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For many, billboards are simply another dreary fact of life. They pollute
the landscape with their blatant pitches for cigarettes, suds and washed-up
superstars coming soon to a casino near you. They barely register in a
passing pedestrian's or motorist's imagination until you see these:
An Apple computer billboard of Amelia Earhart changed from "Think
Different" to "Think Doomed."
A neon Joe Camel ad that once touted "Genuine Taste" now asks
"Am I Dead Yet?" with a lit skull superimposed over the cartoon
camel's head.
A billboard for a local radio station that once read "Hits Happen-New
X-100" now says "Shit Happens-New Exxon," only a few months
after the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989. The San Francisco-based Billboard
Liberation Front has taken responsibility for these double-take-inducing
billboards for more than twenty years.
Cigarette billboards may now be a thing of the past as a result of the
$206 billion settlement between the tobacco industry and forty-six states.
But back when the BLF began, their modifications were some of the only
anti-smoking messages out there.
What BLF does can be called billboard modification or alteration, improvement
or beautification. Some call it vandalism or defacing private property.
Others call it admirable; Utne Reader nominated the BLF as one of its
ten media heroes of 1991.
BLF founding member Jack Napier calls it art. His group organized "The
Art of Midnight Editing," a bicoastal exhibit of the group's last
two decades of "Culture Jamming and Drive-by Advertising Improvement,"
which came to the Lab in San Francisco in March and CBGB's 313 Gallery
in New York in April. For the first time, the show gathered together private
photographs and examples of work by various twilight groups and fringe
individuals around the country, above ground and in the bright light of
day.
The Unusual Suspects
The newest works on display included the BLF's guerrilla-style commentary
on the "Think Different" campaign, which Napier describes as
"a great example of how absolutely everything, no matter what it
meant in different circumstances, can be used as a sales model."
Obviously the images of Bob Dylan, the Dalai Lama and John Lennon are
"meant to be distilled into a sales pitch."
The BLF slapped another notable target, the psychedelic swirl of a Levi's
billboard, with the face of Charles Manson two years ago in San Francisco.
A hilarious press release/communique followed: "The historic collaboration
between two of the most potent iconic forces of the 1960s taps into a
frothy zeitgeist of manipulative nostalgia . . . Levi's and Charlie, those
two great success stories of pop mesmerism . . . appear to us reborn as
the Dank and Dope of the '90s . . . Charlie was the '60s and now thanks
to Levi's he is the '90s."
The possibility of Manson becoming the "spokesconvict" for Levi's
appears to be an all-too-real possibility in today's advertising environment,
theorizes Napier, with tongue planted firmly in cheek. "Manson does
represent the prison population, one of the largest populations in the
world, and since Levi's is going overseas, if they go to China, they could
use prisoners to manufacture Levi's," he says. "It's only a
matter of time before they start using Idi Amin or Pol Pot to advertise
shoes. It's so important to sell things; anything that'll work they should
use."
Some of the earliest billboard modifications in the exhibit were made
by Mark Pauline in the late 1970s, before he began to wage wars with robots
in his Survival Research Laboratories. Clad in a painter's uniform in
broad daylight, he transformed a billboard depicting the owner of Jeno's
Pizza into an executioner dangling a likeness of Pauline's head. In another
of his greatest hits, a billboard of Kojak's Telly Savalas hawking Black
Velvet whiskey was changed to "Feel the Pain."
Also on exhibit were photos of hand-painted billboard alterations by Ron
English, one of the few BLF artists who have been arrested for their trespasses.
In vivid colors and a hyper-realistic style, English painted one Joe Camel
asking another: "Hook any new kids today?"
Another billboard, which depicts the New York-via-Texas artist on a cross,
with the caption "Let's get drunk and kill God," was the subject
of one of English's few negative encounters with the public. When he put
it up with the help of members of the New Jersey group Cicada Corps in
a mainly Puerto Rican neighborhood, the response was violent.
"I thought, it takes people just three seconds before they pull their
thoughts together and decide to kill you," recalls English. "When
they saw the billboard, you could see them seething, all these men sitting
on porches and drinking beer. They all went into their houses and brought
out sticks and baseball bats."
Fortunately, he managed to drive off in time, although Pedro Carvajal,
who was filming the modification for a documentary, almost crashed into
another car in his haste to escape. Cicada Corps and its previous incarnation,
Artfux, also exhibited photos of billboards that ranged from an image
of Uncle Sam captioned with "I want you to die a horrible meaningless
death to sustain a lifestyle that will ultimately destroy the earth"
to an altered Newport cigarette billboard of two women laughing with a
man in a leather jacket, reading "Rebel without a Lung." The
advertisement's Surgeon General box also received a critical rewrite:
"Warning: Healthy profits don't always require living customers."
The corps has also modified bus shelter posters and stop signs, which
in the right light say "Stop AIDS" or "Stop racism."
The exhibit included photographs detailing the handiwork of anonymous
underground groups such as the California Department of Corrections, whose
alterations include a British Petroleum ad altered to say "SFPD/The
Sign of Brutality," and Hocus Focus, who staged yet another "Think
Different" campaign and added the lines "Imagine lovers are
not hucksters" to the image of John Lennon and Yoko Ono and "He
not busy being born is busy buying" to the photograph of Bob Dylan.
"Why Ask Why?"
The effect, according to Judith Coburn (writing in the Village Voice),
can be compared to the actions and artwork of the Situationists in the
late 1950s, who used existing mainstream channels of communication to
their own advantage and ultimately claimed responsibility for the mass
strikes in France in May 1968 that paralyzed the entire country.
But the reasons for the BLF and other groups' modifications of billboards
are as varied and hard to pin down as the groups themselves. The BLF-
which at twenty-two years is the oldest instigator of the "anti-advertising
movement" in the United States, according to Adweek-has a forthright
approach to "billboard improvement," as they prefer to call
it. They believe all people should have their own billboards. "We
don't have anything against billboards at all or the idea of advertising,"
says Napier. "However, I'm miffed at the idea that wealthy individuals
and corporations have access to drive-by media. These are very expensive
to lease or rent or own."
As a sign of their benevolence, the BLF takes pains to alter billboards
without damaging property and occasionally leaves a twelve-pack of beer
for workers assigned the unfortunate task of restoring the billboard.
And as a mark of their professionalism (legend has it that members work
in graphic design and advertising), they also strive for pleasing layout
and impeccably matched fonts. "Spraypainting foul words is not creative,"
says Napier.
The BLF also offers scruffy art students, would-be pranksters and nascent
billboard editors a guide to "the Art and Science of Billboard Improvement,"
covering production, execution and escape methods at its Web site (www.billboardliberation.com).
The group began as little more than an elaborate stunt concocted by the
San Francisco Suicide Club, which organized "marginally legal"
urban adventures such as wandering the sewers of Oakland and having a
meal with the Moonies. The nineteen-year-old Napier and another BLF member
were blindfolded, driven to a downtown San Francisco freeway exchange
and urged to climb onto a factory roof and alter two Max Factor billboards.
"I was astonished to see you could climb up and put whatever you
wanted to say on it. That was a revelation to me as a former juvenile
delinquent," says Napier, today a self-described businessman in an
advertising-related field.
Others define billboard modification under the somewhat more cerebral
category of "culture jamming," a term popularized by Negativland.
As cultural critic Mark Dery defines it, "jamming" started out
as a "CB slang of interrupting radio broadcasts or conversations
with fellow hams with lip farts, obscenities and other equally jejune
hijinx. Culture jamming, by contrast, is directed against an ever more
intrusive, instrumental technoculture whose operant mode is the manufacture
of consent through the manipulation of symbols."
Others, like filmmaker Craig Baldwin-who is known for his Negativland
documentary, Sonic Outlaws, and less known for the billboard alterations
he carries out with his own gang of pranksters, the Urban Rats-see the
act as a natural, almost folk art, response to the pervasiveness of advertising
in the urban environment. He wishes billboards would be abolished, as
they are in Hawaii and Oregon, but "meanwhile I'll meet advertising
on its own terms. I don't have the luxury of choosing my battlefield,"
says the frenetic San Franciscan. "It may be more effective to invert
the received language of advertising, and that's a challenge and measure
of your ingenuity, pluck and wit."
Billboard modification is in keeping with a Northern Californian tradition
of communitarian ideals, which involves people communicating among themselves
and not through banks, networks or producers of mass media, Baldwin believes.
Its predecessors and successors were the street theater activists the
Diggers, '70s-era East Bay anarchists such as Point Blank! and later the
Silicon Valley hackers.
Others, such as Carvajal and his mainly Latino group, are motivated by
the disproportionate amount of billboard advertising in low-income black
and Latino neighborhoods. "All these communities are saturated and
bombarded with negative adsCtobacco ads and alcohol ads. We started to
transform those negative messages into positive messages by defacing them,
by using humor and the same aesthetics as Madison Avenue, matching the
font, changing the text so that it looks like it belongs there. That is
the characteristic of the Cicada billboardCthey're very subtle, so they
stay longer," says Carvajal, who has documented Cicada and Artfux's
work in the documentaries Citizen Art/Culture Jamming (1995) and Art Pushes:
Art Provokes: Artfux (1991).
The members of Cicada and Artfux got started on their life of billboard
banditry with the help of English, who taught them overlay techniques.
Now Cicada is so familiar in New York's Alphabet City that residents offer
the members water to mix their wheat paste or lend an extra ladder, says
Carvajal. "They know us and what we're about and that we're just
trying to diminish the negative imagery," he explains. "They
enjoy it."
English started out making billboards to entertain his girlfriend; he
would drive her by them in Dallas and Austin, Texas, where he attended
college and majored in art. They were such a hit, he decided to continue.
After all, he thought, he probably wouldn't be able to show in a gallery,
so it seemed like a good way to have his own art exhibit. He and his friends
would get a keg of beer, go to a park down the streets from the billboards
and have an art opening.
Since he was arrested and charged with a second-degree felony in 1984
with a group altering thirty-eight billboards in downtown Dallas, English
has become an established artist with Ozone Gallery in New York and has
tried therapy to kick his billboard habit.
It hasn't worked. English continues his beautification projectsCas he
speaks on the phone he has two "Think Different" posters ready,
depicting Charles Manson and Bill Gates. "I think a funny thing happens
when you enter the art system. The only art you sell is art to really,
really rich people. You think, 'I'm from a trailer park in the Midwest
and those people will never get to see the art,'" he says. "So
I get off on going to poor neighborhoods and doing stuff and having people
get off on it and thanking me."
San Francisco State University instructor Timothy Drescher understands
that interplay between art and the community. He draws parallels between
billboard alterations and the early community murals from the mid-'60s
to the mid-'70s. "The early phases of community murals were much
more politically incisive than they have become in the '80s and '90s.
They're now another form of public art; they're completely bureaucratized,"
he says, adding that early murals used to tackle controversial issues
such as racism and housing. "I see in billboard correction some of
the excitement and incisiveness and response to major issues in the early
years of community murals."
Although Mad Magazine had done spoofs of advertisements in the early 1960s,
Drescher says the earliest mention of targeted billboards on record that
he has found was in Edward Abbey's novel, The Monkey Wrench Gang, in which
environmental saboteurs cut down billboards in the middle of the night.
Working with the Enemy
High-minded monkey-wrenching aside, Napier believes that, inevitably,
advertising will also appropriate the appropriators. In recent years,
an ad campaign for Amstel beer seemed to be culture jammed by a fictitious
group, Americans for Disciplined Behavior. Sun Microsystems billboards
adopted the appearance of Unabomber-style manifestos. The California Department
of Health Services' anti-smoking campaign depicted Marlboro cowboys with
captions that read "Bob, I've got emphysema," and Plymouth Neon's
"Hi" billboards appeared to get hit by taggers that changed
it to "Hip."
Napier thinks the direction advertising is taking is predictable. "Eventually
advertising will consume all methods and modes of communication, and they'll
regurgitate it like a rat consuming its own bowels," he says.
So what does an anarchist do in response to the backhanded compliment
of being copied? Strike back, as the BLF did against the Plymouth Neon
campaign, swapping "Hi" to "Hype 666."
Or join 'em. Napier says the creators of the Apple campaign recently tried
to hire the group as copywriters. "We're probably not going to take
the bait. They're going to have to pay a lot, because I'm making a lot
of money now," he says wryly. "We're actually considering back-charging
and invoicing them for our previous campaigns. Anytime a product gets
into print, regardless of the context, it sells more units. Considering
that, we're quite owed it."
Thanks to the Gadfly Online magazine for the permission to reproduce
this article.
Kimberly Chun, is the associate entertainment editor
in charge of music coverage at SF Gate, the San Francisco Chronicle's
Web site.
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