After having to pay substantial fines in the early 90’s for his graffiti, he moved onto paper and has spent the last 10 years A not-to-be-missed piece.Ĭreating his name from a cartoon strip he used to read as a child, ‘Blek le Roc’, about an American animal trapper fighting the invasion of the British Army, he changed the ‘le Roc’ to ‘le Rat’ because his first stencil was a rat - and because you can find art in ‘rat’.
Running ManĪ rare 3 colour silkscreen on Moulin de Gue paper, showing the clean simple lines that form part of Blek le Rat’s superb iconography. This stunning monochrome print of a dancer is a sleek, modest and graceful piece that captures the essence of the artist’s stencilling ability. Just released to celebrate the publication of his new book ‘Getting Through The Walls’ – the first and only collection of his work extensively photographed by his wife, Sybille Prou - and a major exhibition of his work in London, artrepublic has two new Blek le Rat prints that have already sold out with the publishers, available at both their London and Brighton galleries. From there he moved into figurative work documenting homelessness, poverty as well as mixing up styles and genres, with works such as David with Kalashnikov and Space Cowboy. Inspired by New York’s graffiti scene in the 70’s and by WWII propaganda, where Italian fascists would stencil pictures of Mussolini, Blek Le Rat (real name Xavier Prou) moved away from traditional tags and started out with a simple rat stencil, of which he painted thousands on the city’s streets. The Rat invasionīlek Le Rat created the stencil scene in the early 80’s on the streets of Paris and has been pushing the boundaries of graffiti art ever since. “Only 20 years earlier.” Banksy’s work is often a homage to that already done by le Rat. In 2005, the British graffiti artist Banksy, whose canvases today command six figure price tags, quoted that every time he thought he’d painted something slightly original, he found out that Blek Le Rat had already been there, done that. Born in 1951 in Paris, he is considered by many to be the grandmaster, the creator ‘absolu’ of stencil graffiti as we know it today.
Anyone who knows their stuff about street art will hold the Parisian graffiti artist, Blek le Rat in the highest regard.