From Voice ~ Topics: illustration, interviews
Interview with Shepard Fairey: Still Obeying After all These Years
Heller: It has been fifteen years since Obey The Giant hit the radar screens and catapulted you into both design notoriety and entrepreneurial activity. Could you have imagined its impact when you began?
Fairey: In 1989 when I first began the Obey Giant campaign, which was originally just a sticker that said "Andre the Giant has a Posse", I thought it would only be a few weeks of mischief. At first I was only thinking about the response from my clique of art school and skateboard friends. The fact that a larger segment of the public would not only notice, but investigate, the unexplained appearance of the stickers was something I had not contemplated. When I started to see reactions and consider the sociological forces at work surrounding the use of public space and the insertion of a very eye-catching but ambiguous image, I began to think there was the potential to create a phenomenon. At the time I thought about all this in purely hypothetical terms because I did not think I had the resources to create the kind of image saturation it would require to make it a reality anywhere other than Providence, Rhode Island. I became obsessed with the idea of spreading the image further and was surprised by how many people were willing to spread the stickers to other cities based on the template established in Providence or an explanation of the concept. I think a lot of people liked the idea of "fucking with the program" in a society dominated by corporate imagery. The stickers were a rebellious wrench in the spokes, a disruption of the semiotics of consumption. Eventually, five years or so in, the stickers spread enough for national media to notice. I considered the coup successful at that point. Now that I make posters and t-shirts that are for sale some people consider the entire project invalidated. I don't think a lot of people consider that it costs a lot of money to produce posters and stickers that are sacrificed to the street.
Heller: Obviously, RISD, where you went to art school, was a heady place and doubtless influenced your version of culture-jamming, But were you politically motivated when you started producing "Obey?" Did you believe this would have political resonance?
Fairey: Actually, I did not look at Obey Giant as political at all at first. In college I had been producing some work based on the concepts of abuse of authority, racism, and first amendment rights. Though these works were cathartic, I realized the actual result was limited to me achieving greater status in the liberal club I was already a member of. I saw the political angle for Obey Giant as "the medium is the message". When something is illegally placed in the public right-of-way the very act itself makes it political. My hope was that in questioning what Obey Giant was about, the viewer would then begin to question all the images they were confronted with. I was very hesitant to make any literal political statements with my images because I felt the mystery of the project elicited a variety of honest reactions that were a reflection of the viewers’ personality in the same spirit as a Rorschach test. I also did and do not feel I have all the answers... though I do have opinions. I want people to question everything.
Heller: Part of the allure of "Obey" has been its ambiguity. There is an Orwellian quality in this big brother figure that is contrasted by the inherent humor in the goofy Andre visage. Do you feel that such ambiguity has served you well?
Fairey: Yes I do feel that the ambiguity of Obey has served me well. To get back to what I was saying before, all my didactic slogans and left wing rhetoric would only be embraced by people who shared the same opinion, and be instantly rejected by anyone who saw it as issued by the enemy. Obey seemed to get under people's skin because they didn't know what to make of it. This ambiguity promoted a debate about the intent of Obey and got a lot of issues out on the table that people would not have discussed if they were able to classify and immediately ignore it. I think the Obey icon image finds a balance between goofy and creepy, humorous and monolithic. I consider the image the counter-culture Big Brother. I'd like to think of it as a sign or symbol that people are watching Big Brother as well. I've had people ranging from anarchists to the president of the National Reserve Bank embrace my work and I think the more diverse the audience is, the more potential for interesting dialogue there is.
Heller: Why did you become an active (and illegal) wild posterer?
Fairey: I became active as a street artist because I felt public space was the only option for free speech and expression without bureaucracy. The internet was not developed at the time I started and though it does level the playing field for some things, it still filters out those who do not own a computer. I also did not really consider what I was doing art and considered the art galleries too elitist anyway. I also found the whole idea that you could be arrested for stickering or postering as something I wanted to rebel against. In my opinion the taxpayers are the bosses of the govt. I'm a taxpayer... why can't I use public space for my imagery when corporations can use it for theirs? I was baffled by the idea that companies could stick thousands of images in front of people as long as they were paid ads but that I could not put my work in the street without being told that it is an eyesore or creates a glut. For the most part I think the merchants and the city governments don't want the public to realize there can be other images coexisting with advertising. This is the exact example I'm trying to provide.
Heller: How do you determine what to attack with your posters and stickers, and on what venues they will appear (or deface)?
Fairey: I use common sense. As a taxpayer I feel that public property is fair game as long as I'm not covering text on street signs. I use the backs of signs, electrical boxes, and crosswalk boxes. I try to be as respectful to private property as possible. I mostly only hit private property if it is abandoned or boarded up. If a building has a lot of graffiti on it already then I might hit it. Unfortunately the cities are usually more aggressive about prosecuting art on public property than private which often pushes graffiti artists to hit things like store fronts. I don't approve of this but I understand why many artists have been pushed in this direction. My opinion about street art is the same as free speech...I'd rather hear or see the occasional thing I was offended by than not have the right to express myself in a way that others might find offensive. I have experienced that there is a silent majority of people who are more open-minded about street art than public policy would suggest.
Heller: Speaking of ambiguity, how do you reconcile your business, which counts some big corporations as clients, with your wild snipping? Is this the Robin Hood effect?
Fairey: Yes, I would consider my inside/outside strategy toward corporations somewhat of a Robin Hood effect... I use their money, which becomes my money, to produce stickers, posters, stencils, etc. This strategy was however, the result of my acceptance of the reality of things. One of the most jarring realizations this project has brought about for me is the complete inevitability of supply and demand economics in a capitalist society. I will explain, but I must also emphasize that I believe in capitalism with some checks to chill out the evil greedy element. Capitalism is a way for hard work to yield rewards. When I first started Obey Giant I owned a screen-printing shop and used that equipment to produce my own work as well as doing work for paying customers. Printing is a difficult business and I got frustrated with it. I work as a graphic designer these days which came about because the work I was putting on the street created enough of a buzz that companies began to feel it would resonate enough to be used for marketing. I had created a demand for my style of work that meant that if it was not supplied to the corporations by me, then it would be supplied by other hungry designers. I decided that in doing graphic design I could keep my design skills honed and make enough money to pump even more Obey Giant materials out in public, which I consider truly subversive. This method of financing my campaign also keeps me from having the content of Obey dictated by fine art market forces. Plus, I have been able to convince some of the corporations to invest in the cultures that try to exploit, helping to create a more symbiotic relationship between the creators and harvesters of culture. It's not an easy game but I'm making the best of life without a trust fund.
Heller: As one weaned during the sixties (which makes me a weanie), I have been long sensitive to the notion of "selling out" and of "being co-opted" by profiteers. By running your own business (agency) you control how much you're being co-opted, but for you what is definition – or line in the sand - of selling out?
Fairey: To me selling out is doing things purely for the money without concern for the consequences to integrity. Let's face it though, money is freedom. For some it is freedom to buy cocaine and cars... for me, my design earnings give me freedom to produce my propaganda work and travel to other cities to put it up. It is also gives me freedom to keep an art gallery that is never profitable open. People often accuse anyone who does not fulfill their image of fine artist as suffering martyr of being a sell-out. After 10 arrests and having been physically assaulted by the cops and deprived of my insulin on several occasions (I'm diabetic), I can tell you that it is very possible to make money and be a suffering martyr!
Heller: I know you put your body where your work is and have been busted by police in a few cities for your contraband activities. This is admirable, but I have to ask is it worth it? In other words, do you feel that there is a quantifiable result? And if so, what is that?
Fairey: To get back to the martyrdom issue, I spend the money and take the risks I do because I want to and I don't feel that anyone owes me anything. I do feel sorry for myself when I'm sitting in jail but overall I feel it is all very worth it. I feel it is worth it because of the positive feedback I have received from people. Many people feel powerless and my goal is to show that one person can have an effect on things even with limited resources. Whether this manifests itself with people in the form of street art or a magazine or a band, I'm hoping to encourage D.I.Y (do it yourself) ethics. These things are hard to quantify until they pass the tipping point... but I've seen satisfying results.
Heller: So, after so much "brand" exposure for "Obey" do you feel it still has legs, or has it run its course? Is it time for other approaches or does it still get results?
Fairey: I do still think Obey has legs but the longer it is out there and the more popular it gets, the more it becomes absorbed into the dominant paradigm even if it is fighting the whole way. In some ways Obey can run parallel to the system utilizing aspects and subverting others but eventually it's familiarity will render it impotent... it will become wallpaper. There are examples of how this has already been demonstrated. I was regarded as a vandal when I was living in Providence but I was recently asked to be in a museum show of "Rhode Island treasures". People have also told me how they felt comforted by signs of subculture when they traveled to a conservative place and saw my stickers existing there. 15 years is enough time to develop a solid case study which is what I intend my "15 years of Obey Giant" book that is in the works to be. The book will be as much a sociology or anthropology piece as an art book. Obey has a life of its own at this point and though I do want to continue with it, I also feel like working on some new stuff that will afford me the anonymity which allowed me to move freely and discover a lot through Obey Giant in the first place. So don't ask about specifics because it’s all top-secret.
Heller: Currently you are producing more decidedly overt political messages. Is the coming election and the increasingly mucked up war in Iraq your inspiration. Can "Obey," which certainly sounds like it could be the current administration's mantra, function in this environment. Or have you decided that a more polemical route is a better strategy?
Fairey: I actually have always thought that the command to "obey" would cause people to do the exact opposite or at least question obedience. A lot of my work even before the Bush administration has dealt with dictators and the consequences of the public giving them their obedience. The funny thing is that the people who have reacted most violently towards the dictator images are the people most like them... it's like their cover has been blown or something. Most people seem to intuitively get that my project involves a lot of questioning authority. The reason that I have become more direct and overtly political is that I feel we are in a time of a crisis and there is no time to be wasted allowing people to have epiphanies about authority, conspicuous consumption, and the control of public space at the rate that best suits them. I hate behaving like a paternalist but I feel it is my only choice right now. I have an audience that listens to me already and plenty of other people to reach, who for the sake of the future of the planet, I hope I can convince not to elect Bush. I acknowledge this is a short-term solution and my goal is to get people to scrutinize things so in the future people like Bush could not thrive because people would not fall for their fear tactics. I will probably continue to make posters like "More Militerry less Skools" because that is not attacking anyone specific but a mentality. Attacking individuals is playing catch-up. I'm more into preventative medicine. The two party system is flawed but then again, I don't know how to fix the country. I think the constitution has some good ideas in it and questioning creative reinterpretation of it could be a good place to start... we've got some Animal Farm meets 1984 shenanigans going on right now.
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Fairey says:
"In some ways Obey can run parallel to the system utilizing aspects and subverting others but eventually it's familiarity will render it impotent... it will become wallpaper. There are examples of how this has already been demonstrated. I was regarded as a vandal when I was living in Providence but I was recently asked to be in a museum show of "Rhode Island treasures"."
Thanks for being honest about this. The fact is virtually everything that can be is commercialized. What Tom Wolfe called "radical chic" is ongoing. The fact the Fairey didn't start off "radical" and then became political, after-the-fact, and is now contributing to a cool commercial style - whether he wants to or not - is evidence that a designer has got to really delve into deeply offensive areas to retain any semblance of integrity, otherwise his design-statements are eaten whole by the commercial beast. -
Fairey uses the visual rhetoric of agit-prop well. But I've always had trouble understanding the political goal (and message) of his work. Okay, it is not a leap to interpret "obey the giant" as a declaration against the "giant" corporations that control our intake of media and commerce, or big government that controls our intake of truth. BUT is there more than that? Can graphics of this kind, ironic pictures and slogans (and I include Barbara Kruger and Robbie Conal), provide anything more than irony as a kind of salve for the world's woes?
I ultimately get more facts on which to base my personal political opinion from columnists like Paul Krugman and filmmakers like Roger Moore than I do from poster/sticker propaganda. I realize that the goal of such stuff is not to give information, but I'm just not sure what the short- or long-term effect of this type of graphic art is designed to be. Perhaps there are others out there who either understand it better or have similar qualms. -
It can be hard to avoid doing one of two things, either gaining popularity to be appropriated by the very institutions or segments of society that you seek to comment on, or to have your message only preach to the converted. At that point, you may have your message completely adopted by the group with which you align with, but not be heard by the group you may wish to influence.
If your goal is to galvanize your group, then maybe that's okay - you've reached your 'target audience'. If your goal is to reach people to try to convince them of something you believe and they may not believe/be aware of, then your message must be designed to do more than be accepted by those that already think like you. -
Great discussion. It reminds me of Tibor Kalman's response to designing the visual environment of Time Square. Rather than attempting to control the existing chaos, he decided to amplify it. The Time Square "brand" was not typified by any single element but by a combination of elements.
The main message (according to me and not Fairey) of the Giant is not "resist" so much as it is "more!" More for more's sake. If you're in to that, then the Giant may actually make you want to consume. If you're not, it reminds you of what you are already consuming.
To me, the power of the Giant is the fact that it blends in rather well with the visual landscape and, to the intiated, reminds us that what we are looking at is a visual landscape designed to coerce us into reacting. Rather than a big middle finger, it seems more like the bell of a monk. A big ugly monk. -
Ben makes good points. I attended the AIGA Hell Yes evening last night. It was great to have all that politically activated energy in the room, but I realized that even those on TV and Radio (Daily Show and Air America) are limited by the audiences they choose to appeal to. The Daily Show may be a bit broader in its appeal, but if I were right wing or conservative I wouldn't be a regular viewer (not as long as I had Fox News to keep me warm).
Anyway, the question that wasn't answered was how to reach the 20% or more undecided? How do we do that with our design and our rhetoric (we meaning those with left leanings)? When Tom Tomorrow on the panel asked the audience if there was anyone still undecided about who they would vote for only one woman raised her hand - she said that the panel members (including Milton Glaser) did not convince her where her vote should be cast.
Wow, if such a powerful evening (of Bush Bashing) couldn't make a dent what will? Andre? Is his enigmatic quality the weapon that will break through?
Steve Heller showed, among other election design things, the famous LBJ Daisy commercial (shown only once). Even last night it would convinced me to vote for LBJ (I was a baby back then) and not Goldwater. Has there been a tool as powerful as that in this age? Anyone? -
i believe it would be a very correct idea to let S. Fairey be ignored, let him not be interviewed, let his opinion not matter.
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Jellybean's comment would have more pertinence if he said why. I don't believe that many pundits have much to say, but the fact is, they do say it anyway. So to make such a statement does not serve the conversation.
Personally, I like what Fairey says, I only question whether his workhas the weight to change (or even subvert) thinking. If it is totally ineffectual or if, as John Hockenberry at Hell Yes implied, that our political process is reduced to trivial pursuits (like goofy enigmatic posters), then we're in trouble.
But I think postering serves a purpose, if only to get people worked up. Fairey's latest poster reminds me how worked up I am these days. -
Do I detect the sulpher whiff of sarcasm from the Bean?
Rereading the interview, it strikes me that Fairey may be more interesting than he realizes. He set out to do a poster campaign to raise awareness of the politics of consumption and ended up creating a consumable. The Bolshie "power to the people" rhetoric that Fairey and Heller focus on misses the point (as does Poyner's analysis in his book Obey the Giant). What still feels fresh about the Giant is not a revolutionary message (for which, I think, it is a pretty poor vehicle), but rather the irony that this malevolent, brooding image that is meant to raise awareness of the machinations of consumer society, instead is just a malevolent brooding image that raises awareness only of itself. It is just a picture of a mean looking guy. I love it for its uselessness. It's failure as a vehicle is its success as an icon. -
Ben's comment is very existential. Meaningless has meaning and is meaningful to those who cannot find meaning in meaning. But I agree to the extent that what he's created has various interpretations attached to it. I heard Paul Rand once say that he did a job and then made up all sorts of excuses why it was meaningful. I think the "bolshie" stuff could be real, but perhaps its the overlay that is ultimately put on something that was accidental.
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Dig it DesignBoy! Dig it!
But what I meant is not so much that the image can be interepreted in different ways, but that the Giant doesn't mean anything unless you already know what it means (which goes back to your early comment about preaching to the converted.) Compared to the Drop Bush Not Bombs poster, the Giant is utterly enigmantic. And so it endures. -
I guess I am rethinking my previous comment (I was so naive back then). The Giant does have some have some affect (or is it effect?) but it is purely atmospheric. A malevolent ambiance.
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This will be my final word, so others can join in (I hope).
You are correct its enigmatic nature provides its endurance, although it could just as easily be its downfall. It must be connected to a narrative to have depth. Otherwise, it will be used and abused by anyone who decides its a cool thing. The genius of Fairey is that he took ownership of Andre, but by making it enigmatic he is allowing it to be co-opted by others. who may use if for, dare I say, evil. -
It's seems none of you have played/play the game. Obey isn't about anything but Shepard Fairey.
All he set out to do was impress his friends, his crew so to speak. There is undoubted personal motivation/significance, but I highly doubt its beginnings are based with the knowledge/theory/methodlogy of advertising in mind. It only fits here (Aiga, design, etc) because it's a well executed aesthetic. I don't think the originals would've had hardly the impact of plain appeal, had the image not been tweaked into posterization shiek. If you asked anyone in 94 why they were ripping down his posters for their bedroom walls, they said "it looks cool."
Anyhow, Shepard has stuck with his phenomenolgy bit, which I beleive to be the most truthful explanation of his street work. The fact he still puts in work this far into the game is pretty crazy, given the possible consequences to his livelihood, a la B.McGee, which is a very similar situation.
Graffiti is egocentric by nature, and anyone who calls Shepard a sell-out is jealous of the perfect game he's played.
We've all helped him get to where he's at.
Obey your thirst! -
One thing that has turned me off to Fairey's work is his recent undertakings. I was recently flipping through a magazine one I cannot recall and I saw a billboard splash, with a large dollar bill on it. I did a double take and there was the infamous portrait of Andre's face smack dead in the middle. The dichotomy here is ridiculous; even if it was a humorous attempt, to take a stab at corporate America or consumer America. Obey has become that. I see it being sold everywhere from local boutiques to Hot Topic (the punk rock gap), it’s become what it was once fighting to disrupt. Phenomenology is dead. We have now begun to question the source that has made us question everything around us. I fail to see how Obey being apart of the big corporate game is helping to disrupt it. To me it’s been thrown into the mix and has become a house hold name.
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AIGA encourages thoughtful, responsible discourse. Please add comments judiciously, and refrain from maligning any individual, institution or body of work.
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Shepard Fairey now has OBEY products made by sweatshop workers in China. He's one subversive guy.
I'm sure the workers are in on the joke..
don't believe the " I saw the factory and it's o.k." excuse on his website either....they all say that.
He's a marketer with nothing to contribute.
http://www.sweatshops.org / -
jeeez guys,..it IS all about fun,..right??! you all sound so serious,..jealous???..hmmm,..maybe. he has become wealthy from all this no doubt,..and that makes some folks a tad bit upset,..yet i was in R.I. when it all started and i enjoy keeping the madness going in little cities that have little to no idea about OBEY or stickering as art at all,let alone the total lack of any real street art besides just some goof with a spray-can writing "f-shizzle my nizzle"...i stand behind pasting in areas like that,..the chance of any new train of thought for those folks is very refreshing...even if it just pisses them off. you all write very well and bring up a lot of great references,...(strong absorption of knowledge presented to you for sure),..but i dont think bringing up all these "super deep" points is very worth-while or effective,..in a way you are just like the way you describe Shep ,..tooting your own horn for your own agenda,..however minute. now i am not trying to insult anyone,..so if you want to talk bad about me you only prove me right,..which i would rather not be. skateboard culture,..anti-establishment,..street art,..whatever! it is fun,..and for me it is better to keep spreading good art in any form than just going around tagging my own name and is a lot easier to do than throwing up huge burners and all that. so it quells the jones that little vandals like me feel,..hehehe,..just being honest. anyway,..for some reason i still like to piss the sheep of the main-stream off,..after all this typing i feel that the campaign is worth the effort,..i request stuff from Shep and he provides every time,...free advertisement?? sure,..but i dont get anything free from other "companies" to help them spread their message,..because they have no message to spread...and i dont feel strong enough about them to ask for anything. he has inspired me to be more adamant about my own art styles,.even if involves "piggy backing" off his creativity,..whatever,...it is D.I.Y. inspiration in the long run so it is once again worth-while! as far as sweatshop work goes,...what is the immediate cure for the unemployment crisis after all the factories are closed???..what is the cure for the lack of human respect in those lands???..deep subjects,..and very easy for the comfy kids here in the good ol' USA to yell about,..you want to change the world,..right on!!..i am with you! lets do it!..i have been active for over 16 years in the anti-B.S.culture,..start with going vegetarian,.that usually pisses people off worse than any OBEY stickers,,..anyway,..you are all great folks and i hope to not have offended anyone,.(at least not TOO much!!)..hehehe,....and there is no such thing as too much posse! keep on fighting the good fight! peace!
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I've lived in Providence most of my life and I was there when the whole Andre thing was happening. It was cute. Then people started spreading it around the world. That was cute too. All of a sudden this guy's name is everywhere. But the AIGA? I mean come on, aren't there much more talented designers out there you guys could interview than a wannabe street artist? When I read about him in Juxtapoz (a low-brow art magazine), that was one thing. I even questioned his credibility compared to other the low-brow artists who graced the Juxtapoz pages (Mark Ryden, Coop, Frank Kozik, etc.). He's done one thing that's gained attention and now he's written up in the AIGA. I was considering signing up for a membership before I read this. Now...
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I give major props to Shepard Fairey, and anyone who puts down what he is trying to do is jealous. Judging talent is subjective, and i there are other artist out there who are very talented, maybe even "more talented" than the producer of Obey. Regardless, Fairey created an international phenomenon, and was part of an overall movement that has brought street art credibility that is now allowing other artists to capitalize and eat off of their street art skills. For that he deserves major props. Similarly I highly respect the fact that he is actively walking line, trying to be a responsible capitalist and at the same time affect a positive change on this country. Major props to Shepard Fairey, anyone posting, crying about how Mr. Fairey doesn't deserve the fame he has earned through his hard work and efforts, needs to get back to work and try to go do something, go create something, and stop bitching. Big ups to Obey and Shepard Fairey.
-One Love -
Shepard is a brilliant wonderful sincere person.
When he was at risd we loved him like a son.
He is special to his generation as Andy Warhol was to mine. People should appreciate how hard this young man works and cares about what he does. The insinuation that he is in it for the money is rediculous. "True friends are forever." Separd will go down in History as a true friend of freedom. -
Michael has surely missed the boat. The billboard with the dollar bill that he encountered was an ad for a gallery show titled "This Is Your God". He has misinerpreted the billboard as he has other Obey imagery he has seen. There is no shortage of bad art. I have been an art dealer for over forty years and a gallery owner for over fifteen. My experience with Shepard and his art has been a breath of fresh air. He is extremely talented. if there is room in the pantheon of great artists for Leroy Neiman, Walter Keene, Thomas Kincade, Botero and that guy who paints whale murals on large walls, then, surely there is room for Shepasrd Fairey. Andy Warhol used to draw pictures of shoes for women's magazines. In my opinion Shepard is one of the most important emerging artists in the country. I think that this interview and the discussion that has ensued proves my point.
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Shepard Fairey has a posse
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I love it and hate it. It's real smart and real uncool at the same time. It's big and small. It made you think.
Now it's pretty much done but embrace the face, it's your own. -
"jellybean" is obviously a w supporter. i've found that most of these think the same. hey didnt nazis go out with hitler as kind of "uncool"?
to NOT interview shepard? to NOT let him have an opinion? you are one of the heard.
SHEEP LOVE DECEPTION -
sunday afternoons,at the neighbors-wonderful wetback Hungarians-i shared cigs,miller highlife & the couch w/ granny.we would root for Andre on canadian wrestling.he was young ,lean,the" nice guy" in the act who would be maligned & cheated in the ring...this was pre-worldwrestling or whatevr th fuk its become-all pantomine&pathos back then and as the beer worked its magic & we were rooting for the good guys.justice,youth&style&beauty.Check out old time can. wrestlr EDward Carpanchia(sp?) former olympic acrobat and ally of ANDREthe Giant they were the good guys in tagteam matches...There was a certain grace,honor & sense of fair play in it all-canadian afterall and pre- super hyped mediaed to hell & back again !!! maybe i'm nostolging, lets just say i'm doing it outa respect for a long dead Hungarian lady who loved cheering the GIANT up off the mat nuff said
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Artist at the core of a soul.......
I became familiar with OBEY GIANT through Jim Morrison's website http://www.thedoors.com . S. Fairey did a couple of wallpapers with his image. Loved the idea he incorporated. I looked a little deeper. Head out to the website. Collected many of his images by save as ;o) and I am admiring his work as we speak. Just read the article listed above and it gave me more of what OBEY is tending to be. I agree to speak loud and obey your sense of words. If you can not stand behind your sentences then, why speak or write?
Concept of Abuse of authority/racism and 1st amendment rights should be something we as humans should learn through life in a raw study. See, how everything connects? The government in my own theory doesn't let us obtain this knowledge and nevertheless, takes labor away from our country. I am a born American w/ a decent of Hispanic Culture. I am an American that at times when asked the question "What nationality are you" I automatically say "Hispanic," in which, that term is not necessarily wrong, yet I don't say "I'm American." My mind noticed and I questioned myself for such thing. My own answer towards the negativity is that I am not a happy taxpayer. The money is being used to purchase more government homes with pools and decks; while society is struggling to feed Generation X. Will Generation X die before they are known? We as America..... Do we value the states and think of them has heaven found or just a place we want to run from.
I live in NJ, a town that is being turned into a city. Like Jim Morrison states in one of his books.... "At what sacrifice is a city born?
OBEY GIANT..... Selling out? Well, is he loosing his Posse, we ask our self? His selling shirts, His selling posters, His selling OBEY, Is he really? Doesn't money provide everything we do, so is it wrong to sell? Don't we sell ourselves each day, through hard working hours? Fixing light post, making shoes that don't let us feel the ground and the most important thing money produces food. No money No food. Are we here to obey the giant pyramid with the one eye "In God we trust"...... The pyramid is bullshyt run by the one and only "Semi-Selected Rich Bastards"
OBEY VS MIIZ MARIA: This logo has encouraged me to spread my words and built awareness in the streets of the poor. Yes, poor the streets are; homes with no lives, bodies being found laying flat in there face, etc..... Can we stop the Governmental Madness, Americans... Can we start at the core of the issue? Can we endure more than the 24hours giving? Possibilities of smiles, Possibilities that a shirt I’m wearing is actually produce by an American........ Obey coming to NJ, starting point WNY, NJ?? Spreading Revolution?.. Miiz
UNITED STATES NO POSSE.....................
MIIZ MARIA -
VIVA LA POSSE!!!
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society and the media can rot your mind and soul...shepard = andre....don't overanalyze...just enjoy the ride......kudos to you magister...its a cause worth supporting...
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andalu13.com totally supports the cause ....we have your back shepard!!!!!
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Shep. Your the man. Seize the time or the time will seize you.
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I don’t know how i feel about the apparel but i will paste his stickers and posters all over town with an elitist grin of my own!!

Fig. 1
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