In the article, “The History of American Graffiti: From Subway Car to Gallery”, the writer Saskia De Melker, discusses how the explosion of graffiti has come into our culture and today’s society. It all started back in the late 60s, when a young man in high school was trying to get the attention from a girl by “tagging” city walls. He felt that the only way his star crossed lover would see him for who he actually was, was through an oversized attention seeking piece of artwork. However it did not get the attention of other people until the 80s, when the graffiti was then advertised as a form of artwork. Ever since, galleries all over the world now sell ‘graffiti-looking’ pieces for thousands of dollars. While some may look at certain graffiti and think it is trash, others see street art as a form of artistry and dexterity. For years now, many graffiti artists have become famous for their work, like Banksy. He has created dozens of artworks all over the world that people are now willing to pay big money for. One of his most expensive and famous art pieces was “Keep it Spotless,” it sold for over $1,870,000. While most would say Banksy is a form of genius, others say it is illegal. Even though his street art is all over the world and conveys various messages about todays society, if one were caught spray painting or vandalizing a wall, one would be thrown in jail and fined. The article online, “Graffiti” by Deborah Lamm Weisel, is a guide for cops explaining everything there is to know about what graffiti is, the dangers of it, the types of graffiti, motives of offenders and the characteristics/patterns of graffiti offenders. This guide does not need to argue whether it is an art or crime, because police know it is a crime. While most feel that graffiti is associated with gangs and the gang culture, Deborah tries to convey that it can come from anyone and be anywhere, like Banksy. But even the artistic graffiti paintings are illegal. She argues that when graffiti or street art springs up in one place, it attracts more ‘urban street art’ to the same area. “For many people, graffiti’s presence suggests the government’s failure to protect citizens and control lawbreakers.” Some look at graffiti and street art as a form of expression, others like the police feel that it leads people to think poorly about the government and their tax dollars at work. Ironically, street artists who are tax payers themselves “argue that they too have ownership over public spaces that have been unfairly taken over by advertisers” (Alpaslan 2). Some advertising corporations pay for street artists to ‘graffiti’ certain areas, which causes a double standard. So graffiti artists have tough time differentiating between art or crime. Zeynep Alpaslan, the author of the article “Is Street Art a Crime”, argues whether street art or ‘graffiti’ is considered in fact a crime or a mere expression of what one feels. Even though police may think it is an offense against the law, Alpaslan uses criminology to see whether “street art [is] under a type of crime, then examine it using criminological perspective, with criminological and deviance theories.” Alpaslan tries to distinguish contemporary public-space artwork from the territorial graffiti so much of us know. John Fekner characterizes street art as “all art on the street that’s not graffiti” (Lewisohn, 2008). Street artists seek public spaces to vandalize rather sell their work to galleries, so they can reach countless people instead of the few that walk into the art gallery. Alpaslan concludes after much research, that graffiti or street art can be categorized as a “Blue-Collar crime: any crime committed by an individual from a lower social class, Political: any behavior perceived as a threat, and/or Public-Order crime: defined as a crime which involves acts that interfere with the operations of society. I feel as though it is all circumstantial. It all depends on the piece of graffiti or street art and the person viewing it, to declare whether it is art or a crime. If the graffiti is legible and sends a thought provoking message to its viewer, I would consider it art. Otherwise, it is just another form of gang related graffiti. “The Difference Between Street Art and Graffiti” an article by Jill C. Weisberg, tries to explain the differences in the matter. She talks about how a ‘graffiti’ artist considers his or her work a piece of art as well as a street artist does...but does not do it for everyone. The graffiti artist vandalizes for other graffiti artists. Whereas a street artist will vandalize a wall or a piece for everyone to try and understand the meaning behind it. A graffiti artist (not the street art kind) usually end up spraying a vulgar or political message all over the city at any given time trying to convey their message to other ‘gangs.’ The street artist paints what they feel is a form of beauty trying to say a different message with their art by a picture most of the time, not actually writing out their message.