Posts Tagged ‘Little people in the city’

Posted by
Jo Richards
August 22nd, 2010

Slinkachu’s Little People and Inner City Snails

by Jo Richards

Two miniature people look at a cigarette that has been changed into street art in this piece of work by street artist Slinkachu. From Red C marketing's We Like articleSmall is beautiful. Following on from Julian’s theme of little ideas that can be hugely impactful, one of my favourite street artists, the anonymous Slinkachu, fits neatly into this category.

His on-going microscopic street art project, ‘Little People in the City’, is utterly charming in terms of minimal representation of the human condition. Basically, he custom-designs miniature models from train sets and makes them over with modelling clay hoods etc, plus a few props. After putting them in their own real life scenario, interacting with subjects from Big Ben to bird poo, he then leaves his painted creations to fend for themselves in big bad cities. Poor little people. But not before documenting snapshot evidence of their short-lived existence; i.e. until the street-sweeper swish them away. There’s loads of photos on his website and in book, which is delightful. In fact, it was the most interesting artifact I found in the St Ives Tate Gallery at first visit.

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Posted by
Julian Gratton
November 26th, 2009

This week’s book in reception: Little people in the city by Slinkachu

by Julian Gratton

A miniature father protects his daughter from a bumblebee, just one of the street art scenes by Slinkachu as featured in Red C Marketing, Advertising Agency, Design Agency, Online Marketing Agency's We Like postingI stumbled upon a book recently which I simply had to buy for the sheer inventiveness of the images inside it. Mixing sharp humour with a delicious edge of melancholy, ‘Little people in the city’ brings together the collected photographs of Slinkachu, a street artist who for several years has been leaving little people in the bustling city to fend for themselves, waiting to be discovered.

Flicking through the pages of this book is like discovering a whole new miniature world around us… think Land Of The Giants meets the Borrowers in the modern world. As you see page after page of these miniature statues going about their daily lives, whitewashing graffiti and moving into new homes… you really do get the sense that there could actually be miniature people living amongst us.

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