Out Of Weapons, 2018 by Blek Le Rat – [HFM special edition of 10]

Year: 2018

Edition: 10

Material: Six colour hand pulled screen print on 300gsm Arches paper with deckled lower edge. The Yellow, Red, Blue and Grey (stars) are added by hand.

Dimensions of screen print: 285 x 255 mm

Dimensions of frame (with museum glass): 405 x 370 x 20 mm

Extra information:

This version of Out Of Weapons was especially released for galerie Ange Basso when they exhibited Blek Le Rat at Urban Art Fair Paris, 2018. It was the same year of the release of the regular edition of 50. We offer this artwork with the original galerie Ange Basso certificate and the brochure they presented during the fair.
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Blek Le Rat (French, born 1951)

Born in 1951, Xavier Prou (better known as Blek Le Rat), is one of the first graffiti artists in Paris. He is the founder of the international stencil art movement. After a trip to the USA in 1971, Blek first witnessed the ‘wild style’ graffiti prevalent in New York City. This left a lasting mark on him. After his impressions from his visit to New York, Blek Le Rat started painting the streets of Paris in 1981. He chose a different technique – the stencil – as more appropriate for the French architecture.

Blek Le Rat’s first stencils were black rats, seen to be running along the walls throughout the centre of Paris. The rat, also an anagram for ‘art’, is in Blek’s mind “the only animal to survive the apocalypse“. In 1983 Blek began to paint life-size stencils. Alongside his rats, these have become his trademark style and have influenced generations of street artists around the world.

Dedicated to the idea of bringing art to the people, Blek often quotes the old masters like Caravaggio, Michelangelo, Guido Reni and Leonardo da Vinci. “I want the characters of the paintings to walk out of the museums to give them back to the people of the city” he says. In the mid 2000s, Blek’s work evolved to become more overtly political. Following the kidnapping of French journalist Florence Aubenas in Iraq, Blek pasted hundreds of prints of her image around Paris. Her portrait appeared everywhere, from her work place at Libération, next to cafés and offices of major newspapers. This activation aimed to attract the attention of the media and politicians to raise awareness of her situation.

This body of work was a defining moment for Blek, who says, “I became aware of my power and responsibility as an artist working in the public space“. That same year, Blek began a series portraying beggars on the street, aiming to shed light on the issue of homelessness. Blek paints the same portrait of a young beggar around the world, from Europe, to the United States to Australia, to challenge authorities, because “sometimes images have a bigger impact than reality”.

(Source: Blek Le Rat official website)