If these scrawls could talk: Tour guide Tom Sevil in The Age
Tom Sevil, Tour Guide of 2009 Fringe Festival walking tour Carlton’s lesser known street art histories, gave Age journalist Andrew Stephens a preview tour of Carlton’s remnant and more recent street art and talked about the nature of street art, especially political street art, Melbourne’s changing street art sites and “official” graffiti…
TOM Sevil is up a laneway inspecting some 1970s graffiti. He likes these places. He’s a stencil artist, graffitist and graphic designer, but also something of an archaeologist, because the work at hand here is but a fragment, partly buried beneath rich layers of history.
In white house paint applied with a brush, not an aerosol, this graffito no longer makes sense. It says: Frazer is a bottled toad in a trust – and there it ends, forever to remain a mystery, its final words obscured by years of others’ graffiti.
This fragment, a bastardisation of a phrase from Shakespeare’s Richard III, is more poetic than most of the illegible tags scrawled about the laneway. It might once have had something insightful (but misspelt) to say about Malcolm Fraser, then prime minister of Australia. But in this world of laneways and rapid-fire guerilla action, the scrawls, tags, posters and stencils are all ultimately temporary.
For Sevil, quality and longevity aside, it is all about political action.
Now THAT’S what I call an interesting take on this subject. What I would advise though is talking to other people actively involved in the scene and bring to day any different points of view and then update or create a new article for us to . Hopefully you’ll take my advice, I’m looking forward to it! Try to cover off on some graffiti characters as well if possible, they’re everywhere at the moment.