You know times are hard
when you see Father Christmas
sell The Big Issue.
by Scooj
You know times are hard
when you see Father Christmas
sell The Big Issue.
by Scooj
Barry Gray and your
ondes martenot; music so
sophisticated.
by Scooj
A recent political mural just off the Gloucester Road (which eventually becomes Cheltenham Road and the Stokes Croft area) caught my eye a couple of weeks ago.

This collaboration by Feek (the main character) and 3Dom (the octopus and ‘citizens’) looks to be a poke at the right wing politics of the Tories and UKIP (whose party colours are purple and yellow).

Feek is a local Bristol artist who links up with quite a few of the artists, like Sepr, 3Dom and Soker, amongst others. Annoyingly I am struggling to find out much more about him.

Bolton Road is more of a narrow alley way, and this mural is rather difficult to photograph.
7/10
Pale civil servants
wearing tired suits and faces;
austerity’s grip.
by Scooj
I always wanted
a buckskin jacket, like the
one Roddy Frame wore.
by Scooj
Winning the global
race is irrelevant if
there are no runners.
by Scooj
Some eggs, flour and milk
and a very hot oven;
Yorkshire pudding done.
by Scooj
Alex Lucas is a breath of fresh air on the street art scene. She is a hugely talented textile designer and illustrator/animator. Her commissions are instantly recognisable and can be seen all over Bristol.

This mural, completed in October 2015, looks to be a commission by the University of Bristol Cabot Institute, and is right next to the most wonderful public conveniences.

The work features a plesiosaurus and other sea creatures from the period, one mischievously using a spray can, and tells a story of sea level rises. There is more about the collaboration on the Cabot Institute website

I love this.
8.5/10
In the shadow of
Brunel’s finest, but worthy
of such company.
by Scooj
Mistaken by many for a Banksy, this wonderful stencil is actually by JPS (Jamie Paul Scanlon) and was sprayed in 2013. Clearly it draws on Banksy’s style and subject matter, but that is no surprise as JPS credits his emergence and confidence as a street artist with a visit he made to a Banksy exhibition at Bristol Museum.

I have written several posts about the work of JPS, and he remains my favourite Bristol-based artist.

8/10