Now...
Patrick Hedlund has a follow-up piece today at DNAinfo. He speaks with an anonymous RCN spokesperson who sounds a little huffy about Chico's mural, which graced the wall for two years.
"The bottom line is the building had illegal graffiti on it and we cleaned it up — period."
And!
But the RCN spokesman quickly dismissed the idea that Garcia might return to work on the wall.
"We're not interested in doing business with him again," he said.
Curious to see how long the building sits tag free.... this little doodle was quickly painted over....
Anyway, there were all sorts of Chico murals on this corner...
Are you telling me that RCN just figured out that there are murals here? (What about the illegal ads?) And it wasn't as if Chico just ran up here and tagged the wall in the middle of the night... this corner art took a long time to create... And this entire time RCN was unaware of the activity?
A side note, perhaps ... graffiti artist Jairo Pastoressa, accused of murdering Christopher Jusko, helped Chico create this mural ... His signature was in spray paint below Chico's name.
[Photo via DNAinfo]
i hope they tag the sh*t out of this wall now. what a jerk! this is what happens when you have so much negative energy that it blinds you - he actually thinks that the hospital blue looks better than a colorful, vibrant work of art. what men do in aorder to convict and judge eachother. insecure a-hole.
ReplyDeletesheesh!
why would they touch that? especially after two years? you're on avenue c! get over it!!! Also how long before Peels gets tagged? any bets?
ReplyDeleteI feel like these walls have sported Chico murals for as long as I can remember. And you can't do a production like this without documented permission from the property owner. The cops will roll up and ask for documentation. If you don't have it, you will be arrested. Maybe Chico gets a pass in the neighborhood because he's Chico, but still. Come on.
ReplyDeleteI don't want to jump to conclusions about the Pastoressa angle, but the timing is curious. Another possibility is that the city pressured them to remove it. The city has been on a campaign since Bloomberg signed that measure that gives the city the right to remove graffiti at street level after notifying the property owner. I believe that when a property owner gets a notice, the property owner can remove the graffiti, or tell the city that they wish for the graffiti to remain, or ask the city to remove it. If the owners does not respond at all, I believe the city will come in and remove the graffiti after a certain number of days. A lot of gates and walls on Avenue A were cleaned up of late, and I imagine this program is why. I wouldn't be surprised to hear of the city pressuring property owners to have the graffiti removed, too.
good point. there must've been some rift between them to precipitate this action.
ReplyDeleteIt's a beautiful empty canvas now. Thanks, RCN. You have just given motivation to several dozen aspiring artists. I hope you bought that paint locally, as I think you're going to need lots and lots of it.
ReplyDeleteLike WB said, there has been stuff on that wall longer than two years. It wasn't the Obama stuff, but there were other Chico pieces up there for years.
ReplyDeleteI always assumed RCN paid for those murals, especially since one of them featured their van. I also thought they covered up the Chico murals with ads because they were selling that space. I have a bad feeling the Pastoressa case is now being used to justify the white-washing of the neighborhood. Chico's murals, like them or not, identify the EV/LES as a unique neighborhood. Welcome to Orwell's 1984.
ReplyDeleteWhat corporate "spokesman" speaks anonymously? That is very fishy.
ReplyDeletethe city will warn you if you have graffiti.
ReplyDeletethey will ticket you if you do not remove the graffiti.
they will remove the graffiti and charge you.
if it is a storefront, usually the tenant (store owner) is responsible, not the building owner.
next time you see a boring painted wall it's because of the need to remove graffiti.
i do not advocate graffiti (tagging) on buildings, but big blank walls are perfect places for street art (as opposed to graffiti).
it is incorrigible how much tax payer money the bloomberg administration is spending on "cleaning up" our city which happens to be extremely beautiful as is and needs no such thing, when programs for the elderly, the poor, students etc are getting absolutely decimated. DOUBLE. SHAME. ON. YOU.
ReplyDeletercn just went from nasdaq publically traded company to privately held. new management probably had something to do with this. not bloomberg or city. if that was the case they would have said that it was and put an end to it.
ReplyDelete