Graffiti Flourishes in New York as Sign of Existence

Graffiti artist Saynosleep paints a door in New York City on December 15, 2020. (AFP/Thomas Urbain)
Graffiti artist Saynosleep paints a door in New York City on December 15, 2020. (AFP/Thomas Urbain)
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Graffiti Flourishes in New York as Sign of Existence

Graffiti artist Saynosleep paints a door in New York City on December 15, 2020. (AFP/Thomas Urbain)
Graffiti artist Saynosleep paints a door in New York City on December 15, 2020. (AFP/Thomas Urbain)

In a city whose streets lack vivacity and social life, graffiti has become a "mean to emphasize existence amid a prevailing impression that New York died" after the pandemic. As dusk becomes nightfall, graffiti artist Saynosleep takes a quick look around and then gets to work on a luxury store closed since it was looted during protests.

The anonymous 40-year-old artist, who uses a different pseudonym for his artwork, said: "There has never been a time like this."

The facades of hundreds of store that have shut because of the pandemic are "an invitation" to artists. Walls, bridges, sidewalks and subway cars, 34 of which have been painted since the beginning of the month, are canvases. "It's a big surge, a renaissance of graffiti. Everybody wants to express themselves. People are bored. They need something to do," said Saynosleep, noting that he has seen people in their 70s drawing graffiti.

The creative impulses are not to everyone's taste, however. New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo said the graffiti was "another sign of decay," along with an increase in murders and shootings in New York City. He indirectly blamed Mayor Bill de Blasio for supposedly taking a lax attitude towards it.

"I think it's horrible. Some say it's art, but did they get permission for that? No, so it's vandalism," said Darcy Weber, who has recently settled in New York. For some, graffiti reminds them of the dark days of the 1970s and '80s when New York was broke and crime was rife.

A spokesperson for the New York Police Department told AFP the force is "fully aware of the importance of addressing graffiti-related crime."



Octopus Riding a Shark Caught on Camera

Researchers with the University of Auckland captured the rare sighting in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island in New Zealand. (Credit: University of Auckland)
Researchers with the University of Auckland captured the rare sighting in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island in New Zealand. (Credit: University of Auckland)
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Octopus Riding a Shark Caught on Camera

Researchers with the University of Auckland captured the rare sighting in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island in New Zealand. (Credit: University of Auckland)
Researchers with the University of Auckland captured the rare sighting in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island in New Zealand. (Credit: University of Auckland)

A rare sighting, captured on video off the coast of New Zealand and shared by scientists affiliated with the University of Auckland, shows a Maori octopus riding on top of a mako shark, Fox News reported.

The university said the December 2023 encounter "was one of the strangest things University of Auckland marine scientists had ever seen. It was a mysterious sight indeed... octopus are mostly on the seabed while short-fin mako sharks don’t [favor] the deep."

The university researchers had been looking for shark feeding frenzies in the Hauraki Gulf near Kawau Island when a mako shark with an "orange patch" on its head was discovered, the report said.

The researchers launched a drone and put a GoPro camera in the water and "saw something unforgettable: an octopus perched atop the shark’s head, clinging on with its tentacles," University of Auckland Professor Rochelle Constantine wrote in a piece for the university last week.

Constantine added that the researchers moved on after 10 minutes, so they weren’t sure what happened to the "sharktopus" next, but the "octopus may have been in for quite the experience, since the world’s fastest shark species can reach [30 mph]."