Archaeology Graffiti, graffiti in a time perspective.

Graffiti Archaeology

Graffiti is a medium time-bound? This is the question behind the project of Cassidy Curtis, ie the website Graffiti Archaeology . According to its author, Grafarc is the study of 'mural' framed within a temporal perspective. The project consists of a collage of images of graffiti taken by different photographers over the course of several years. The photos are overlaid with precision so as to ensure the user, which navigates between the various layers, the experience of the passage of time, marked by recent tags that go to cover those of long standing. Similarly, it is possible to perceive the way in which the style of a writer you edit and attend the dialogue between artists. The walls are repainted frequently because the writers compete and collaborate on the 'public web' to gain visibility. The site reflects the real and the virtual space of the city of the internet, but the placement of walls photographed is not disclosed. The reason for the secrecy is in the double identity of the aerosol art that is both public art and vandalism, virtuosity and subversion. Digital technology, especially in the role of the photograph as that of the network, is proving its nature 'conservative'.