6024. Anchor Road (5)

Inkie, Anchor Road, Bristol, May 2024
Inkie, Anchor Road, Bristol, May 2024

This container, behind the Watershed, is one of the more curious spots in Bristol. I am not sure who owns the container, nor do I understand quite why the council has given permission for it to be sited here, but here it is and fortunately for us, it has played host to a series of high-end commissions over the years. Inkie replaced the Paul Monsters piece that had been here before a little while back, but I have only recently photographed it.

Inkie, Anchor Road, Bristol, May 2024
Inkie, Anchor Road, Bristol, May 2024

There are several Inkie elements that have come together in perfect harmony in this combination piece. The print background runs through the whole piece and sets a regular patterned backdrop. Of course the distinctive writing in very Inkie colours is as good as you’ll see and to the right is one of his beautiful Art Nouveau style characters. The only board of the piece that leaves me scratching my head is the cartoon-style spray can, which doesn’t look like an Inkie piece at all and doesn’t quite fit with the rest of it.

6023. Leonard Lane (45)

Alex Arnell, Leonard Lane, Bristol, May 2024
Alex Arnell, Leonard Lane, Bristol, May 2024

The work of Alex Arnell, in my mind, verges on the grotesque… not his artwork, I hasten to add, but his subject material. Although he operates out of Brick Lane in London, he appears to have visited Bristol on a couple of occasions, and has left behind a gallery of characters in Leonard Lane.

Alex Arnell, Leonard Lane, Bristol, May 2024
Alex Arnell, Leonard Lane, Bristol, May 2024

Alex Arnell’s style is utterly unique and could be interpreted as scribbles that ‘anyone could do’. That may or may not be true, but the point here is that he does it, and he does it really well. I like deliberately naive artwork because there is an authenticity about it, and although a cultivated look, it is also honest and unpretentious – although there might be those that consider it grossly pretentious. The skeleton is rather scary, not because it is a skeleton, but because there is threat and alarm in his expression. Crazy stuff, but most welcome.

6022. Cheltenham Road

Roo, Cheltenham Road, Bristol, May 2024
Roo, Cheltenham Road, Bristol, May 2024

The maxim ‘you can never have too much of a good thing’ is a variant of the phrase ‘you can have too much of a good thing’, and the two have very different meanings. In this instance I am adopting the former in relation to the number of recent pieces painted in Bristol by the London-based Roo.

Roo, Cheltenham Road, Bristol, May 2024
Roo, Cheltenham Road, Bristol, May 2024

It has been a very long time since this wall last had anything meaningful on it, and Roo has filled the space perfectly. Her precision and apparently simple design actually underplays her skill in creating such a tight piece. The character is bound to strike a chord with cat lovers, and the black ‘naturescape’ complements the piece nicely. Great work from Roo.

6221. Peterborough

Nyces, Peterborough, April 2024
Nyces, Peterborough, April 2024

My work trip to Peterborough in April had spin-off benefits, as do all my work trips when I am ‘on tour’, in the form of exploring a new city, finding interesting doors and sniffing out graffiti and street art. I cannot visit a new place without having my extended radar on full alert for opportunities to find things that interest me – some might call it marginally obsessive, and they might be right.

Nyces, Peterborough, April 2024
Nyces, Peterborough, April 2024

Nyces (Nathan Murdoch) is a bit of a celebrity in his home city, and this piece sparked a series of local newspaper and TV features about the artist, such as this one in the Peterborough Telegraph. The colourful piece is not only wonderfully painted in a patchwork of colour and geometric segments, it also has an uplifting message for the heavy traffic that passes by saying “Hello my beautiful people”. Nyces is a big graffiti fish in a small bowl.

6020. M32 roundabout J3 (575)

Kid Krishna, M32 roundabout, Bristol, April 2024
Kid Krishna, M32 roundabout, Bristol, April 2024

There are one or two artists that are on fire at the moment, and I am really struggling to keep up with their work, which vexes me a little, because I want to share it all – I’ll need to find a way of sharing moor, possibly through mini galleries or something like that. Kid Krishna, has been going nuts lately, and I must have seven or eight recent pieces in my archive, all waiting to be posted.

Kid Krishna, M32 roundabout, Bristol, April 2024
Kid Krishna, M32 roundabout, Bristol, April 2024

This is a bright and colourful piece of graffiti writing spelling out CRIE, which you can see more clearly in this one than in some of Kid Krishna’s other pieces. There is so much intricate work, and a flow that runs through the letters both in design and colour. Kid Krishna’s work always comes across as quite organic, chaotic and unplanned. I don’t know if that is the case or not, but it is also consistently good.

6019. Greenbank (118)

DFC1848, Greenbank, Bristol, April 2024
DFC1848, Greenbank, Bristol, April 2024

It is always good to find DFC1848 pieces in Bristol, and he left behind two or three pieces on his last visit, of which this is one. This character is the one that DFC1848 first used to really establish himself as a street artist, and although he has improved immeasurably in both technique and creativity, it is nice to see this old friend again.

DFC1848, Greenbank, Bristol, April 2024
DFC1848, Greenbank, Bristol, April 2024

The letters DFC from his name can be found in this tag-character The ‘D’ is in the ear, the ‘F’ is on the character’s cheek and the ‘C’ I think is represented by the mouth or possibly the eye. I must try and seek out and photograph the other pieces he painted on this visit.

Thursday doors – 16 May 2024 – Doors from Highgate, London

Doors 264 – Doors from Highgate, London, November 2023 (Part IV)

This week I am incredibly pressed for time, so this will be a very short entry. My late afternoon doorscursion back in November 2023 through my old ‘manor’, Highgate village, continues in this penultimate collection from North London.

I really wanted to talk about all the pubs in Highgate, because when I was a teenager, all the talk was that Highgate had more pubs on the main street than anywhere else in the country. I have no idea if this was true, but the following is a list of them (all within a few hundred yards), starting halfway down Highgate Hill:

  • Brendan the Navigator, used to be called The Old Crown Inn – it has obviously gone up-market.
  • The Duke’s Head
  • The Angel
  • The Prince of Wales
  • The Crown
  • The Gatehouse (featured below)
  • The Flask (featured below)
  • The Red Lion and Sun
  • The Wrestlers
  • The Bull

I hope you enjoy this week’s selection:

The Gatehouse entrance door and lamp, Highgate , London, November 2023
The Gatehouse entrance door and lamp, Highgate , London, November 2023

The Flask entrance (please use other door), Highgate , London, November 2023
The Flask entrance (please use other door), Highgate , London, November 2023

Blue door with fine columns and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023
Blue door with fine columns and portico, Highgate, London, November 2023

Triple panelled black door, Highgate, London, November 2023
Triple panelled black door, Highgate, London, November 2023

Chesterfield door and fine scalloped awning, Highgate, London, November 2023
Chesterfield door and fine scalloped awning, Highgate, London, November 2023

The Old Hall gate and door, Highgate , London, November 2023
The Old Hall gate and door, Highgate, London, November 2023

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

Thursday Doors 2024 logo

6018. M32 Cycle path (265)

Mind 49 and Wxttsart, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024
Mind 49 and Wxttsart, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024

Regular readers may be experiencing ‘déjà vu’ on seeing this fine collaboration from Wxttsart and Mind 49, as they have overwritten and incorporated elements of their last collaboration on this exact spot, and the unobservant might have missed the ‘update’ altogether.

Mind 49 and Wxttsart, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024
Mind 49 and Wxttsart, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024

The ‘old’ work is the purple and cream script by Wxttsart running through the middle of the piece which has a clever ‘ripped wallpaper’ look to it and has been augmented with fresh writing at the top and bottom of the piece that appears to spell out MYLK, (milk being Wxttsart’s moniker). The portrait, by Mind 49, is rather larger than its predecessor and beautifully executed. Mind 49 manages to paint informal portraits in a photorealistic style while retaining a softness about them, and this is a prime example. Both artists have combined (again) perfectly to create this striking collaboration piece.

Wxttsart and Mind 49, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, January 2024
Wxttsart and Mind 49, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, January 2024

6017. M32 Cycle path (264)

Minto, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024
Minto, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024

Minto keeps his work ticking over nicely with a fairly regular weekly/fortnightly contribution, and each and every piece is a cracker. Minto has a distinctive style and creative streak that makes for outstanding graffiti writing – character combinations and mash-ups.

Minto, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024
Minto, M32 Cycle path, Bristol, April 2024

This piece, on the Cycle path behind the Black Swan, looks like a bit of a quick one and features trainers, something of a theme for the artist at the moment… that and camper vans – perhaps we can read into that a profile of his lifestyle. The letters, which spell out Minto, are nicely rounded off with a yellow and orange border. So good to have him back in Bristol.

Perched

Speckled wood, St Paul's, Bristol, May 2024
Speckled wood, St Paul’s, Bristol, May 2024

.

Drunken woken dance

from here to there in sunlight

then settled in shade

.

by Scooj