CAFAM Granny Squared: 14,000 squares
1 2013-09-18T17:32:55-07:00 Gabriel Peters-Lazaro 3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0 610 5 CAFAM Granny Squared, the work of 500 crafters from 49 states, is a ground breaking, temporary public art installation on Museum Row in Los Angeles, CA. plain 2015-05-21T11:45:08-07:00 YouTube 2013-05-18T05:30:10.000Z video Mezj7WiMoqU Nonprofit Yarn Bombing Los Angeles Ritesh Mehta f6bb7237e7d4a245c56fe5016bb295dc579e3d58This page has tags:
- 1 2014-06-06T12:28:49-07:00 Sangita Shresthova 497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7 Browse Media Library Gabriel Peters-Lazaro 15 Media Library tag for Browse Media Library structured_gallery 2015-12-07T11:13:12-08:00 Gabriel Peters-Lazaro 3bc3965831120bc593545fef6d0da73657e21ea0
- 1 media/Knock Knock Def Jam Poetry.png 2014-06-06T13:43:21-07:00 Sangita Shresthova 497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7 Media About Literacy, Education, and the Arts Diana Lee 9 Media Library tag for Literacy, Education, and the Arts structured_gallery 2015-01-26T21:09:09-08:00 Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890
- 1 2014-06-06T13:43:55-07:00 Sangita Shresthova 497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7 Media About Geo-, Space, and Environment Diana Lee 8 Media Library tag for Geo-, Space, and Environment structured_gallery 2015-01-26T21:08:32-08:00 Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890
- 1 2014-06-06T13:41:28-07:00 Sangita Shresthova 497a02d289c277275bc5ece441097deedf8135e7 Media About Gender and Sexuality Diana Lee 6 Media Library tag for Gender and Sexuality structured_gallery 2015-01-26T21:12:27-08:00 Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890
- 1 2013-11-03T11:06:31-08:00 Samantha Close f42637f3cf8f8e584095341d3b0809f178e3d449 Feminism and Gender Samantha Close 3 plain 2013-11-06T08:26:53-08:00 Samantha Close f42637f3cf8f8e584095341d3b0809f178e3d449
- 1 2014-02-17T22:51:59-08:00 Samantha Close f42637f3cf8f8e584095341d3b0809f178e3d449 Graffiti Knitting Samantha Close 3 media 2014-02-17T23:15:55-08:00 Samantha Close f42637f3cf8f8e584095341d3b0809f178e3d449
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media/yarnbombing.jpg
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Yarn Bombing Los Angeles
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Org page for Yarn Bombing Los Angeles
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2016-09-07T21:53:14-07:00
About
Yarnbombing Los Angeles is a graffiti knitting collective based in Los Angeles and currently led by Head Poncho Carol Zou. The collective evolved out of the October 2010 Fig Knit On participatory public knitting event when Arzu Arda Kosar, one of the participants, proposed another yarn bombing at the 18th Street Arts Center in June 2011.
Joining in the international graffiti knitting movement but also putting their own spin on its practices, YBLA is a deeply collaborative group that aims to blur boundaries between craft, high art, street art, artists, and people on the street. They come together in monthly stitch n bitch meetings at the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles, where newcomers can learn how to knit, crochet, or collage together recycled sweaters into yarnbombs. YBLA also regularly reaches out for contributions to their projects, from phrases submitted via Tumblr that the group can knit and place in LA to granny squares submitted via the mail to cover their museum home.
Contributed by Samantha Close on 5/10/14Yarnbombing Los Angeles Media
CAFAM Granny Squared: 14,000 squares
CAFAM Granny Squared: did you know?
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2014-02-17T22:51:59-08:00
Graffiti Knitting
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media
2014-02-17T23:15:55-08:00
About
Graffiti knitting, also called yarn bombing and yarn storming, is a loose international movement that blends graffiti and fiber arts, primarily knitting and crochet. Graffiti knitters make their pieces in private, often in groups, and then install them in public spaces. The yarn bombs are temporary, as they are easily removed by cutting the yarn with scissors, and the yarn itself deteriorates after a few weeks of being exposed to the elements. Just as paint graffiti is known to straddle the lines between art and politics, graffiti knitting groups engage with issues relevant to their local communities and spaces though in an artistic, often humorous, way. Although graffiti knitting is technically just as illegal as graffiti painting, it is very rarely prosecuted.
Artists had previously used yarn as a medium, but most agree the graffiti knitting movement was founded in 2005 by Texan Magda Sayeg and her group, Knitta Please. The movement spread via knitters and groups posting pictures of their installed pieces online and sharing them with each other. Though the groups are physically separate and pursue diverse projects, many come together virtually to install graffiti knitting and upload the photographs on International Yarnbombing Day, organized by Joann Matvichuk in Alberta.Key Issues
Graffiti knitting is a tactic that can be used to comment on a wide variety of issues. By its nature, it is often concerned with the use and appearance of public space. Many groups also comment on issues related to gender, as knitting is often associated with women and graffiti with men, and environmentalism, via sustainable practices like re-using yarn and highlighting nature (or the lack thereof) in urban environments.
Key Organizations
Contributed by Samantha Close