Tag Archives: railways

great trains of graff!

great graff train

You have to check out the link above. You just have to…

It’s a wonderful, unique 2 minute indulgence in to the scandalous world of graffiti art

and what better way to watch it than as it rolls by on a train

As it was meant to be seen..

In motion….

A friend on Flickr wrote me the other day:

“to think that this “rolling billboard” rolling wall” travels from canada into the usa and through nashville. cool stuff,
and vice versa, stuff from nashville rolling into canada into the big cities.”

Too cool…

A fellow enthusiast is loving my stuff, from another corner of the world! He’s giving me insight too, filling me in on some tags, names so I can give credit where credit is very much due…

He wrote,

“I did a road trip this year through Washington Idaho Montana and North Dakota, and I noticed that there aren’t many cities but a lot of small towns, and for a lot of kids trains are the only change in scenery.
So I found it cool to think that there are kids out there that make sure to watch each train rolling through town, and how it must inspire them to become apart of this movement.”

Video recording really helps. I’m going to try to capture better footage, so please forgive the shaky cam.

I get a bit excited when one comes by. There are so many, you’d think I was over it by now.

Yeah, Right?

I’ve started posting mini snippets of boxcars rolling by.

I could sit and watch ‘em for hours too. There’s something relaxing about it. It’ll put you to sleep if you’re not careful…

My hope is that the artists, their family, friends and fans get to see their art,

their creativity….their self expression.

I’m just out there because I love it! Looking and recording,

Ready to share my love for such a unique, captivating art form.

Plus as thegraffitihunter and with so many international contacts, I now have a reputation to live up to. tgh


On photographing boxcar graffiti

…Or having graffiti delivered right to your door.

I covered in a recent blog, photographing freight train graffiti but I am beginning to realize that this is turning in to a massively huge sub-section.

Or hub-section.

I have landed a home right near some awesomely busy, busy railroad tracks just north of Nashville.

Every day, every hour is a graffiti hunter’s dream….

Honk, Honk…

Quick, gotta run up there and see whats coming through.

There is so much great stuff rolling by, I’m having a hard time keeping up with it all.

My photo’s are backing up on me. I feel artfully constipated…

Have I uploaded?

Have I downloaded ? Sideloaded? Middle loaded? God Lord…wayyyyyyyyyyyyyy too many shots of trains.

Trains waiting on the tracks, or whizzing a long…just a wee bit too fast for my camera (I really do need  to invest in an SLR).

See…or should I say hear, right now as I am writing, at this very minute there’s one going by.The temptation to jog up the street and up on the tracks is so hard to resist. But, I must control my urge. Everything in moderation, please!

I have gotta draw a line.  And pardon the pun.

There’s simply no way I will catch all that graffiti, especially when it’s zipping by.

I am excited. Each dawn brings a new day…a day of brightly painted mobile canvas’, all craftily, ingeniously and fantastically bombed!!!!!

This has completely morphed in to a full-time, fantastic hobby.  Better still…a crazy wicked interest.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   I do not mind a bit.  And I adore how its all connecting so beautifully to Nashville’s very own Wildchild, Vernon Rust. Songwriter, performer, character extraordinaire!

He has totally immersed himself in my outlandish interest and fascination for graffiti.

He welcomes a jaunt up to the railway line.

He has become an invaluable member of thegraffitihunter crew.

He be one of my homies….Rock on Vern!

You are The Man….

I read a super cool comment, from a super cool contact on Flickr.

“You  and Vern peep hella trains” he said…for sure, for sure!

And your music ain’t bad either, Vernon Rust….


On photographing freight train graffiti

…Or better snap it fast!

snap it fast

What better way to display your graffiti than on a fast-moving train. And what better way to get your art out there. It’s like a national canvas, constantly on the move from one place to another. You could call it an unofficial tour…

A TOUR DE FORCE!

Graffiti has appeared on railroad boxcars and subways for many years with many international styles stemming from New York City subway graffiti. There are many other instances of notable graffiti.  Namely, Bozo Texino…one with a history dating back to the 1920′s and continuing to the present day. In the heyday of hobo graffiti, boxcar observers were treated to a diverse  array of visuals and expression. Beyond  tags and caricatures, you can find propaganda, poetry, political satire, narrative art plus a code of symbols aimed towards fellow freight riders.

“In addition to human faces and forms, students of boxcar calligraphy bump into figures of animals now and then, also pictures of trains and locomotives, but rarely any other type of machine. Most of these masterpieces are drawn by hoboes while they are waiting for freights or loafing around warehouses. Or, perchance, while enjoying free transportation at the company’s expense, they show their gratitude by scribbling over the inside walls of the train. Other sketches are done by railroad men in terminal yards.” Railroad magazine July 1939

It was often the railroad employees that decorated the trains! Sometimes more so than by hoboes or riders. Texas filmmaker Bill Daniel has studied the culture and through many years of research produced the documentary film ‘Who is Bozo Texino?’ Daniel even identifies Bozo Texino as an engineer named J.H. McKinley, who titled himself Texino and added his own cowboy caricature. Daniel lived the vagabond life in his quest for the origins of such a unique and selectively iconic writer. But ultimately he  wanted “to show what the message of graffiti is, that there’s an art in life when it’s free, that outside the boundaries of commodity and wage life there’s a flourishing human condition, with storytelling, social bonds, and friendship.”

 http://www.billdaniel.net/  

freight train art

       Having lost my super cool digital SLR with just as super fantastic Zuiko telephoto lens in San Francisco (now that’s a whole other story!), I arrived in Nashville and at the crossroads of freight train USA without a camera! Quelle Horreur!!!

What was The Graffiti Hunter supposed to do? Mope about, look longingly at others’ photos of graffiti and street art on Flickr? It was indeed a depressing time, but to my rescue came my dear father. He rushed me, from England, a Nikon Coolpix. So OK, it’s fairly simple, nothing fancy…point and shoot but who was I to complain… Now catching a fast-moving train with awesome graffiti bursting forth from the cars is extremely tricky with a non-SLR camera. For every 20 or so photos, I might be lucky if I snagged one fairly well and that’s hopeful! Most are a blur or the tail end of a really fantastic throw up. Sometimes I catch a great shot of the rocky gravel underfoot plus the grinding wheels of the train…But what fun!

Hearing the train in the distance, it’s horn blaring and warning ‘I’m a coming!’

Then…whoosh, whoosh, whoosh

They cruise steadily in to town but, boy do they haul ass out of it! When the coast is clear, I’ll run a long the tracks, two sleepers at a time and head for a bridge or tunnel. This is where a graffiti hunters’ dreams come true…

I swear I am forever a kid who just discovered railroads and is completely and utterly addicted to the graffiti hunt…


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