Kayone is the tag name of Italy’s Marco Montavani, a pioneer in Milan’s graf scene who has been bombing like mad more canvas than concrete in the past year. He’s moved on to develop a beautiful fine art style using his usual favorite writing utensil, the spray can, plus the more conventional artist’s paint, creating a scene of colors blending into one another with drips and lines of contrast for an ambient feel that remembers Jackson Pollack. Kayone’s one of the handful of Italian street artists picked to showcase new works in the much-attended and very awesome Street Art show running in Sao Paulo’s MAC exhibit space till the end of March, which unites that country’s street artists with their colleagues in Brazil. All of Kayone’s canvas works here are worth burning time to check out.


Wow. I’ve just come across a spectacular and fresh form of street art called light graffiti which uses no spray paint or paint pen. Say what? It’s invisible, in fact — an anti-vandalism squad’s answer from a higher being — until it’s caught on film. Armed with a camera, tripod and light sources like fire torches, glowsticks and flashlights, light graffiti artists tag colorful outlines of images and abstract drawings outdoors at night while the camera catches the trails via time-lapse. The photographic results, when developed, are electric. 
