than
others. One day out of a whim I took a felt tip marker from the art class
to the rest room at I school, drew on the door of the stall a horse
head and signed it
Mr. ED.
After I did that little sketch
in the restroom at school, I noticed that kids who didn’t know me by name
before started addressing me as
Mr. ED
or
ED; it appeared
that many who happened to go into the rest room and saw the Graffiti were
impressed enough to inquire who I was, which established a new popularity
for me around the school and into the surrounding neighborhood. This is
the basic appeal as well as motivation for the Graffiti artist,
Fame!
I believe I was 11 years old when that occurred, what really set me off
was when this cute girl that I always admired from a distance who never
talked to me before came up to me in the cafeteria and stated with
bells in her voice: “Mr.
ED” can you
draw me a horse please?” Right there I knew I was on to something. A.J.
also established a tag from a popular television program, he adopted the
whole title of the show, “Adam 12”, after all Adam was his name.
Westerns were the |
|
regular
television programs back then you had shows like “Bonanza”, F Troop”,
“The lone Ranger”, “Wild Wild West”, “and others so western cowboy type themes were popular. I
noticed that many of the street gangs of the period adopted the western
outlaw look as well. Dudes on gangs were sporting stuff like bandannas,
wide brim hats and cowboy boots with spurs, thick leather hostler type
belts, and other western gear. I started adding western theme characters
to my
Mr. Ed.
tag and sketched a horse, cowboy hats, horse shoes and other things in my
graffiti, when guys started repping turfs I added the
-161-
after
Mr. Ed.
because 161st street was the nearest number street to where I
was living so when ever I wrote my tag outside my neighborhood I had to
Rep. 161st street as my hood. The street where I was living in
the Fort apache |
|
|
|
section
was
Hewitt Place
between Westchester and Longwood a section of 161st street came to an
end into Hewitt. I lived closer to the Westchester avenue end of the block, my
building where I lived was the second to last on the street. Dynamite 161-aka-Dr.
Soul lived next door in the last building on the Westchester end. TOPAZ
ONE lived on the Longwood avenue end of Hewitt. The elevated IRT number 2
and 5 trains track ran the length of Westchester Ave. with the uptown track
adjacent to Hewitt. The tracks are about 3 to 4 stories high in the air and most
of the buildings on Hewitt were 5 to 6 stories high. You could hear the trains
as they pulled into the Prospect avenue station going uptown and they would
become loudest is they passed Hewitt going down the Westchester Ave. track on
the way to the Intervale avenue station. At times you could hear the train’s
noise up until it passed the Intervale station. On Hewitt we had a spectacular
view of the tracks. |
|
|
|
Eventually A.J. and myself
became somewhat serious Juvenile delinquents. Boosting (shoplifting) was a
frequent activity and we became proficient at it. This is a required
ability for a major Graffiti writer because it is the specific source of
spray paint and markers to work the craft. Skipping class and school at
times we would hop the turn stile in the subway and ride the trains to
specific shopping areas so we could boost, at the time mainly clothing. As
we spent more time in the subways I begin to notice the Graffiti tags
specifically: Taki 183, Kilroy was Here, Lee 163, El Marko 174 , Super Kool 223, Stay High 149 ( was all over the wall and buses at first
), Jesus Saves, Kool Herc, Tabu 1, Sweet Duke 161,
this may have been late 1969 early 1970 most of the tags were simply in what
we refer to as a “toy marker” (cheap marker) |
|
some were very appealing
because the pen seemed to be thicker with better ink. I wasn’t familiar
with the Piolit markers yet as a Graffiti tool but had seen them before in
school most of what I noticed at first was inside tags on walls and the
interior of subway cars. During the original hey days of Graffiti you had
certain train stations like 3rd avenue, 149th street and 135th and others
that had been so bombed by writers, tagging all the walls that the entire
station looked psychedelic. I'm just talking just marker hits of every
color in the rainbow. During this time I was
periodically writing
Mr. ED
with a toy marker and I started adding the number
161,
after I noticed that certain areas or train stations were dominated by certain
signatures which included a number related to that area I was a member of the
Ghetto brothers street gang and was familiar with turf rights. But over all
back then there was a general turf pride thing based on where you were
from you had to represent. I remember that my brother started tagging an early A.J.
161 first, which I assumed was the initials to his birth name, it stood for
ALL-JIVE. I was attracted to the
Ghetto brothers
because of their band. They had a serious Latin rock band that used to be
jamming in the hood frequently. Their club house was basically right |
|
|
around the corner from where I
was, most of their members were Latino and they started referring to me by a
nick name that meant coconut in Spanish, co-co or coquito; I heard it as “Corky”
and that’s how I got my second alias. I can remember when they first moved into
the 163rd street clubhouse up on the hill, when they begin to
decorate it there was quite a bit of spray paint
available. I assisted
them with some designs and when I was done they let me have quite a bit of
the paint that was left over. There was a large church that
took the entire half of the street with a large wall; this is basically
where all of the writers on the block including myself started practicing our tags, my biggest and best tag on that
wall was a skull and cross bones with a crown. This was inspired by the colors
of the Savage Skulls street gang, which was the biggest gang in my hood.
One of my homeboys Super Slick 156 was a Savage Skull. Slick and me got
along well because we both were the eldest males of large families. One of his younger
brothers Skip I was one of A. J. and my crime partners, Skip’s
|
family was
always from that area, at least when A. J. and me got there they were well
known. Skip was very adept at boosting but was even better at “geese jobs”
(burglary). This was basically how I acquired my first large amount of
spray paint, which I took to the lay-ups (parked trains)! There was a
hardware store that we entered through the roof and cleaned them out of
spray paint in every color imaginable, along with the tools we sold; I was ready for Staff’s
big score. Since I had made some money from that job, I went to Pearl Paints on
Canal Street and brought about $100 worth of art supplies. I had equipment
before, but now, I was stocked to the ceiling! |
|
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
After I found a good stash for
the paint I begin to map out my game plan. I never went to a lay-up (parked
trains) before with the intention of doing Graffiti. But I was familiar with
them specifically the middle track lay-ups that were uptown on the numbers 2 and
5 line, I used to go to those lay-ups on some general mischief, so I had stuff
like conductors keys for train doors and exit gates and flash lights, transit
uniforms, tools. I would regularly know which stations closed down at certain
hours and I had keys to open the booth and the turnstiles and take all the
tokens. Two of the writers I admired most in the beginning were Super Kool
223 and Stay High 149 when I first started it
appeared to me that these guys were into it fulltime. I was determined to
compete with them, most of their tags were individual signature type, mostly
stuff you could just ride the trains and do, but I knew that at least that dude
Super Kool was going to the lay-ups because I saw his tag
there! If you study my signature tag “Staff 161”, you could see
where I was inspired by these two writers. I got Stay High’s “S”
and Super Kool’s “Crown” and “cloud around the
tag.” Basically the name Staff came from the Bible
specifically the 23rd Psalm, most of my younger
brothers and
sisters were given biblical names by my mother a devout Christian woman, you got
Adam, David, Daniel, Joseph, Naomi, Esther, Eve, it’s my youngest brother
Lester (Les) who didn’t get a biblical name, certain stories in the Bible
that refer to a rod or a staff such as the one MOSES had appealed to me
During the 60s and 70s, canes and walking sticks were a popular item,
amongst the afro centric soul brothers. I had made one from a branch of a tree
broke off it was just a cool thing back then to walk with and they doubled as a
good weapon just in case you needed one. There were so many different kinds of
writers back then, especially before the subways became the main target. You had
Graffiti that was just a statement with no specific name that we recognized as
legendary. You had individuals that made their mark with what would be
considered unconventional ways: shoe polish, stickers, carvings and other odd
stuff. You had mysterious symbols that seemed to be every where, then you had
the special individuals that only tagged certain places or thing; restroom
kings, king of the bread delivery trucks, king of the phone booths, king of the
bill boards, king of the highways, king of being most traveled, you had tags
that you would see in multiple states, but didn’t dominate any particular state.
King of the airport, then you had the ladies who had their own special styles. You had these style guys back then that even
through they got around less than the average writer they had some incredible
unique tag or something about them that created a mystique. So being not
‘recognized’, would automatically bring up the question, for what? If you got
your tag off and somebody saw it and took notice then you got recognized. Most
of us realized back then that we weren’t going to reach everybody but was happy
with getting some people’s attention. Even if you just pissed somebody off with
your tag, your tag still got attention. In our own rebellious ways we refused to
be ignored, 15 minutes of Fame was better than no Fame at all
somebody knew now that they saw your tag that you was around, and you was
somebody significant on 161street or you was the number 1 with that title, but
most of all they realized you was determined to make your presence known.
|
|