the entire point of it. If the person making their mark didn’t intend for it to
be seen by others, they wouldn’t do it in the first place, it would remain only
a thought, a wish, a prayer even. I’m always wary of over interpreting things
(which isn’t to say I don’t overthink EVERYTHING), but even the smallest, most
plain and mundane graffito was created with feeling, by someone. For someone specifically?
Perhaps. Possibly. Potentially. But always for an intended audience, whether as
one individual to another or just as a message wider, unknowing and maybe uncaring
world.
The thing to remember though is that attitudes change. The
word ‘graffiti’ wasn’t even coined until 1851, which rather suggests that
before then it wasn’t needed. But it certainly existed before then – because
the word came into being to describe the inscriptions that were being found on
the walls of the newly discovered Pompeii .
But until that point, graffiti had been considered as unremarkable as to almost
never be remarked upon. And yet it was there, seen, registering with an
audience, whether they were the direct targets or not, for as long as humans
have been able to write and draw, they have left their ideas behind on the
walls. We celebrate the historic graffiti, painstakingly record it, pin the
butterfly to the board… but how much do we really think about those who created
it and what they are still trying to tell us now? There is a story behind every
graffito, it’s never mindless doodling or just a coincidence that it happens to
be there.
Graffiti today is considered unwelcome and illicit, something
destructive and bad. That's precisely why artists create it in public spaces, people who feel sidelined, who feel out of kilter and don't feel that they have any other outlet to express their feelings. Whether they do it to claim space for themselves, or to express their contempt for other people, whether they do it to be provocative, I can't claim to know. But their intention is to be seen, whatever the motivation. It's done to be provocative - either to create moral indignation at the fact that it exists, or a message to make the audience think. Creating it in any space is seen as naughty, subversive,
and antisocial. But could anything be more personal, more touching, more human
than the need to communicate with others? To leave a speech mark without words
in a language everyone can read, but few seem able to understand?
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