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5Pointz Aerosol Art Center, Inc. is an outdoor art exhibit space in Long Island City, New York, considered to be the world’s premiere “graffiti Mecca,” where aerosol artists from around the globe paint colorful pieces on the walls of a 200,000-square-foot factory building.
The name 5Pointz signifies the five boroughs coming together as one but, because of its reputation as an epicenter of the graffiti scene, the industrial complex has actually united aerosol artists from across the world. Legendary writers from Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Japan, Brazil, and all over the United States have painted on the building walls, including Stay High 149, Tracy 168, Cope2, Part, and Tats Cru.
Over the past decade, the striking, graffiti-covered warehouse has attracted several hip-hop and R&B stars, including Doug E. Fresh, Kurtis Blow, Grandmaster Kaz, Mobb Deep, Rahzel, DJ JS-1, Boot Camp Clik, Joan Jett, and Joss Stone.
On any given day, 5Pointz visitors can expect to find prominent artists, musicians, deejays, Emcees (rappers), and B-boys (break dancers) on site, in addition to filmmakers, photographers, and entire tour buses full of admirers soaking in the more than 350 Technicolor murals.
The gallery curator is graffiti veteran Jonathan Cohen, best known by his signature tag, “Meres One.” His goal is to convert the five-story, block-long industrial complex at Jackson Avenue and Davis Street, formerly the Phun Phactory, into a graffiti art museum.
The name 5Pointz signifies the five boroughs coming together as one but, because of its reputation as an epicenter of the graffiti scene, the industrial complex has actually united aerosol artists from across the world. Legendary writers from Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Japan, Brazil, and all over the United States have painted on the building walls, including Stay High 149, Tracy 168, Cope2, Part, and Tats Cru.
Over the past decade, the striking, graffiti-covered warehouse has attracted several hip-hop and R&B stars, including Doug E. Fresh, Kurtis Blow, Grandmaster Kaz, Mobb Deep, Rahzel, DJ JS-1, Boot Camp Clik, Joan Jett, and Joss Stone.
On any given day, 5Pointz visitors can expect to find prominent artists, musicians, deejays, Emcees (rappers), and B-boys (break dancers) on site, in addition to filmmakers, photographers, and entire tour buses full of admirers soaking in the more than 350 Technicolor murals.
The gallery curator is graffiti veteran Jonathan Cohen, best known by his signature tag, “Meres One.” His goal is to convert the five-story, block-long industrial complex at Jackson Avenue and Davis Street, formerly the Phun Phactory, into a graffiti art museum.
These are all the jacks I've carved over the years. I don't use real pumpkins because I'm very anti food-waste. This collection grows a little each year.
Hand built Factory Five Roadster, built by me. Check out more of these car photos in our Show Off Your Ride gallery.
Except I don't have Bishop in this photo, but you get the idea.
I LOVE this photo ALOT! Definitely my FAVOURITE photo at DCD camp this year =DDD
It reminds me just how amazing God has brought all these people together, all the different people of different nations - gathering in one place; worshipping and praising God!
God's connecting us because we need one another for this HUGE HUGE end time revival - the outpouring of the latter rain, which is gonna be 7 times the former rain! Hello, 7 times of what we've been reading in the book of Acts. It's =O enough for me.
so "Clap your hands all ye people! And SHOUT with a voice of TRUIMPH!"
GBU! ♥
Got to the point of having to patch concrete to continue, so I did that before stopping to eat dinner.
The official opening takes place today of the downtown Chilliwack campus at Five Corners.
Rick Collins Photographer - UFV
Right after the storm.
Love standing in the rain and walking barefoot through the warm puddles.
('Puddle' is a strange word.)
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem arrives at the Five Country Ministerial and is greeted by U.K. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood at the Honourable Artillery Company in London, Sept. 8, 2025. (DHS photo by Tia Dufour)
The five gallery Conservatory of Flowers Victorian Greenhouse has been one of Melody's and my favorite places to visit in our city of San Francisco. We were back in this pleasant place filled with tropical trees, plants, and flowers in January 2024 after extended absences during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. The first gallery to the left after entering the building is the Potted Plants room. That is where I made this photo of the Lollipop plant, also know as Pachystachys Lutes and Golden Shrimp plant. Captured this image using macro and spot focus on my Canon Powershot SX50. I have this setting saved as one of my custom settings.
Five Million Flowers is an installation art show, featuring LED backlit honeycomb in bee hive frames. Each front is adorned with a translucent image of a woman from around the world, all sisters to the Queen. The Queen Bee, Hymenoptera, invited you to see deep into the blue spectrum. Those wanting to light candles to the Queen, for their own desires or to honor the bees, leave treasures for her in her beehive basket.
Had a bimble around Fairburn Ings nature reserve. There was a spot that was covered in these rather styish looking boys.
"A subtle display tea with characteristics of vanilla and green tea flavors. The blooming lotus flower is burgundy in colour."
The official opening takes place today of the downtown Chilliwack campus at Five Corners.
Rick Collins Photographer - UFV
5Pointz Aerosol Art Center, Inc. is an outdoor art exhibit space in Long Island City, New York, considered to be the world’s premiere “graffiti Mecca,” where aerosol artists from around the globe paint colorful pieces on the walls of a 200,000-square-foot factory building.
The name 5Pointz signifies the five boroughs coming together as one but, because of its reputation as an epicenter of the graffiti scene, the industrial complex has actually united aerosol artists from across the world. Legendary writers from Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Japan, Brazil, and all over the United States have painted on the building walls, including Stay High 149, Tracy 168, Cope2, Part, and Tats Cru.
Over the past decade, the striking, graffiti-covered warehouse has attracted several hip-hop and R&B stars, including Doug E. Fresh, Kurtis Blow, Grandmaster Kaz, Mobb Deep, Rahzel, DJ JS-1, Boot Camp Clik, Joan Jett, and Joss Stone.
On any given day, 5Pointz visitors can expect to find prominent artists, musicians, deejays, Emcees (rappers), and B-boys (break dancers) on site, in addition to filmmakers, photographers, and entire tour buses full of admirers soaking in the more than 350 Technicolor murals.
The gallery curator is graffiti veteran Jonathan Cohen, best known by his signature tag, “Meres One.” His goal is to convert the five-story, block-long industrial complex at Jackson Avenue and Davis Street, formerly the Phun Phactory, into a graffiti art museum.
The name 5Pointz signifies the five boroughs coming together as one but, because of its reputation as an epicenter of the graffiti scene, the industrial complex has actually united aerosol artists from across the world. Legendary writers from Canada, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Japan, Brazil, and all over the United States have painted on the building walls, including Stay High 149, Tracy 168, Cope2, Part, and Tats Cru.
Over the past decade, the striking, graffiti-covered warehouse has attracted several hip-hop and R&B stars, including Doug E. Fresh, Kurtis Blow, Grandmaster Kaz, Mobb Deep, Rahzel, DJ JS-1, Boot Camp Clik, Joan Jett, and Joss Stone.
On any given day, 5Pointz visitors can expect to find prominent artists, musicians, deejays, Emcees (rappers), and B-boys (break dancers) on site, in addition to filmmakers, photographers, and entire tour buses full of admirers soaking in the more than 350 Technicolor murals.
The gallery curator is graffiti veteran Jonathan Cohen, best known by his signature tag, “Meres One.” His goal is to convert the five-story, block-long industrial complex at Jackson Avenue and Davis Street, formerly the Phun Phactory, into a graffiti art museum.
For more than half a century this sign has greeted Montrealers driving over the Champlain Bridge, walking through the Old Port or Little Burgundy, or descending from Mount Royal, but perhaps for not much longer. In July, the sign went dark, its owners having decided to do away with it. As one of Montreal’s most distinctive and beloved landmarks faces extinction, a question is raised: do we care enough—or even know enough—about our sign heritage?
Picture taken 04/23/25
Five Below | 9559 Mentor Ave, Mentor, OH
Former CiCi's Pizza.
Please contact me via FlickrMail, or on Gmail if you'd like to use any of my photographs.
retaimings@gmail.com
I was thinking a wee bit "outside the box" with this one. I went out yesterday to take a FTF 7 and I couldn't find anything that I liked. But I saw this 56 and thought, hey five, six, ...... there I made you say seven!! Hope the admins are in an end of term, demob happy sort of mood. This just might be my Fill The Frame Friday shot.