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College Hill Independent
1996
By Ellen Welch
A Giant Spectacle RISD grad's sticker campaign sends shockwaves throughout
America
Observant pedestrians in Providence will notice scraps of colored paper,
bearing cryptic messages and images, plastered to the parking meters,
telephone poles, and sidewalks of the city. The most insidious of these
water-stained, mass-produced images must be the lumpy, hollow-eyed face
of the late but great wrestling star obey giant, staring out above a boldfaced
caption: obey giant Has a Posse.
"The Giant" is not just another bit of art student graffiti, or a hip
mode of advertising downtown venues; the stickers have been sighted at
New York bus-stops and on brick walls in Georgia--as well as on North
Main Street, Providence. The Andre phenomenon did originate on College
Hill, however, when Shepard Fairey (R'91)--the project's creator--was
a RISD freshman. Over the phone, Fairey shared the history of the Andre
the Giant sticker phenomenon from San Diego, where his business continues
to reproduce the infamous image.
Photocopy trancendence
In the late '80s, Providence fostered a thriving skate-boarder culture
among the city's teenagers. Gangs of skaters "tagged" city spaces with
signature sticker-graffiti that displayed group slogans and logos. A skate
shop operated above d'Angelos on Thayer Street, where a furniture store
now sells futons to College Hill residents. Fairey worked in this store
the summer after his freshman year, xeroxing the most popular tags, such
as "Team Shed" stickers, to sell to local skaters.
On his daily errands at Kinko's, Fairey saw "kids printing up their own
tags," spending hours to create and print original stickers for their
skater-gangs. Fairey and a few of his friends couldn't resist creating
a mock-tag when they spotted obey giant, staring up at them from a "random
newspaper ad" that publicized a wrestling event. By pasting a few self-fashioned
stickers alongside "real" tags around the city, Fairey thought he could
"make the skater kids wonder what's up." The project worked, Fairey says,
because the obey giant stickers "transcended skater cliques"--no single
group of skaters could claim responsibility for the image. At this point,
Fairey and his friends were simply "having fun" plastering the city with
Andre's face, and observing the confusion of skate-taggers who visited
the store.
The Giant did not take on a wider audience until the fall of Fairey's
junior year, when a RISD assignment led him to replace the face of Mayor
Buddy Cianci with that of Andre on a Steeple Street billboard. The metamorphosis
was covered exhaustively by local newspapers and radio programs as Providence
resdients conjectured about possible meanings behind Fairey's images.
The most popular interpretation suggested that by transforming the mayor
into a wrestling icon, Fairey's image reminded viewers of a notorious,
shady, violent episode in Cianci's past. Fairey says that the billboard
incident first impressed upon him the "power behind propaganda," and proved
to him "how easy it was to manipulate people." Excited by this feeling
of power, and curious about the project's potential, Fairey decided to
turn obey giant stickers into a campaign that reached well beyond Providence.
He sent eight-by-eleven inch "proofs"--sheets of tiled stickers--to friends
in New York, South Carolina, and Georgia, who in turn shipped photocopies
to other out-of-state acquaintances.
Overcoming metaphysics Fairey is very articulate when explaining the forces
that turned his obey giant stickers into a phenomenon; it's obvious that
he has had practice. Just as Providence media could not believe that Fairey's
billboard had only the vaguest of underlying theories, viewers across
the nation demanded an explanation of the campaign as Andre stickers appeared
in their cities. What began essentially as little more than a joke was
eventually featured in the pseudo-academic paper, "A Social and Psychological
Explanation of obey giant has a Posse," in which Fairey described his
sticker campaign as "an experiment in Phenomenology," quoted Heidegger,
and discussed "the trendy and conspicuously consumptive nature of many
members of society" as evidenced by public reactions to the stickers.
Some of these reactions have surprised Fairey. He writes that "the paranoid
or conservative viewer" often condemns the obey giant stickers as the
work of "an underground cult" or simply as "an eyesore or act of petty
vandalism." Yet, Fairey met one such "conservative viewer" who belonged
to a punk band, and who condemned Fairey's "Obey Series"--Andre stickers
sporting the caption "Obey Andre the Giant"--as fascist propaganda.
Mostly, however, public reaction only reflects simple curiosity. "People's
reaction, then my reaction to the reaction," Fairey says, have led him
to expand the movement and to create new incarnations of the Giant image.
The summer following his junior year at RISD, Fairey began experimenting
with silk-screening, creating T-shirts that displayed different phases
in the evolution of obey giant. The "industry" he began in 1990 lasted
until this August, when Fairey moved operations to California.
A new art? Fairey's new company, First Bureau of Industry, specializes
in graphic design for corporations and offices, and provides the basis
of Fairey's income. Still, The Giant continues to play an important part
in Fairey's life and work. In California, he mass-produces and distributes
stickers, posters, stencils, T-shirts, and other merchandise bearing the
obey giant image. The media and art world also continue to give attention
to Fairey's "phenomenon." Last year, the New Museum of Contemporary Art
in New York devoted its store-front display to Andre the Giant. The Cooper
Hewitt Museum has also featured Fairey's work. Still, the most obvious
and most profound influences of the Andre the Giant campaign are to be
found in Providence, where art students launch their own sticker campaigns,
and downtown clubs use amateur-looking stickers and post-bills as cheap,
trendy methods of advertising. Fairey acknowledges this work as "a new
movement," that he insists he could not have spawned by himself. "All
of us [artists] were influencing each other," he notes, "which is pretty
natural in the artistic community." Fairey cites the group of artists
working out of Ford Thunder Studio on Eagle Street as one source of current
sticker-art campaigns. He discusses all of this in the context.
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