To celebrate the 40th anniversary of Style Wars! The Museum of the City of New York is having a graffiti art bazaar, film screening, and a panel discussion.
In the fall of 1983, PBS premiered the documentary Style Wars, which chronicled New York City’s youth culture through the world of graffiti and breakdancing. The brainchild of director and producer Tony Silver and producer Henry Chalfant, the film tackles the conflict between graffiti artists and the cynical officials as the New York they know vanishes around them. This film is an invaluable record of both the city’s history and the early days of Hip-Hop as they celebrate the genre’s 50th anniversary in 2023.
About the Speakers:
Henry Chalfant is best known for his photography and film documentation urban youth culture. His photographs of New York's subway paintings record hundreds of ephemeral art works that have long since vanished. Exhibits of his photos begin with the O.K. Harris Gallery, 1980, the Mudd Club in 1980, the landmark ‘New York-New Wave’ show at P.S. l in 1981, and continue to include The American Century, at the Whitney Museum, New York, 1999; Born in the Streets at the Cartier Foundation in Paris, 2010 and Art in the Streets at MOCA in Los Angeles in 2011; Language of the Wall, at the Pera Museum in Istanbul, 2014; The Bridges of Graffiti, at the Biennale di Venezia, 2015; Henry Chalfant: 1980, at the Eric Firestone Gallery, New York, 1915; Art is Not a Crime, at the Centro de Arte Tomas y Valiente, Madrid, 2018: Art vs Transit, at The Bronx Museum, 2019. He has co-authored the definitive account of New York graffiti art, Subway Art (Holt Rinehart Winston, N.Y. 1984) and a sequel on the art form's world-wide diffusion, Spraycan Art (Thames and Hudson, 2008); Training Days with Sacha Jenkins (Thames and Hudson, 2015).In 1983, Chalfant co-produced with director Tony Silver the PBS documentary, Style Wars, the highly considered documentary about Graffiti and Hip Hop culture. He has continued to make documentary films about street culture and community life in New York City.
Jessica Green is an independent film programmer currently programming film, speaker, and performance series for BAM, the Weeksville Heritage Center, and the Museum of the City of New York. Jessica served as the Artistic Director of the Houston Cinema Arts Society from 2019-2022, providing artistic leadership for year-round film programming and the Houston Cinema Arts Festival, Houston’s largest film festival. She was the Cinema Director of the Maysles Documentary Center in Harlem from 2008-2018. Jessica is also a former founder, owner and Editor-In-Chief of the New York based, independent Hip-Hop magazine Stress (1994-2001), as well as the former Executive Editor of BET.com (2000-2005).
Lady Pink is a pioneer in the early 1980's NYC based subway graffiti art movement. She has established herself in the fine arts and her paintings have entered important art collections in major museums around the world. Going strong for 40 years, today she continues painting canvases, murals, inspiring and teaching younger generations.
Skeme, born in The Bronx in 1964, began writing Graffiti in 1979 in NYC's streets and subway system, ultimately becoming one of Graffiti's most prolific practicioners. In 1983 he gained both national and international notoriety after appearing with his beautiful Mom, in the ground breaking Hip Hop documentary, Style Wars. Skeme joined the U.S. Army in 1982 , and retired from active service almost 30 years later only to rekindle his love for the art form and culture. He quickly entered the mainstream art world with current works exhibited in galleries from New York to the Netherlands.
Ken Swift is one of the greatest influences the dance of Breaking has known and is credited with establishing movements critical to the dances’ foundation with his personal style and techniques. He is recognized worldwide for his continued contributions throughout the last 44 years of promoting, educating and preserving the art form of Breaking within Hip Hop Culture. Ken is an original 2nd generation B.Boy from NYC and Former Vice President of the world renowned Rock Steady Crew (RSC) who were featured in the first Hip-Hop documentary film “Style Wars”, the first Hip-Hop motion picture “Wild Style” (1983), and major motion pictures “Flashdance” (1983) and “Beat Street” (1984), including the first International Hip Hop Tour, “New York City Rap” (1982). Due to Ken’s contributions as a pioneer he has received many accolades including four Lifetime Achievement Awards from various organizations, received an American Masterpieces in Dance Award from the NEA, as well as being voted the 2nd Most Influential Dancer of the 20th Century by CNN’s Icon Series. He has been featured and interviewed as an expert in over seventy documentary film projects as well as hundreds of newspapers, magazines and books over the course of his career including his first publishing and opening chapter for the Oxford Handbook of Hip Hop Dance Studies. Currently he travels the world judging Breaking competitions, teaching workshops at universities and dance schools and has been lecturing “The Art of Hip Hop Culture” at UCLA.