Graffiti: Difference between revisions
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<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> | <gallery widths="200px" heights="200px"> | ||
File:Sidewalk Penis and Boobs.jpg|The old standbys, | File:Sidewalk Penis and Boobs.jpg|The old standbys, outlines of penises , on the corner of SE 8th and Division. | ||
File:Baby Hanging Station.jpg|Bathrooms are also a common venue for graffiti, as this baby hanging station illustrates. | File:Baby Hanging Station.jpg|Bathrooms are also a common venue for graffiti, as this baby hanging station illustrates. | ||
File:Smile Graffiti Artists crop.jpg|Some business owners, it seems, do not like graffiti. | File:Smile Graffiti Artists crop.jpg|Some business owners, it seems, do not like graffiti. | ||
File:GraffitiPortlandStyle.png|The style is a little lighter than bigger cities. | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 20:56, 21 May 2011
Like all cities, Portland has a lot of graffiti art, tagging, vandalism, and any other words one might use for graffiti. And like other cities, considerable controversy exists over what is public art and personal expression, and what is destructive defacement of public and private property. Business owners are in a constant low-level conflict with street artists, taggers and other individuals, and often paint over tags and graffiti (sometimes creating a graffiti that is even less attractive).
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The old standbys, outlines of penises , on the corner of SE 8th and Division.
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Bathrooms are also a common venue for graffiti, as this baby hanging station illustrates.
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Some business owners, it seems, do not like graffiti.
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The style is a little lighter than bigger cities.
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