
As a resident of New York for just over five years, I frequently take for granted the "relative" cleanliness of my city. Sure, I could do without the many, pungent trash bag piles during summertime, but you quickly get accustomed to a certain level of grit and grime when you live in one of the world's largest metropolises.
In fact, my version of New York circa-2008 is a utopia of clean compared to New York in the 1970's and 80's, when the town was literally coming apart at the seams. As the city suffered a massive financial crisis, crime ran rampant and public services like the subway system fell into decline. As tragic as this period was for residents, it also provided the background for some of the era's most important cultural movements, including the rise of
punk at clubs like
CBGB, emerging artists like
Basquiat and in particular, the first stirrings of the nascent culture of Hip-Hop and
graffiti in the Bronx.
Graffiti is perhaps one of the most controversial artistic movements of the end of the 20th Century. As much as its detractors view the form as symptomatic of urban blight, its supporters just as forcefully embrace it as the stirrings of a wholely legitimate new art form. Though vandals have been defacing public buildings with their "art" since the ancient Greeks and Romans, the modern incarnation of graffiti took shape in New York City in the borough of the
Bronx in the 1970's. In that regard the current prominence of famous graffiti artists like
Banksy owe their rise to the pioneers of the form here in New York several decades ago.
So if you're visiting New York City in 2008, where do you go to see and learn more about graffiti firsthand? Click on through to find out more and learn where to go to find the art form still alive and kicking in the 5 boroughs.