On my vacation recently in Paris I went down to the Metro. A train must have just pulled out because there was no one on the platform except for a man.
He was lanky and tall and seemed to be contemplating the wall. Suddenly took out a black marker and begin to draw on an advertisement. It took him perhaps thirty second.
In bold, black strokes he was shaping something.
It took a moment, but soon I could see that it was a trumpet. When he turned and saw me standing there, he was clearly upset. He thought his action had gone unseen. He stared at me with a gaunt face, but there was something playful in his eyes.
I made a motion with my hands. "It's a trumpet?" I asked.
Relieved that he wasn't going to be arrested, he nodded yes.
"Where's it playing?" I asked in French.
"Everywhere," he replied. Then with a shrug of his shoulders and a wry smile he disappeared on to the train that had just appeared. He took it one station; then I watched him slip away.
But he was right. I began to see his trumpets everywhere. And I began documenting them. Here are all the ones that I found. I liked the statement he's making on all the subway ads, but mostly I like his trumpet. It was always the same.
And clearly at least in Paris as another graffiti below says, jazz is not dead!
He was lanky and tall and seemed to be contemplating the wall. Suddenly took out a black marker and begin to draw on an advertisement. It took him perhaps thirty second.
In bold, black strokes he was shaping something.
It took a moment, but soon I could see that it was a trumpet. When he turned and saw me standing there, he was clearly upset. He thought his action had gone unseen. He stared at me with a gaunt face, but there was something playful in his eyes.
I made a motion with my hands. "It's a trumpet?" I asked.
Relieved that he wasn't going to be arrested, he nodded yes.
"Where's it playing?" I asked in French.
"Everywhere," he replied. Then with a shrug of his shoulders and a wry smile he disappeared on to the train that had just appeared. He took it one station; then I watched him slip away.
But he was right. I began to see his trumpets everywhere. And I began documenting them. Here are all the ones that I found. I liked the statement he's making on all the subway ads, but mostly I like his trumpet. It was always the same.
And clearly at least in Paris as another graffiti below says, jazz is not dead!