Brush With Greatness

Most cities revel in their own pop culture landmarks or specific locales tied to things that celebrities did there. For example, much hoopla survives about the road outside Paso Robles where James Dean crashed and died, the garage that spawned Hewlett-Packard, or that stretch of highway in Malibu where Mel Gibson got his infamous DUI.  San Jose has a few similar sites, for example, the house on Jackson Street where Nirvana stayed in 1990.

I will suggest another local landmark which might possibly achieve similar notoriety: the city utilities box at the corner of Fruitdale and Southwest Expressway, where Shepard Fairey, on Aug. 2, 2000, plastered a promotional poster for his art show at Anno Domini the next night.

No one can vouch for how long the poster lasted, as the authorities painted over it soon thereafter. In fact, many of Fairey’s other posters throughout San Jose that weekend were covered up or removed with impressive and extraordinary quickness. Little did anybody in San Jose know that eight years later, Time magazine would commission Shepard to create an image of president-elect Barack Obama for the cover of their 2008 Person of the Year issue—the one you see on the newsstands at this very moment.

Shepard is a world-renowned cultural provocateur who works with viral marketing and street art campaigns as forms of communication. He creates propaganda-style imagery that explores and confounds the role of subliminal advertising in our everyday lives.

His most notable operation, “Obey Giant,” began with just a few hundred stickers of the professional wrestler, Andre the Giant, containing the words, “Andre the Giant has a posse,” including Andre’s height and weight. The stickers, in themselves, meant absolutely nothing, but after Shepard and his friends started placing them around Charleston, S.C., an entire street art campaign exploded and the stickers began surfacing in major cities all across the country.

Casual observers on the streets became confused. Some folks thought the stickers represented a religious cult, while others thought it was a gang. The campaign was a ridiculing of propaganda and a wiseass stunt to see how the populace would interpret the imagery, but it eventually grew into a worldwide movement, especially when Shepard added the “Obey” slogan to the stickers.

“Obey Giant,” as a brand, then went big time. “Obey” clothing lines, mural art and even musical instruments emerged and the iconography has infiltrated many facets of pop culture around the globe.

Then came Barack Obama’s speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention and Shepard was hooked.

In what was seen by many as a departure from his standard inflammatory, anti-establishment tactics, Shepard, working independently, created the now-ubiquitous Obama “Hope” poster, with the candidate’s face silkscreened in red, white and blue. The picture became the iconic image of Obama’s campaign. When the editors at Time chose the president-elect for their 2008 Person of the Year, they commissioned Shepard to create the cover image for the issue.

So there you have it. When Shepard came and plastered his street art over parts of San Jose eight years ago, the authorities either ripped ‘em down or painted over them, and now he’s getting paid to make Obama imagery for Time magazine. In fact, if you pull over and visit that hideous utilities box at Southwest and Fruitdale, right next to the 25 bus stop, you will see that two sides of the box appear to be still covered with paint and not the same color as the rest of the structure.

The box just might be the only remaining landmark from Shepard Fairey’s 2000 San Jose appearance. Think about that next time you look at Time‘s 2008 Person of the Year issue. Even better, think about it whenever you drive by that intersection.

6 Comments

  1. This is proof that San Jose does not know the difference between street art and graffiti. If it was an advertisement for an MLM weight loss product, they would have let it stay. Can we commission Shepherd Fairy to create statues of Andre the Giant to replace both the Quetzalcoatl and Fallon horse statues?

  2. This is so awesome. Sheperd is an amazing artist who greatly improved the feel of “guerilla” marketing as well as simply the art itself.

    Who would think that an artist considered “underground” would become so acceptable, and successful.

    Great article, thanks!

    Jimmy

  3. It’s probably not a good thing to allow random people to paint anything they want to. But allowing local artists to decorate stuff around town at their own expense or with sponsorship from businesses would make the city more visually interesting. There could be an advisory board to approve the designs—made up of artists, not politicians.

    When the new downtown library was being built, student artists did paintings on the construction fence, some of which were rather nice. It improved the view no end.

    Very few people know that there’s an attractive mural beneath the freeway overpass near Ryland Park, depicting the old Bassett St. train station. I believe it was a bicentennial project. But unlike that other bicentennial project, Pellier Park, it’s still there.

  4. Gary:

    The Wendy’s at Alma and Monterrey carries with it a certain notoriety which, in our consumer and 24 hours news culture, is not lost on my out of town guests….

  5. Dear 10MHz – it was painted in 1982 and originally dedicated to Councilman Claude Fletcher – that was changed at the request of the Council, and it indeed showed the vibrant activity around the “Old” train depot on Bassett. Quite a lively bar – I’m told – in the bldg., pictured on the mural, at Fox and San Pedro St.  TMcE

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