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Graffiti Artwork Drawing

DOES ANYONE KNOW ANY GOOD BOOKS On HOW TO DRAW GRAFFITI???
A CHEAP ONE NOT VERY EXPENSIVE AND ALSO WHERE CAN I GET CLOSE BYE FOR EXAMPLES MICHAEL'S ARTS AND CRaFT OR ANY OTHER ARTS AND CRAFT STORE OR JUST A SIMPLE WEBSITES...
OR WHAT TYPE OF SPECIAL MARKERS DO YOU USE TO COLOR YOUR GRAFFITI ARTWORK AND NOT EXPENSIVE ONES PLEASE........!!!!!!!
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION AND TIME THANK YOU SO MUCH???????
Seriously, there is no way to actually teach graffiti. You learn by looking at whats been done and recreating that yourself. Best thing to do is to go to urban areas to see them, if that's not possible, the internet is a good source of looking at graffiti. You should also get a sketchbook to practice on paper and get your ideas out. You don't want to walk up to a wall and not have anything planned. The sketchbook will be your bible. Just keep practicing the different styles that you'll experience when your looking at the pictures of graffiti online. Soon, you'll end up developing your own style because you'll take pieces of things you like from different styles and make them your own. And as far a paint goes, Krylon is the most common to be found, but it drips easily.
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drawing graffiti
Zhang Dali Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
Zhang Dali's intention throughout his body of work is to call attention to the changes taking place in Chinese society primarily due to the destruction of long standing communities. He wants to enter into a dialogue with his compatriots whom he sees as becoming increasingly estranged as the drive towards modernisation continues. His early graffiti work can still be seen all over the Chinese capital. His signature outline of a human head was found, among other places, on traditional courtyard houses marked for demolition. The artist called this graffiti work "Dialogue" and documented it by photography.According to the artist, immigrant workers who have traveled from the rural areas all over China to earn a living in construction sites in Chinese cities, are the most important members of the Chinese race, who are shaping our physical reality. Yet, they are the faceless crowd who live at the bottom of our society. To cast them in resin is a way to recognize their existence and contribution as well as to capture a fast-changing point of time in the Chinese society. From 2003 to 2005, Zhang has portrayed 100 immigrant workers in life-size resin sculptures of various postures, with a designated number, the artist’s signature and the work’s title “Chinese Offspring” tattooed onto each of their bodies. They are often hung upside down, indicating the uncertainty of their life and their powerlessness in changing their own fates.
Zhang Dali went on to make portraits of migrant workers' faces and resin casts of their heads or entire bodies. Having a studio on the outskirts of Beijing, Zhang Dali became acquainted with a community of migrant workers who lives nearby. Migrant workers have emerged as a product of the urbanization and growth of the main Chinese cities. Mobility has come with reform and this is not always an easy choice. The cities have developed into places of wealth and opportunity, thus drawing all sorts of people in search of better lives. However with this growth of the cities and the introduction of so much from the West: architecture, food, fashion, social manners, etc. has come also great uncertainty. For the migrant worker uncertainty is one of the key elements of their existence. Zhang Dali wanted to bring these people and their hard, bitter lives to the attention of others, and did so by creating head and body casts of volunteers from among these people as well as painting their portraits in his AK-47 series.The presentation of the body casts is vital to transmitting the artist's message. They are shown hanging upside down from ropes tied around their ankles. The imagery is shocking: hanging like carcasses of meat, in mid-air, in limbo. The artist uses the Chinese "dao xuan" to express being upside down in limbo without any inner strength to turn their bodies. These works capture the spirit, or lack thereof, of these workers. For Zhang Dali, his sculptures are living taxonomy, a human version of insect samples ("biao ben") except the specimens are live people. It is a documentation of the species at a specific moment in history.
About the Author
If u want to know more about Zhang Dali paintings, biography, solo exhibitions, group exhibitions and resource of Zhang Dali. View Zhang Dali artwork online at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.Zhang Dali











