Dare (graffiti artist) explained

Dare, born Siegfried von Koeding (15 September 19686 March 2010) was a Swiss graffiti artist and curator.

Life and Work

Dare was born in Basel, Switzerland, to Swiss author Yvette Amman and the German Rolf Kurt von Koeding. He began writing in 1986. Using the pseudonym Dare he started his art career in 1990, making easel paintings.

After his first contract for the photographer Onorio Mansutti and a large wall installation for the district of Münchenstein (1990), works such as a stage design for the Bejart Ballet in Lausanne (1992) and painting the theatre tram for Migros-North-West Switzerland (1995) followed, with his first international press reports accompanied by television appearances and reports on Swiss television. This was followed by commissions for the design of facades, walls and shops in Los Angeles, New York City, and Hamburg, and live-paintings with other artists in Paris, Barcelona, Zagreb and Naestved (DK). At the graffiti exhibition "Concrete or Wallpapers" 2001 in the Swiss embassy in London, Dare met Banksy, who invited him to the exhibition "Urban Discipline" in Hamburg. The industrialist and photographer Gunter Sachs commissioned a large interior work of more than 200 square metres in his apartment in Schloss Velden at lake Wörthersee. Gunter Sachs photographed it for Architectural Digest.[1] [2] [3] At the International Watch and Jewelry Exhibition Baselworld 2007, Pierre DeRoche presented a limited edition of 11 watches with faces by Dare with a "Spray-Happening" in the presence of the artist.[4]

The Fine Arts Museum in Leipzig showed some of Dare's pictures in the exhibition "Art is Feminine".[5] In SFR1 on 15 April 2009 Sigi von Koeding told the Swiss TV talk show host Kurt Aeschbacher about his career stretching from illegal writer to internationally recognised artist. Dare died from a brain tumour less than a year later, on 6 March 2010, and was buried in the graveyard Friedhof am Hörnli in Basel.[6]

DARE's work for Sachs was posthumously rated by the Financial Times as one of the best examples of interior graffiti.[7] On the 6th anniversary of Dare's death, in 2016, an exhibition of his work was shown in the Basilea Foundation in Basel.[8] [9] [10]

Artist's statement

"Script is for me an expression of personality, in that letters do not only serve to communicate subject matter, but are also a mirror of the writer. And that is what I do, I write. My artistic roots lie in Writing, which is known in our society as Graffiti. For more than 20 years I have been dealing intensively and actively with writing, I have learnt its basic typographical form and developed it further on my own. The name DARE stands for a pseudonym which I gave myself in 1986. After all these years in which I have written my name on the walls of the world, it is for me a matter of honesty to write this name on canvas. My pictures are thus to be seen as written self-portraits, and if one believes that handwriting is an expression of personality, then life can be found in every letter. Conversely stated, this is me. DARE!"

Literature

Writer Lexikon: American Graffiti. 1st Edition, Edition Aragon, Berlin 1995,, S. 40.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Memories of Basel#s Graffiti-Legend "Dare" in: Badische Zeitung v. 15 Sept. 2018
  2. "Die Sprayboys", Fotos from and an Interview with Gunter Sachs in: Architectural Digest, Heft Sept. 2007, S. 152ff
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1OMBsW1LEU Youtube Video mit Gunter Sachs Interview zu Dare
  4. "Invitation Happening" by Pierre deRoche, Saturday 14th of April 2007 at 6.15 PM, Basel, Exhibition Centre
  5. "Die Kunst ist weiblich", Programme brochure to Gunter-Sachs-Retrospective, Leipzig, 2008
  6. Dare – The Legacy of «Godfathers of Style» In: Basler Zeitung, 10th of March 2010
  7. Victoria Maw: "Off the wall" in: Financial Times v 15 July 2011
  8. "Anderssein als umgekehrtes Wagnis (To Be Different as a Reverse Venture)", in Badische Zeitung, 2 April 2016
  9. Basellandschaftliche Zeitung: The Heretic with the Spray Can, retrieved on 12 April 2016
  10. Badische Zeitung: Sigi von Koeding - Graffiti as an Urban Spectacle, retrieved on 12 April 2016