Urban graffiti writing has emerged as a new form of youth resistance to authority. The author explores this through 4 years of fieldwork in Denver and research in other cities. Hip hop graffiti proliferates as youth reclaim public space restricted by urban segregation and social control. Graffiti writing disrupts this control but faces aggressive legal crackdowns. In response, writers intensify their resistance through more confrontational graffiti, continuing the cycle of authority and resistance.
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situations of risk as those encountered by the now respond with “mural death squads”
writers. This preliminary research blossomed (Kunzle, 1993; Sheesley & Bragg, 1991).
into active participant observation inside the Toronto street artists develop works that attack
underground, involving not only participation in colonialism and urge political resistance
various informal gatherings, parties, and paint- (Kummel, 1991); and, denied access to radio
buying trips, but also innumerable graffiti- or newspaper, young Palestinian militants in
writing forays in Denver’s railyards and alleys the occupied lands employ wall painting as
(see Ferrell, 1993a). The research culminated, their primary form of communication and resis-
so to speak, in my arrest and trial on charges of tance to Israeli authority (Hedges, 1994; see
“graffiti vandalism.” Ferrell, 1993b).
To develop a comparative perspective on this A particular form of graffiti writing has, dur-
intensive field research, interviews were also ing the past 20 years, also emerged out of the
conducted with legal agents, political officials, economic, political, and ethnic inequalities
and others in Denver; and sites of graffiti activ- endemic to the United States. “Hip hop” graffiti—
ity were visited in cities throughout the United the focus of this study—grew out of the Black
States and Europe. Although these visits did neighborhood cultures of New York City in
not, of course, produce the intensity of informa- the early and mid-1970s as part of a larger,
tion generated in the Denver case, they did pro- homegrown, alternative youth culture that
vide opportunities for extensive observation, included new forms of music (rap, sampling,
and in some cases, interviews with local writers scratching) and dancing (Brewer & Miller,
and those that oppose them. This comparative 1990; Castleman, 1982; Chalfant & Prigoff,
information was in turn supplemented by news- 1987; Cooper & Chalfant, 1984; Ferrell, 1993a;
paper searches and other forms of document Hager, 1984; Lachmann, 1988; Miller, 1994;
research in various U.S. cities. Stewart, 1987). This highly stylized form of
nongang graffiti writing—which includes the
“tagging” of subcultural nicknames on city
FORMS OF GRAFFITI AND walls and the creation of large illegal murals
FORMS OF RESISTANCE (“piecing”) by “crews” of writers—has today
fanned out into large and small cities across the
In a remarkable variety of world settings, kids United States and to Europe, Mexico, Central
(and others) employ particular forms of graffiti America, and elsewhere (Brett, 1991; Chalfant &
as a means of resisting particular constellations Prigoff, 1987; Riding, 1992; Rodriguez, 1994;
of legal, political, and religious authority. Rotella, 1994). Its remarkable growth also
Through an array of painted images, for exam- increasingly incorporates kids from outside
ple, young artists quite thoroughly transformed the ethnic and economic frameworks of its
the political meaning of the Berlin Wall by the originators. In Denver, for example, youths from
time of its destruction (Waldenburg, 1990); and the suburbs and from small towns regularly
in the former Soviet Union, the graffiti of urban seek out the urban hip hop graffiti underground;
youth cultures emerged as a channel of resis- and in Boston, a substantial portion of the
tance essential to the undermining of Soviet city’s hip hop graffiti is in fact now produced by
authority (Bushnell, 1990). In London, femi- crews made up of young Anglo males and based
nists, animal rights activists, and others aggres- in the suburbs (Jacobs, 1993, p. 1). In southern
sively alter offensive billboards (Posener, California, the participation of young people
1982); in Northern Ireland, young Catholics of all sorts in graffiti writing is such that the
paint wall murals that memorialize (and encour- Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department
age) resistance to British rule, and Protestants lists some 800 known graffiti crews; the Los
and the British military counter-attack through Angeles Rapid Transit District alone spends
the same medium (Rolston, 1991). Similarly, $13 million a year on clean-up, and the
Nicaraguan youth groups have for years painted California Department of Transportation budgets
street images of Sandino as a form of political up to $5 million for 1994; and authorities
resistance and dialogue; post-Sandinista officials now find hip hop (and gang) graffiti inside
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Urban Graffiti– • –35
Los Angeles City Hall, in abandoned World social and spatial control. Hip hop graffiti
War II bunkers, and even in the San Gabriel writers work almost exclusively at night, and in
Mountains (Haldane, 1993; Hudson, 1993; so doing use the cover of darkness to evade cur-
MacDuff & Valenzuela, 1993; Maxwell & few restrictions and urban surveillance. In that
Porter, 1993; Sahagun, 1992; Tobar, 1993). The they gain subcultural status from tagging over
members of a national anticrime organization as large an area as possible, they also wander
thus recently named graffiti their biggest con- widely throughout the city; mobility—and
cern (Ching, 1991, p. A1). trespass—are essential. Because further status
What, though, is the larger cultural and polit- derives from the difficulty of a tag’s placement,
ical context in which this wildly popular style of writers also regularly jump razor wire fences,
graffiti writing proliferates? And precisely what climb freeway standards or skyscrapers (“tag-
forms of authority does this graffiti writing ging the heavens”), and otherwise violate the
resist? city’s spatial sorting. And time and again, writ-
ers talk and tag in such a way as to make clear
their resistance to urban control. In Los
URBAN AUTHORITY, SOCIAL CONTROL, Angeles, 13-year-old tagger Creator (CRE8)
AND THE WRITING OF RESISTANCE reports that “most of the time I get up (tag) on
stop signs and city-owned stuff” (Quintanilla,
Contemporary graffiti writing occurs in an 1993, p. E6). In Denver, legendary graffiti
urban environment increasingly defined by the “king” Rasta 68 likewise announces that,
segregation and control of social space. As “Personally, I want to hit on city stuff, like
Schiller (1989), Soja (1989), M. Davis (1990, bridges, rather than some other person’s prop-
1992a, 1992b), Sorkin (1992), S. Davis (1992), erty. They build the boringest crap around, so
Guterson (1993) and others have shown, major why not beautify it?” (Will, 1994, January 2,
U.S. cities today are systematically fractured p. 13). And in Boston, local writer Relm empha-
by ethnic, class, and consumer segregation— sizes in a newspaper interview that he doesn’t
segregation built into skyscrapers and skyways, bomb (tag) individuals, cars, or houses, but only
freeways and transit routes, walled residential large businesses, public buildings, and other
enclaves and secured shopping malls, private urban symbols of the system he opposes
streets and parks. The caretakers of these physi- (Jacobs, 1993, p. 28).
cally segregated cities control (or destroy) pub- If, as alluded to earlier, authority and resis-
lic space and public communities through tance dance together, the next moment in this
privatization and physical insulation, and they tango of urban control and graffiti writing is not
employ extensive public and private police difficult to anticipate: The same legal structures,
power and sophisticated control technologies to policing powers, and technological safeguards
enforce their spatial restrictions. Young people that regulate the city at large are in turn brought
who wish to work or wander in these environ- down on graffiti writers, and with a vengeance.
ments face, in addition to these spatial controls, The array of control technologies and tech-
an increasingly aggressive criminalization of niques aligned against graffiti writing is itself
their activities by local and state authorities. In impressive. Today, legal authorities and corpo-
recent years, city after city has enacted strict rate sponsors in Los Angeles, San Bernardino,
curfews and a multitude of ordinances against CA, New York, Denver, Las Vegas, Fort Worth,
loud music, car cruising, and other youthful and other cities create police and citizen surveil-
pleasures (Ferrell, 1993a; LeDue, 1992; Reuter, lance teams armed with two-way radios, home
1994b). In negotiating the contemporary city, video cameras, remote control infrared video
kids are largely walled in and boxed out. cameras, and night-vision goggles; send out
The writing of hip hop graffiti disrupts this antigraffiti helicopter patrols; secure freeway
orderly latticework of authority, reclaims public signs and bridges with razor wire and commer-
space for at least some of those systematically cial buildings with special graffiti-resistant
excluded from it, and thus resists the confine- coatings; and arrange toll-free telephone hot-
ment of kids and others within structures of lines for watchful residents and motorists with
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36– • –PROPERTY CRIMES
cellular phones (Bennet, 1992; Ching, 1991; regulate or ban the sale of spray paint and
Colvin, 1993b; Fried, 1992; Rainey, 1993; “2 markers to minors and others and that force
teens,” 1991; Valenzuela, 1993; “Writing on the businesses to clean graffiti from their buildings
Wall,” 1993). They also use U.S. Marines in (“Building Owners,” 1994; Fong, 1992; Hanley,
antigraffiti operations, deploy undercover tran- 1992; Hynes, 1993; Smith, 1994; Tobar, 1993).
sit and police officers in the guise of high school And in Denver, Los Angeles, and other cities,
students and journalists, stake out popular aggressively entrepreneurial vigilantes, high
graffiti-writing areas, and set up sophisticated school “bounty hunters,” and others now
sting operations to apprehend graffiti writers receive thousands of dollars in cash awards for
and stop those who sell spray paint to them turning in writers (Ferrell, 1993a; Reuter,
(“Albuquerque Police,” 1992; Baker, 1991; 1994a; Schwada & Sahagun, 1992).
Carr, 1993; Henderson, 1994; “Lure of Fame,” Graffiti writers, of course, counterpunch with
1994; Molloy & Labahn, 1993; National new forms of resistance and increased militancy
Graffiti Information Network, 1990; “Sting,” of their own. In the early years of hip hop graf-
1991; “Teaching Teen,” 1994). fiti, legendary New York City writer Lady Pink
These sorts of physical control are backed by said, “Graffiti means ‘I’m here.’ . . . They want
growing militancy among antigraffiti activists to snub us, but they can’t” (Mizrahi, 1981,
and by increasingly severe legal sanctions. p. 20), and contemporary writers facing the full
New York’s new police commissioner targets force of urban authority echo this sentiment. An
graffiti and other “quality of life” crimes; Los 18-year-old Los Angeles tagger arrested six
Angeles’s mayor Richard Riordan campaigns times says, “They want to wipe us out. But graf-
aggressively against graffiti and now recom- fiti will never die” (Colvin, 1993a, p. B4); and a
mends boot camps as punishment for writers; Compton tagger tells city officials, “You can
another Los Angeles mayoral candidate sug- lock me up, but you’re not going to arrest all of
gests “chop[ping] a few fingers off” (Simon, us. How are you guys going to make us stop?
1993, July 9, p. B3); and Denver’s mayor You don’t know how” (Tobar, 1993, p. B3). To
deflects a recall campaign with a vitriolic anti- prove their point, writers decorate, and dese-
graffiti campaign of his own (Ferrell, 1993a; crate, the very control structures in which they
“These Guys,” 1994). A California assembly- are caught. Kids involved in a city work pro-
man introduces a bill requiring that kids con- gram at Los Angeles City Hall reach for “the
victed of writing graffiti be publicly paddled; heavens” by tagging the top floor of the city hall
and in St. Louis, an alderman proposes public tower (Sahagun, 1992). In response to the
caning (Bailey, 1994; Gillam, 1994; Henderson, Denver mayor’s antigraffiti campaign, Voodoo
1994). Other antigraffiti campaigners in Los paints a “Recall” piece and poem along the bike
Angeles and Denver cheer suggestions of lop- path where the mayor jogs. A Boston writer on
ping off hands, and speak of “hanging, shooting, trial for graffiti affixes tagged stickers—an
and castrating” (Colvin, 1993a, p. B4) and pub- increasingly popular form of pre-fabricated
licly spray-painting writers’ genitals (Kreck, tagging—throughout the courthouse and,
1993; Martin, 1992). remarkably, on the back of the prosecutor’s
In this climate, southern California authori- legal pad (Jacobs, 1993). And Chaka—southern
ties arrest the parents and grandparents of California’s most notorious and prolific
alleged writers on charges of contributing to the tagger—is arrested for tagging a courthouse
delinquency of minors and sue or otherwise bill elevator while visiting the probation officer
other parents for tens of thousands of dollars in supervising his previous conviction for tagging
damages (Goldman, 1993; Lozano, 1994; (MacDuff & Valenzuela, 1993; Martin, 1992).
MacDuff & Valenzuela, 1993; Valenzuela, To avoid later detection, writers in Las
1993). In Los Angeles, writers themselves now Vegas, Denver, and other cities also increas-
face multiple $1,000 civil fines in addition to ingly wear latex gloves when they tag or piece
criminal penalties of $50,000 and 1 year in jail and take other practical measures to avoid
(Simon, 1993, July 9). Business owners in cities apprehension. But for writers, the most remark-
around the country confront statutes that able and insidious form of resistance to
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Urban Graffiti– • –37
increased repression is not a practical measure wont to put it, a “war of the walls”; in doing
but a pleasurable response. This is the adrenalin graffiti, writers challenge the “aesthetics of
rush. Writers consistently report to me and to authority” (Ferrell, 1993a, pp. 178–186) that
others that their experience of tagging and piec- govern the city, invent new visual conventions,
ing is defined by the incandescent excitement, and give lie by their tags and pieces to the vision
the adrenalin rush, that results from creating of a city under firm political control. But this
their art in a dangerous and illegal environ- war of the walls is, more profoundly, a war of
ment—and that heightened legal and police the worlds. For graffiti writing not only con-
pressure therefore heightens this adrenalin rush fronts and resists an urban environment of frac-
as well. In Los Angeles, Creator says, “I bomb tured communities and segregated spaces; it
because I like the chase, the getting up [tagging] actively constructs alternatives to these arrange-
without getting caught. . . . Catch me if you ments as well.
can” (Quintanilla, 1993, p. E1); and in San
Bernardino, an ex-tagger adds, “I miss the rush.
It’s a rush because you’re taking a chance of RESISTANCE, IDENTITY, AND ALTERNATIVE
getting caught. You do it to see if you can get ARRANGEMENTS (GRAFFITO ERGO SUM)
away with it. It’s like an addiction—you can’t
stop” (MacDuff & Valenzuela, 1993, p. A11). The writing of graffiti is an inherently collective
Well-known Denver writers like Z13, Rasta 68, activity. Although writers tag and piece against
Eoosh, and Voodoo also speak regularly of “that the controls of the city, they also tag and piece
rush” one gets from graffiti, its links to illegal- for one another, and in so doing build alterna-
ity, and the ways in which increased police pres- tive structures of meaning and status. Tagging
sure means, for them, increased excitement; as goes on as a collective conversation among
Voodoo says, with regard to piecing, “Right writers, a process of symbolic interaction by
before you hit the wall, you get that rush. And which writers challenge, cajole, and surprise
right when you hit the wall, you know that one another. Like his counterparts in cities
you’re breaking the law, and that gives that throughout the United States, Los Angeles
extra adrenalin flow” (Ferrell, 1993a, p. 82). A writer Rival emphasizes that he tags for the
Denver street artist thus concludes, “Doing graf- respect of “other taggers. Who cares about
fiti is a real adrenalin rush. That provides a lot adults?” (Glionna, 1993, p. B4). Writers also
of the pull and draw to the taggers. The city piece primarily for one another. Writers’ pieces
doesn’t understand that the more they publicize are executed and evaluated within elaborate
the crackdown, the more active the taggers will subcultural conventions of color, proportion,
become” (Ferrell, 1993a, p. 148). A Las Vegas and design; and although writers may hope that
“hip hop shop” owner summarizes the situation their pieces will be seen by the public, they can
succinctly: “The harder the city comes down on be certain that they will be seen and judged by
them, the more fun it is for them” (“Writing on other writers. In this sense, tagging and piecing
the Wall,” 1993, p. 4C). create an alternative system of public communi-
As the adrenalin rush shows, graffiti writers cation for kids who otherwise have little access
resist the pressure brought against them not only to avenues of urban information. And in this
by fighting it, but by using it for their own pur- sense, like their Palestinian counterparts across
poses and by transforming political pressure the Atlantic, U.S. graffiti writers paint a com-
into personal and collective pleasure. Here plex system of subterranean signs directly onto
again we see the dance of authority and resis- the walls of cities that otherwise would render
tance and the strange steps that it follows—in them invisible.
this case, the authorities’ role in amplifying the In tagging and piecing for one another, writ-
meaning and intensity of the very activity they ers also construct alternative systems of status
wish to suppress. In this ongoing interplay, we and identity. Both for those kids increasingly
also begin to see the magnitude of the battle shut out of traditional channels of achievement
between graffiti writers and urban authorities. and for those who, through ethnicity or educa-
This battle is certainly, as headline writers are tion, retain some modicum of choice, graffiti
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38– • –PROPERTY CRIMES
writing provides a powerful alternative process says, Syndicate is “ten people with ten brains
for shaping personal identity and gaining social and twenty eyes to watch out for opposing
status. Black, Latino, and Anglo boys in the authority or enemy and to get down with the
southern California graffiti crew TIKs, for brain waves thrown down on the wall” (Ferrell,
example, have quit high school chess teams and 1993a, p. 36).
spurned advanced placement classes to devote Significantly, the alternative communities
as much time as possible to graffiti. The result is that writers create often violate the city’s every-
not only status among other writers, but invita- day ethnic segregation by incorporating kids of
tions to parties and relationships with girls who various ethnic backgrounds; as seen previously,
also write; as one TIK says, “without graffiti, southern California’s TIK crew is multiethnic,
what do I got?” (Glionna, 1993, p. B4). A young and Denver crews are often made up of both
female tagger from East L.A. likewise points Anglo and Latino kids. These crews also provide
out, “You know how rich people have their an important, street-level alternative to gangs
names on their houses or something? Well, tag- and gang membership. Writer after writer in
ging is like that. People see your name. . . . It Denver, Los Angeles, and elsewhere reports that
makes people feel good” (Diaz, 1992, p. B5). The graffiti writing and crew membership led him or
power of these alternative systems of status and her away from gang identity and activity. The
identity can be seen in the intensity with which members of Denver’s largely Latino NC (No
writers do graffiti. Rasta 68 claims that “I eat, Claims) crew emphasize that hip hop culture
sleep, and breathe graffiti” (Will, 1994, p. 12); generally, and hip hop graffiti writing specifi-
Chaka not only tags the courthouse, but maps cally, exist for them as lived alternatives to par-
locations and tags for 7 hours each night; writers ticipation in Latino street gangs. And as the
jump razor wire and climb billboards to earn sta- members of FBI say, “A lot of people want to
tus by “tagging the heavens”; and, in southern gang-bang, but we focus on just being together
California, businesses are tagged, repainted, and as one, trying to keep out of trouble. . . . We
tagged again four times in a day (MacDuff & aren’t hoodlums—these guys were like brothers.
Valenzuela, 1993; Quintanilla, 1993). We all care for each other. Many of us don’t get
As graffiti writing shapes youthful identities, any support from our parents” (Nazario &
it also builds alternative communities. The Murphy, 1993, pp. B1, B4; see Donnan &
crews to which writers belong not only tag and Alexander, 1992; Hubler, 1993; Martin, 1992).
piece together, but form deep social bonds as These small communities of writers also con-
their members share time and resources, con- tribute to the larger communities of which they
struct collective artistic orientations, and defend are a part. In Denver, writers have painted
one another from enemies real and imagined. In pieces commenting on local politics, war, and
Los Angeles, Creator notes that, “It’s like a AIDS, and have been commissioned to paint
family to belong to a crew. They watch your drug awareness and “stay in school” murals.
back, you watch theirs. You kick it everyday And in New York City, drug dealers and others
with them. . . . You get friendship, love, sup- pay writers to paint large “Rest In Peaces”—
plies, everything” (Quintanilla, 1993, p. E1). murals that commemorate those who have died
Similarly, the 80 or so kids who belong to the on the streets (Marriott, 1993; Sanchez, 1993).
FBI crew in southern California emphasize the Clearly, graffiti writers and crews serve as the
“sense of family the crew has brought to tag- folk artists of urban communities; day-to-day
gers’ lives” (Nazario & Murphy, 1993, p. B1) chroniclers of urban life and death, they repre-
and mourn the deaths of seven crew members in sent the worlds they help create. As Lady Pink
a car crash; as one tagger says, “It was family, says, in recalling the early years of hip hop graf-
love, tagging, everything” (Nazario & Murphy, fiti, “We were like sixties radicals, rebelling
1993, p. B4). In Denver, crews like Syndicate against the system. I was dodging bullets in the
hold regular “art sessions” to work on collective service of folk art, bringing art to the people”
designs, share the “piecebooks” in which they (Siegel, 1993, p. 68).
draw their designs, and often pool their talents As the “Rest in Peaces” begin to show, graf-
to work on large, elaborate pieces. As Rasta 68 fiti also contributes to alternative economic
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Urban Graffiti– • –39
arrangements and underground economies. Hip city and confine kids and others to prearranged
hop graffiti shops in Denver, Los Angeles, Las patterns of social isolation. When these violations
Vegas, and elsewhere now sell magazines, precipitate further controls, graffiti writers
videos, spray tips, markers—and lines of cloth- counterattack, not only with directly confronta-
ing designed and produced by writers (Sipchen, tional styles of writing but with a shared “adren-
1993; Will, 1994; “Writing on the Wall,” alin rush” that transforms legal pressure into
1993). In New York, Los Angeles, and Denver, illicit pleasure. And, as graffiti writers partici-
writers pass out business cards to those who pate in this dance of urban control and resis-
admire their pieces, execute commissioned tance, they at the same time construct elegantly
murals for home and shop owners, and even alternative arrangements that shape both indi-
parlay exposure in antigraffiti mural painting vidual identities and communities of support
programs into commissioned art work and meaning.
(Horovitz, 1992; Marriott, 1993; Pool, 1992). The various forms of resistance embedded in
Increasingly, graffiti writing provides for top youthful graffiti writing in turn remind us of the
writers some hope of economic survival and sort of approach scholars might productively
economic self-determination in an environment take toward larger issues of youth and resis-
that alternates unemployment with minimum tance. Neither dreamy romanticism nor theoret-
wage work. It also creates for writers avenues ical rigidity will suffice; both distance us from
of artistic development and entrepreneurship the subjects of our study, leave us dependent on
outside the restricted circles of gallery art secondhand stereotypes, and ultimately demean
(Ferrell, 1993a). kids’ actions and identities. Carefully situating
As they piece and tag, then, graffiti writers our research in young people’s daily lives, on
not only alter the look of the city and resist its the other hand, broadens our scope to include
structures of authority, but at the same time cre- the many and varied manifestations of authority
ate elaborate urban alternatives. Engaging in and resistance entangled there and pushes us to
what anarcho-syndicalists of the early 20th cen- pay attention to the particular meanings of
tury called “direct action,” and punks of the authority and resistance in the everyday, collec-
later 20th century dubbed “D.I.Y.” (do it your- tive experience of youth. In employing this
self), graffiti writers invent out of their own methodology of attentiveness, we are likely to
activities alternative systems of aesthetics, rep- find in kids’ lives forms of resistance far more
resentation, identity, and meaning. In a world of remarkable than those that romanticism imag-
dead-end jobs and declining career opportuni- ines or rigidity imposes—forms of resistance
ties, they construct new channels for achieving that both confront structures of authority and
status and earning money. In cities partitioned begin to build alternatives in and around them.
by ethnicity and social class, they assemble new And like graffiti writing, these various moments
lines of transurban communication and build of youthful resistance—too often dismissed as
new communities that bridge ethnic and class mindlessly destructive—in fact merit our atten-
divisions. As they wander the city, they invent tion not only for undermining contemporary
new forms of social organization inside the all- social arrangements but for imagining new ones
too-orderly rubble of the old. as well. The words of the Russian anarchist
Michael Bakunin echo in the everyday lives of
young people, and off the graffiti-covered walls
YOUTH AND RESISTANCE of the contemporary city: “The passion for
destruction is a creative passion, too” (Lehning,
A careful examination of hip hop graffiti writ- 1974, p. 58).
ing begins to reveal the many ways in which
young graffiti writers resist the structures of
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