A photograph of tags on a shipping container in Waltham.
A photograph of tags on a shipping container in Waltham.
A photograph of street art and graffiti at the Addington Saleyards. Text on one of the art works reads, "This is therapy... helps me get shit off my chest!".
A recorded conversation about the arts in Christchurch, facilitated by Rosalee Jenkin (UC CEISMIC) and featuring Sophie Davis (UC Masters student and co-director of North Projects), Lara Strongman (Senior Curator at Christchurch Art Gallery), Gaby Montejo (visual art practitioner and teacher) and Wongi Wilson (street artist and professional graffiti artist). The podcast is the first in a series of conversations hosted by UC CEISMIC about Christchurch, five years on from the February 22 earthquake.
A photograph of tag writing and street art on the wall of a building on Fitzgerald Avenue.
A photograph of tag writing on Fitzgerald Avenue. Written over the tags, are several iterations of the word "No".
A photograph of old posters hanging on a support for the Durham Street overbridge.
A photograph of tag writing and street art on the wall of a building located on Fitzgerald Avenue.
A photograph of street art on the wall of the Textile Bag & Sack Company building on Byron Street.
Damage to a car parking building on Lichfield Street. Part of the concrete wall has crumbled, exposing steel reinforcing rods within, and damaging an artwork painted on the wall.
USAR codes have been spray painted in pink on a building on Gloucester Street. The windows have been boarded up and graffiti can be seen in the bottom-left corner.
A photograph of graffiti reading, "City Council cares, yeah right", painted on a concrete block in a retaining wall. The photograph is captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "Cunningham Terrace, Lyttelton".
A photograph of tags on a building and shipping container in Waltham.
An abandoned residential property at 28 Seabreeze Close in Bexley. The garage door has been vandalised with graffiti. The property adjacent to the house has been cordoned off with security fencing.
Photograph captioned by BeckerFraserPhotos, "The empty site of the demolished Methodist Church hall on Stanmore Road".
A photograph of street art on a fence on Hawke Street in New Brighton.
A photograph of street art on a fence on Hawke Street in New Brighton.
A photograph of street art on a fence on Hawke Street in New Brighton.
A photograph of street art painted on a fence at Central New Brighton School.
A photograph of tagging on a building in New Brighton, seen from Hawke Street.
Page 7 of Section A of the Christchurch Press, published on Thursday 22 August 2013.
A green sticker and graffiti on the door of a wooden building on the corner of Peterborough Street and Montreal Street. The green sticker means that the building is safe to enter.
Graffiti of an angel clutching a bottle, accompanied by the text "Chritchurch (sic) living make a good man drink." The photographer comments, "Living in Christchurch during the earthquakes was hard on all of us. Some people got drunk to forget or blot out the aftershocks, whilst others dare not drink so that they would be in full control just in case another big earthquake/aftershock occurred. As of today 24 September 2011 there has been 8660 earthquakes/aftershocks in the Christchurch area".
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of street art on a fence on Hawke Street in New Brighton.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of street art on the public toilets at the entrance to Phillipstown Courts.
A photograph of tagging on a fence and building in New Brighton, seen from Hawke Street.
An abandoned residential property at 37 Seabreeze Close in Bexley. Weeds are growing through the cracks in the ground and the yard has become overgrown. The garage door has been vandalised with graffiti.
A wall on the former site of Piko Wholefoods. A damaged part of the wall is covered with a graffiti paste-up of an elastoplast, with a speech bubble reading, "You poor thing".