Inspiring Creativity, Literary Expression, Building Connections
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Issue 63 - Exhibition - Graffiti

LOUD, MESSY, POLITICAL, UNAPOLOGETIC, ANONYMOUS OR NOT 🔥🎨 We were looking for the rule-breakers, the wall-scribblers, the midnight painters, the poets with paint on their fingers—this one’s for you.

This issue is diving headfirst into the world of graffiti, street art, and public rebellion.

We sought art that shouts, writing that provokes, and ideas that can’t be caged - whether you’re tagging underpasses, turning walls into protest, or scribbling resistance on a napkin.

Graffiti didn’t start in the ’70s, it’s been around since humans figured out how to leave a mark.

From ancient Roman walls scrawled with political insults and crude jokes to Pompeii’s public declarations of love and shade, graffiti has always been about voice, resistance, and raw expression.

Fast-forward to 1970s New York City, where modern graffiti exploded from subway cars and crumbling brick walls.

Young people, mostly from marginalised communities, turned the city into their canvas, tagging names, claiming space, telling stories no one else would publish.

Graffiti became a way to exist loudly in a society that often ignored or erased them.

By the ’80s, graffiti was criminalised and commercialised. While police cracked down, galleries started cashing in.

Artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring bridged the street and the studio, but the core of graffiti stayed rooted in freedom, rebellion, and visibility.

Today, graffiti lives everywhere, from global art fairs to back alleys. It’s political, personal, poetic, and still illegal in most places. That’s part of its power.

It resists ownership. It speaks when nothing else can. It’s art for the people, raw, fast, and unfiltered.

So whether you're spraying protest on a boarded-up shopfront, writing love notes on lamp posts, or making zines in your bedroom, you’re part of this legacy.

This is your space to go raw, loud, political, personal, funny, furious, fearless.

No white cubes. No gallery rules. Just pure, unfiltered expression.

Artist: Boo’21 Custom Artwork

@boo21custom

Description: Bubblegum Girl x is an original design created to depict bold and vibrant colours while pushing the boundaries of what is recognised as art. This design is available as a limited edition print but is now also featured on my collaboration with Pepita coffee and Fatboy Slim on their limited edition collector coffee tins that are sold in galleries, shops and cafes in the UK.