5978. Dean Lane skate park (710)

Chill, Face 1st and Zake, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024
Chill, Face 1st and Zake, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024

One of the strong themes of Bristol street art in 2023 was the continuing presence of the PWA crew as a major force in the city’s graffiti scene. That presence has seamlessly continued into 2024. This February triptych from Chill, Face 1st and Zake in Dean Lane is part of that contiuity.

Chill, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024
Chill, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024

I feel that I rather take Chill for granted a little, simply expecting every piece he paints to be as brilliant as the last, and in this respect he never disappoints. He has been introducing more colour into his pieces and adding more points of interest in beautiful doodle formats around his characters, such as the flower and little bird here. I feel that Chill has or desires to have a strong connection with nature, which I applaud.

Face 1st, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024
Face 1st, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024

Face 1st is a hero of Bristol street art, and an ever-present throughout the nine years I have been writing about it. In this piece, a girl with big FACE hair, Face 1st has chosen some bright and striking colours that scream out very loudly from the wall behind the fence. There is some revisiting his brain theme and lots of splodges and drippy bits. Lots of fun here, although this girl doesn’t seem to be too happy.

Zake, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024
Zake, Dean Lane, Bristol, February 2024

Rounding off the triptych is an unusual piece by Zake, who has incorporated a couple of ideas I haven’t seen from him before. I love it that artists often choose to push the boundaries of their craft. The orange lenses of the glasses the character is wearing work very nicely, the challenge here being to keep the face intact and seamless behind the orange colour. The other weirdness is the eye in the mouth, for which I have no explanation, it is just a bit odd and unsettling. The three PWA boys have smashed it once again.

5977. Cumberland Basin

j9449j, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, January 2024
j9449j, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, January 2024

The artist formerly known as j9449j is obviously a person who enjoys anonymity, and has been incredibly hard to track down. I still know nothing about the artist, and just to add to the confusion, j9449j has changed their Instagram handle to @dr3amcore, this leaves me with the dilemma I have faced before which is do I stick with the first name I was familiar with or change to the new name. The convention on Natural Adventures is to stick with the first name unless the artist requests otherwise, so that is what I will do.

j9449j, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, January 2024
j9449j, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, January 2024

This piece was photographed back in January (I was doing a bit of archive-hopping), and features writing that I have struggled to read, but to me, it looks like “L I ? A T E R”, but I can’t make sense of that, so I must be wrong. Whatever the letters, the fill patterns are full of the wonderful plant shapes that typify work by j9449j. The colour palette is not my favourite, but in my view saved by the vibrant green/yellow flashes through the piece. I have many other pieces by the artist and hope to unearth them as the months and years go by.

Rocky

Abandoned rocking horse, Buxton, April 2024
Abandoned rocking horse, Buxton, April 2024

.

Bedraggled, unloved

and surplus to requirements

second life awaits

.

by Scooj

5976. Chatterton Square (8)

Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024
Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024

I don’t get to visit this spot all that often, but in fairness neither do many artists, so what gets painted here tends to last a reasonably long time, and although I photographed this beauty by Acer One back in January this year, I think it had been painted some time before that.

Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024
Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024

The piece is obviously a protest statement about the war in Gaza and a powerful reminder of just how long innocent Palestinians have been suffering for since Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. When I think about what is happening over there, my head bursts, and like so many people I simply want the suffering to stop.

Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024
Acer One, Chatterton Square, Bristol, January 2024

The letters spell out BRISTOL 4 PEACE, speaking loudly and clearly to the people of Bristol. The letters are beautifully designed and cleverly concealed, and the incorporation of the colours of the Palestinian flag speaks for itself, really. A fine piece of commentary art from Acer One.

5975. Star and Garter (8)

Kid Krishna and Marckinetic, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024
Kid Krishna and Marckinetic, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024

Those boys have been smashing it lately, and by those boys I mean Kid Krishna and Marckinetic. It doesn’t seem to matter what spot I go to, with the exception of Dean Lane, I can usually expect to find something from this pair. And this one in the green adjacent to the Star and Garter in Montpelier/St Paul’s is an absolute beauty.

Kid Krishna, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024
Kid Krishna, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024

Kid Krishna is a prolific artist once he is on a roll, but can be prone to stopping altogether for a while… it can very much be fits and starts from him. This one is a cornucopia piece, so full of wonderful colours and movement, it almost feels like the whole thing is swirling around in front of your eyes. This takes abstract writing to another level and verges on the trippy. The focal point of this organic ball of colour is perfectly offset by the atmospheric cosmic style background. This is truly wonderful work from Kid Krishna.

Marckinetic, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024
Marckinetic, Star and Garter, Bristol, April 2024

Next to Kid Krishna is something a little more formulaic, but only by comparison, by Marckinetic that highlights his unusual approach to writing the letters FFS (I think). The characteristic long straight letters are interlocked and slightly juxtaposed with the circular element at the end. His cosmic fills are sensational and like Kid Krishna’s piece the letters contrast perfectly with the background. Long may this purple patch continue.

5974. St Werburghs tunnel (419)

Logoe, St Werburghs, Bristol, April 2024
Logoe, St Werburghs, Bristol, April 2024

Logoe has been visiting Bristol again recently, and that generally means that he painted several pieces over a weekend. Unfortunately this time I goofed up some of my photographs and on returning to the pieces they had already gone. Not to worry though, he is so prolific and this is the first of a few posts from his trip earlier in the month

Logoe, St Werburghs, Bristol, April 2024
Logoe, St Werburghs, Bristol, April 2024

This is a particularly fine example of his work; beautiful, clean script writing, spelling out LOGOE in turquoise, set on a grey-green background. He has painted a subtle patterned green drop shadow, that complements rather than dominates the writing. No contemporary Logoe piece is complete without a string of oval spots running through the middle of the writing. All great stuff.

5973. Cumberland Basin

Nips, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, April 2024
Nips, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, April 2024

Although she has only relatively recently come under my radar, Nips is a definite favourite whose work I always feel pleased to see. I often wonder whether I would be able to identify writers’ work if they didn’t use their customary letters, and the truth is I don’t know, some have a style that is easier to recognise than others. I would like to think that I would always recognise a Nips piece even if other letters were used.

Nips, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, April 2024
Nips, Cumberland Basin, Bristol, April 2024

Nips’ graffiti writing here has used a wonderful palette of colours that work incredibly well together and, as ever, her fill patterns and ideas are superb. The character ‘dot’ on top of her ‘i’ is one of the identifying features of her work. This is a great piece that stands out well from the noise of the messy background wall.

Thursday doors – 25 April 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 262 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part I)

Last November I went to London to visit one of my uncles who has been rather unwell. He lives in  Highgate in North London, where I lived for much of the first eighteen years of my life. After paying my uncle a visit, I thought I’d nip up to Highgate Village which was once so familiar to me when I was growing up, and where I went to secondary school.

Of course when I lived there I never really took in the special place, the architecture and of course the doors – I think appreciation of doors is something that comes with age. This post is the first of several selections of doors that I managed to snap in the space of an hour, before a rapid retreat back to Bristol. My uncle, in case you are wondering, is recovering well albeit quite slowly. I hope you enjoy this week’s selection:

This is Highgate! - door and glass-panelled shopfront, Highgate, London, November 2023
This is Highgate! – door and glass-panelled shopfront, Highgate, London, November 2023

The gates to Waterlow Park where I spent many happy moments, Highgate, London, November 2023
The gates to Waterlow Park where I spent many happy moments, Highgate, London, November 2023

High security door? Highgate, London, November 2023
High security door? Highgate, London, November 2023

Park View blue door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Park View blue door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Yellow door with fancy crest, Highgate, London, November 2023
Yellow door with fancy crest, Highgate, London, November 2023

Red door and steps, Highgate, London, November 2023
Red door and steps, Highgate, London, November 2023

Green door with large flat awning and worn steps, Highgate, London, November 2023
Green door with large flat awning and worn steps, Highgate, London, November 2023

Grey doors of the Angel Inn where many happy hours were spent, Highgate, London, November 2023
Grey doors of the Angel Inn where many happy hours were spent, Highgate, London, November 2023

Spending time in Highgate and writing this post now fills me with nostalgia. There will be plenty more doors to come from Highgate in the next few weeks. May I wish you a very happy weekend.

If you have made it this far, you probably like doors, and you really ought to take a look at the No Facilities blog by Dan Anton who has taken over the hosting of Thursday Doors from Norm 2.0 blog. Links to more doorscursions can be found in the comments section of Dan Anton’s Thursday Doors post.

by Scooj

Pay it forward

.

Oak, cherry and elm

I’ll be pushing up daisies

before they mature

.

by Scooj

• after a day spent planting trees on a hillside in the Peak District National Park

5972. M32 Cycle path (261)

Bean, M32 Cycle path, Bristol April 2024
Bean, M32 Cycle path, Bristol April 2024

By the time this post is published I will be half way through a team away day in Derbyshire, planting trees. I have to leave right now so that I am not late for my lift.

Bean, M32 Cycle path, Bristol April 2024
Bean, M32 Cycle path, Bristol April 2024

This is another magnificent piece by Bean whose Easter break return to Bristol has been both productive and seen some real improvements in his work. I love the character’s hair in this piece. Norma’s service resumes tomorrow I hope.