Endless Canvas opens a 'Sistine Chapel' of graffiti art in Berkeley

The organizers were surprised with the masses of people who showed up, posting on their website the day after: "we didn’t think that many people would show up." Perhaps the mystique of the event was heightened because the location of the warehouse was kept secret until the day before the event, leaving people to speculate about where the warehouse could be. There's nothing like secrecy, controversy, and rumors of art depicting illicit things to bring out thousands to an East Bay art event.
What attendees found in the former Flint Ink building at 1350 4th Street (a warehouse vacant since 1999), was a building transformed by graffiti artists into what Sean Hanlon, an Oakland resident, called "a Sistine Chapel of graffiti art." Not only were the walls covered with spray paint, but also the floor, ceiling, stairwells, and even elevator shaft.

In addition to artwork by over 80 local street artists, entertainment was provided by local hip hop and dance groups. As the sun went down, floodlights were turned on to illuminate the walls, and the crowds only grew as the hours went on. Between 6-7pm, there was no line to get into the event. But by 9:30pm, the line stretched 2 blocks.

The Berkeley warehouse looks similar to Kunsthaus Tacheles in Berlin, Germany, except this one has even more graffiti covering every inch of the interior. Read more about how Alan Varela came to host the Special Delivery Bay Area 2012 art show in the East Bay Express.
Click here for photos of the art exhibit.
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By Matt Werner, author of Oakland in Popular Memory. Email Matt at editor[at]thoughtpublishing.org.
Published on September 10, 2012 01:52
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