SpY
Website: www.spy-urbanart.com
Exhibitions
Werke
CCTV
spy cctv 2
Copyright: Weltkulturerbe Völklinger Hütte / Hans-Georg Merkel
Date
2019, in situ
Dimensions
Durchmesser ca. 8 m
Material
Mischtechnik
Description
SpY, from Madrid, has been an urban interventionist since he, as part of the first generation of European graffiti writers, began artistically appropriating urban spaces in the 1980s. In the 2010s, he gained notice with, among other things, conceptual inscriptions of lone, evocative words in bold san serif typeface traversing entire buildings—as in, for example, Stavanger or Bilbao. Other projects include the wrapping of police cars with foil and barrier tape and, in 2019, employing pyrotechnics to enable red smoke to rise from a chimney at the World Heritage Site Völklinger Hütte. SpY's installation CCTV, created that same year for the Urban Art Biennale, appears to hail from a dystopia. Big Brother is watching you! The overwhelming quantity of fake surveillance cameras seems exaggerated, but the question does arise as to whether the public video surveillance of today has not long since assumed similarly alarming proportions—albeit less blatantly obvious. With his circular formation of cameras, SpY gives countenance to the underlying threat that comes with the restriction of personal freedom for the sake of supposedly increased security. At what point does crime prevention turn into an encroachment and a totalitarian demand for control?
Robert Kaltenhäuser
CCTV
spy cctv 2
Copyright: Weltkulturerbe Völklinger Hütte / Hans-Georg Merkel
Date
2019, in situ
Dimensions
Diameter ca. 8 m
Material
Mixed media
Description
SpY, from Madrid, has been an urban interventionist since he, as part of the first generation of European graffiti writers, began artistically appropriating urban spaces in the 1980s. In the 2010s, he gained notice with, among other things, conceptual inscriptions of lone, evocative words in bold san serif typeface traversing entire buildings—as in, for example, Stavanger or Bilbao. Other projects include the wrapping of police cars with foil and barrier tape and, in 2019, employing pyrotechnics to enable red smoke to rise from a chimney at the World Heritage Site Völklinger Hütte. SpY's installation CCTV, created that same year for the Urban Art Biennale, appears to hail from a dystopia. Big Brother is watching you! The overwhelming quantity of fake surveillance cameras seems exaggerated, but the question does arise as to whether the public video surveillance of today has not long since assumed similarly alarming proportions—albeit less blatantly obvious. With his circular formation of cameras, SpY gives countenance to the underlying threat that comes with the restriction of personal freedom for the sake of supposedly increased security. At what point does crime prevention turn into an encroachment and a totalitarian demand for control?