Typographical Graffiti Projects

Mathieu Tremblin Paints Over Tags and Translates Them into Type

Mathieu Tremblin is a French street artist who can best be described as an anti-graffiti graffiti artist. Throughout the past decade, he has painted over graffiti in the French cities of Nantes and Reims and replaced the original tags with typographically accurate matching words and symbols.

Mathieu Tremblin's project is called 'Tag Clouds,' and the results range from silly to fascinating. No matter the tag, Tremblin does his best to match the original color as closely as possible. Then, after painstakingly decoding the words and phrases, he creates a sort of collage in which all the tags fit, overlapping and orienting themselves as closely to the original surface as possible (while staying within the confines of proper typography.) For words, the results tend to be relatively indecipherable, but for images like faces, Mathieu Tremblin uses old-fashioned unicode smileys and frowney faces, morphing fascinating art into parodies.
Trend Themes
1. Anti-graffiti Art - Mathieu Tremblin challenges traditional graffiti by painting over tags and replacing them with typographically accurate words and symbols.
2. Tag Clouds - Mathieu Tremblin creates collages of overlapped tags, matching the original color and orientation as closely as possible, but within the confines of proper typography.
3. Unicode Art - Mathieu Tremblin uses old-fashioned unicode smileys and frowney faces to transform graffiti images into fascinating parodies.
Industry Implications
1. Street Art - Artists can explore anti-graffiti art techniques to challenge and transform traditional graffiti into new artistic expressions.
2. Graphic Design - Graphic designers can experiment with tag clouds and typography collages for unique visual presentations and artworks.
3. Digital Art - Digital artists can incorporate unicode symbols in their work to create interesting and innovative pieces.

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