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Writers Bench
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In March of 2009 we chose to honor the
149th St. & Grand Concourse bench
where graffiti writers began to
congregate in the mid 70's. Although
there were similar Writers Benches
throughout the city, this particular
bench was the most popular and seemed to
embody the vibrant and tenacious
graffiti movement.
The project pays homage to emergent
culture and physical social networking
sites through a plaque and poster
campaign. 100 hand-screened 2 color
prints were made and distributed
throughout the NYC subway system and the
plaque was installed on site.
The plaque reads...
"You are presently siting on the
most historic writers bench in all of
New York City. The writer’s bench is an
important symbol and historical marker
for graffiti writers. Beyond being a
physical bench it grew to be a verb in
it's own right, describing the action of
watching graffiti pieces travel into the
station on the train. At the bench,
writers congregated not only to piece
watch but to critique, study, meet other
writers, teach, sign each other’s black
books, and discuss layups and yards. In
a way the writers’ bench was the
emergence of an unsanctioned free school
dedicated to the tradition of graffiti.
As time passed the writers’ bench
evolved from being a great location for
piece watching to a popular gathering
place for writers from all over New York
City.
Over a quarter century ago graffiti
writers from the Bronx began meeting
here to watch trains carrying graffiti
pieces. This was an ideal location
because it was where the 2 and 5 IRT
lines converged showcasing work of the
graffiti writers from the Bronx and
Brooklyn. The bench began attracting
more and more graffiti writers to the
point that it was a place of pilgrimage
for writers. Other stations benches
became popular but none to the effect of
this bench at the 149th St. Grand
Concourse Station.
The first writers’ bench was formed
around 1972 and located on W. 188th St.
in Manhattan. Many writers’ benches
flourished since that time and up
through the 80’s before slowly being
dissolved. Some of the most notable
were the benches at the Atlantic Ave.
and Brooklyn Bridge stations. Although
the writers’ bench community has now
shifted to other locations, such as
online, these benches are remembered as
icons that attest to the explosion of
the graffiti writers movement and d.i.y.
culture. "
19 photos, 5 videos | 1,180 views
items are from between 15 Mar 2009 & 03 Apr 2009.