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Ranking: 2015 SJR (SCImago Journal Rank) Score: 0.131 | 319/716 Cultural Studies | 295/436 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) | 359/505 Law (Scopus®)

Limiting Law: Art in the Street and Street in the Art

  1. Linda Mulcahy
    1. London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK
  2. Tatiana Flessas
    1. London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK
  1. Email: l.mulcahy{at}lse.ac.uk

Abstract

Conventional legal responses to street art have tended to characterize it as a problem that is best dealt regulated through criminal or property law. This is not necessarily perceived of as a problem by street artists who have actively sought to situate understandings of their work outside of the law. But attitudes are changing. Street art is increasingly seen as having commercial value, enhancing the cityscape, creating new local art markets, attracting tourists, and contributing to the gentrification of impoverished areas. The result is that conventional ways of conceiving of street art have begun to pose new challenges to concepts of crime and property. Drawing on an observational study in London, this article proposes a new theorization of the legal problems posed by street art that pays close attention to the sensual experience of encountering it in the city and to street art as performance rather than artefact.

This Article

  1. Law, Culture and the Humanities 1743872115625951

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