Top 55 Quotes & Sayings by Ben Eine

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English artist Ben Eine.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Ben Eine

Benjamin Flynn, known professionally as Eine, is an English artist based in London.

Spraypainting a shop shutter turns an ugly, boring thing into something interesting and colourful. I think you'd have to be a pretty negative person to find fault in it.
Old typography or letter woodblocks that are hand-carved, cracked, and worn are especially beautiful. I love that aged, handmade effect, and that's why I don't muck around much with Photoshop.
I haven't studied art and I haven't studied typography, but I've still gone out and done it. — © Ben Eine
I haven't studied art and I haven't studied typography, but I've still gone out and done it.
I love to paint and beautify the most unexpected of places - I've painted everything from doorways to trains but have always wanted to do something really huge and different.
Most people think I do street art, so I do everything for nothing. I'm an urchin who paints walls and does work for nothing. That's the first misconception about street artists, that we just paint for nothing.
I have never voted in any election - I usually have more important things to do, especially since I've had kids.
It's hard to live just by selling paintings.
I don't want to sell to street art collectors, I want to sell to art collectors.
I'm a luxury brand.
I don't get paid for what I do in public places. So I invest the money I earn in galleries back into doing the stuff I passionately want to do on the street.
When I first got into graffiti I thought it was going to change the world. But when, 20-years-later, it still hadn't, I got bored of the self-imposed rules.
The Prime Minister gave President Obama one of my artworks and suddenly my name was all over the news.
When I started working at Pictures On Walls, I'd been hanging out with Banksy for a few years travelling around the world together painting stuff, and then we moved into a new office and wanted to do screenprinting.
It makes me really proud to be able to use my art to spread positive messages around the world. — © Ben Eine
It makes me really proud to be able to use my art to spread positive messages around the world.
I did long-term re-insurance claims. Asbestos, health hazards, pollution. It was very boring. But I've got quite a mathematical brain and it paid well.
The art that I do is for the people. It is about engaging a new audience who wouldn't necessarily go to art galleries and museums and painting on the street is the best way to do that.
Whenever I go anywhere in the world to do a show I try to paint something in the street as well.
My work isn't overtly political, although it is sometimes painted in places where I don't have permission to paint, so that could be construed as a political statement.
I've a lot of respect for what people are doing here in Manchester, to promote the city's creativity and Aviva Investors Manchester Art Fair has played a big role in that. I'm glad to bring my work to the North West.
One of the advantages of not going to art school is that you're not taught what you can't do.
Street art belongs on the street. But I'm a working street artist and I earn my money selling art in the style of street art via galleries.
I'm a long way from being a Damien Hirst.
I remember finding this book, which showed a New York subway train that had been covered in so much graffiti you couldn't recognise it was a train. I thought, 'I want to do that... how do you do that?'
Street art, unlike graffiti, adds to the environment and is a positive experience for the artist and community.
Painting on the ground was a cool challenge because you can't just stand back and see what you're doing.
My philosophy through all my work, be it on canvas or on the street, is about pushing boundaries and not going with the flow because everyone else is doing something a certain way.
I got a message from Downing Street that my picture's hanging in the White House. Which is weird.
My friends were stealing cars and shoplifting. I was never into that but I was cheeky. I enjoyed making people laugh.
A friend of mine back in 1989 did an illegal rave in Vauxhall. He got Keith Haring to come along and tag the side of the wall. My friend cut it out of the wall and he kept it under his bed for 20 years. Then a few years ago he asks me if I want to buy it... so I spent £12,000 on a Keith Haring.
When I got into graffiti, it was the most-exciting art form and it changed the course of my life.
David Cameron has given one of my paintings to President Obama. It's quite mad, really. But it's OK. It's not the kind of recognition I seek or get every day, but Cameron seems quite a positive kind of guy and Obama's a dude. I would probably have had issues if it had been for Bush.
I'm a bit too old for anarchy. If I was younger I might be more political but I'm married with kids and I've got a mortgage.
I'm always travelling and spend a lot of time in airports so I know what it feels like to get a personal welcome home. I wish I got more of them.
When I can, I enjoy working with local people to involve everyone in the community in changing their environment.
An airplane cabin isn't the first place people think of when they choose an exhibition space, but I'm all for doing things differently.
I used to run away from the cops and now I stand and chat with them about my art. I'm older now and it is harder to run away from them. It would be embarrassing for an older man to get arrested by someone half your age. So I gave up running.
I respect Virgin Atlantic's brave and challenging attitude and the way it goes against the grain, so I jumped at the chance to be part of the first ever Gallery in the Air. — © Ben Eine
I respect Virgin Atlantic's brave and challenging attitude and the way it goes against the grain, so I jumped at the chance to be part of the first ever Gallery in the Air.
I'm hoping that Abu Dhabi's first piece of street art will inspire the next generation of artists the same way that the discovery of subway art inspired me all those years ago.
The whole world is covered in graffiti. No one cares. It's just part of urban noise.
You can't be a punk all your life.
You just have to be clever about who you work with. Had I done Gap or H&M, there's no way Louis Vuitton would have wanted to work with me. So you hold out for the big ones.
Anyone can lose their home and find their life is turned upside down.
Whenever I get a job that's somewhere around America, I fly over my ex-wife and daughter and hang out with them.
Street artists want to add something to the environment. They consider the audience, whereas graffiti writers don't care about anyone except themselves, they do it purely for the kick.
In certain places around the world, street art is widely accepted and it is part of the urban environment.
For me, it's mostly about having stuff on the street. You're walking down the street, you do it every day, and suddenly there's something that wasn't there yesterday: something bright and cheerful and different. It might stay there for a year; maybe it will disappear.
I'm not a massive artist by any stretch of the imagination. Yes, I've been in papers and magazines, but you never have any idea if anyone actually reads it or pays any attention.
I was brought up in south London and I started out in the world of graffiti when I was about 14 because I wanted to be part of that hooded tracksuit gang thing. — © Ben Eine
I was brought up in south London and I started out in the world of graffiti when I was about 14 because I wanted to be part of that hooded tracksuit gang thing.
Banksy's a very selfish, driven, paranoid artist. For good reasons.
A lot of my paintings have quite negative meanings, but painted in a bright and cheerful way.
All too often, when people think about art in the U.K., they think London. There's some really great work being produced outside of the capital city and I think it is important to stop and acknowledge that.
I started off tagging stuff - I'm not meant to be having tea and biscuits with the prime minister.
I love the process of cutting everything out with a scalpel yourself: I don't want to have my stencils drawn up in Illustrator, then laser-cut. I like the fact that it's slightly wrong; I think it gives it a beauty. The individual and handmade will always be worth more than what a computer can do, at least until computers can learn how to make mistakes.
I painted the words "GREAT ADVENTURE" in Beijing, Dallas, San Francisco, Copenhagen, and Japan. What it means to me is completely different to everybody else. And that's what I love about random words and phrases taken out of context: everyone applies their own context. If you want to apply something political or meaningful to a word I wrote on the side of the wall, then it's up to you.
Graffiti writers will never stop. They'll just evolve. It's interesting what ideas people come up with and how it all extends forward.
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