|
|
|
caesar
woz 'ere...
(the grafitti problem)

We've already shown
you this door elsewhere on the site - but we're showing you again,
so yah, booh, sucks! We've got a bee in our bonnet and we ain't
done yet...
In England and the US
we are used to seeing graffiti, but not on elegant buildings
hundreds or even thousands of years old.
It is hard for the visitor to Rome to grasp how such beautiful
architecture and historic landmarks can be taken for granted
in such a casual way as to think nothing of defacing it.

Or perhaps it is us
in England who are the true philistines for having torn down
so much of our own architectural heritage in favour of faceless
concrete shopping-malls and multi-storey car-parks.
One thing seems clear from Rome's example though - Decadent and
irresponsible youth behavour cannot wholly be blamed on environment
- Though much of the graffiti seen on the noble marble edifices
of old Rome may indeed be rooted in anarchistic reaction to old
values and centuries of government hypocrisy by youths living
in slum tower-blocks on the outskirts of Rome; It is not the
first time in history that Rome has been sacked, burned and flattened,
or collapsed in on itself as a consequence of negligent and decadent
self indulgence by succesive governments.

Thus a nation and a
culture such as Italy which has historically placed so high a
value on art and sensual delight as first considerations when
designing civic architecture or expressing the ideals of it's
regime cannot be surprised if successive generations of Romans
seek to imprint the city-scape with their own pet forms of contemporary
art, in this case, graffiti.
However, it is at the same time disappointing that the perpetrators
of this graffiti cannot conceive a more 'home-grown' style of
expression. Both on the door pictured above, in general around
Rome, and particularly on the sides of Rome's subway train carriages,
the aerosol graffiti is nothing more than a faithful copying
of the rap-culture aerosol lettering forms originating in black
inner city areas of the United States: A culture which has nothing
to do with the Mediterranean way of life.

The Isola Tiberina,
seen from the Garibaldi Bridge. On this beautiful and mysterious
island in the middle of the Tiber River in central Rome, some
of this gigantic grafitti dates back to the 1970's when graffiti
was a little more politically or romantically oriented than today's
gangland yoof scrawling. While the fuzz manage to largely prevent
modern additions to the display, curiously, the older stuff is
allowed to remain. The two figures walking in the distance on
the right of the island give an idea of the scale of the graffiti.
If Italy hopes to raise
future generations of artisans of the calibre and originality
of the Renaissance, it is clearly failing miserably to inspire
them with new, original creative hope and aspirations. Italy's
love-affair with America has continued for several decades now,
and American pop-culture has always threatened to engulf Italian
tradition, as indeed elsewhere in modern Europe.

Sadly, nowhere is this
degenerating homogenisation of popular art, fashion, music, culture
and lifestyles from North America more powerfully witnessed than
in these aerosolled stones of Rome.
...need to get hold of any of our pictures?
|