Lock On (street Art)
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Lock On is a genre of
street art Street art is visual art created in public locations for public visibility. It has been associated with the terms "independent art", "post-graffiti", "neo-graffiti" and guerrilla art. Street art has evolved from the early forms of defiant graff ...
, where artists create installations by attaching sculptures to public furniture using lengths of
chain A chain is a serial assembly of connected pieces, called links, typically made of metal, with an overall character similar to that of a rope in that it is flexible and curved in compression but linear, rigid, and load-bearing in tension. A c ...
and old
bike lock A bicycle lock is a security device used to deter bicycle theft, either by simply locking one of the wheels or by fastening the bicycle to a fixed object, e.g., a bike rack. Quick-release levers, as used on some bicycle wheels and seatpost faste ...
s. The installations themselves are referred to as "a Lock On" (''singular'') or "Lock Ons" (''plural'').


Style

A Lock On is art in a public space, typically attached to a fence or street lamp with some sort of padlock, without permission. The Lock On style is a "non-destructive" form of underground art.


Artists

* REVS is the tag name of a New York City graffiti artist whose sculpture, wheat paste stickers and roller pieces have earned him a reputation of an artist provocateur. In New York, steel sculptures created with construction-grade steel and spelling "''Revs''" can be found around Brooklyn and Lower Manhattan. * TEJN is considered the "founder" of the Lock On phrase. Taking scrap metal from urban areas, TEJN welds and shapes the iron into figurative sculptures which he "returns to the street" as site-specific art secured with chain or an old bike lock. The genre was introduced when he started placing welded iron sculptures, chained and locked, throughout Copenhagen and Berlin. * The peace organisation Pink Army places pink war toys in selected urban areas as part of their "war against war". * Street artists In Portland, Oregon have chained toy horses to old metal rings, formerly used for tying real horses.


Technique

Lock On street sculptures can be made from various materials like wood, plastic, clay, concrete, iron, styrofoam or polystyrene. Typically a part of the concept is to re-use found materials. In some cases the materials are released in the same neighborhood where it was originally collected, now upcycled into sculptures, following the thought of improving cityscape by the use of materials that used to impair the very same area. The locks used when mounting street sculptures are, in some cases, dismounted from broken bikes, found nearby.


Gallery

File:Callwaiting.jpg, Sculpture installation by Mark Jenkins


See also

* List of street artists * Public art * Reclaim the Streets *
Street art in Melbourne Melbourne, the capital of Victoria and the second largest city in Australia, has gained international acclaim for its diverse range of street art and associated subcultures. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, much of the city's disaffected youth ...
* Street poster art * Wooster Collective


References


External links


The Horse Project



Pictures of Lock Ons
Street art Outdoor sculptures Graffiti and unauthorised signage Public art {{Street art, state=collapsed