Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez

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I have known Koe Rodriguez for the longest, but only recently discovered his treasure trove of graff history. I’ll let Koe get into it…

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How did you first get into graff? Did you write, or have you always been more of an aficionado?

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I got into Graff during the early 80s because Hip-Hop was in full effect and everybody was goin’ for theirs.  My older cousin and his friends where into it, the media was giving it some exposure and I was personally blown away by it.  I was into drawing at the time, so I gravitated towards the element of Hip-Hop that resonated with me the most.  I started off like everyone else, a young toy, getting’ up with El Marko markers and Wet Look spray paint.

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By the mid-80s, I began trying my hand at painting.  My name was originally “Coe,” but I later changed it to “Koe” after discovering there was a Coe in the Bronx.  When it came to piecing, I enjoyed rockin’ the letter “K” much better than the letter “C” as well.  As I was actively writing, I began documenting the art as well – this was in 1985 at the age of 15.

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Being a true Gemini and having that insatiable appetite to absorb knowledge, I was also consuming as much information as I could about Hip-Hop and Graffiti in general.  This went on for many years and by the time I was in my 20 and 30s, cats were calling me a Hip-Hop encyclopedia and later a scholar.  When I was filmed for the movie “Just For Kicks,” they actually gave me that “Hip-Hop Scholar” credit, I never requested it.  I’m a pretty humble cat and rarely ride my own jock.

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Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez

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When did you begin collecting materials on graff culture? Where has this path taken you?

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I began collecting graff related items dating back to the early 80s.  Newspaper clippings came first and then books like Subway Art and Steven Hager’s Hip-Hop came next.  My family was fortunate enough to cop a VCR around 1984 and I began recording anything I could on Hip-Hop culture, especially Graffiti.  ABC (Channel 7) ran a few good specials on Hip-Hop early on like 20/20’s “Rappin’ To The Beat,” “The Big Break Contest,” “New York Hot Tracks” and a made for TV movie called “Dreams Don’t Die” featuring Graff by the late, great Dondi White.  In the late 80s, I would cut my high school classes, jump on a Path Train and head to the original Soho Zat to boost IGT Magazines and Vaughn Bode comics.

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The 80s were a really special time for consuming all things Hip-Hop.  I remember heading over to comic book hot spot Forbidden Planet to rack comics with my lil’ homie and Vulcan (who was working there) had the drop on us and told us to forget about boosting anything.  It was actually pretty cool (and funny) being busted by a popular graff writer of the time.  Vulcan was cool about the situation and after asking him what would be a good spot to photograph subway burners he put us on to a good spot uptown to bench and catch flicks.  As for the path that collecting and being down with Hip-Hop in general has taken me, its allowed me to have a pretty nice career in Hip-Hop.  Truthfully, I feel blessed to be doing what I’ve always loved doing, and getting paid for it.  Life is a trip.

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Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez

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Which piece is the pride of your collection and why?

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A: Wow – there’s just so many. lol I have vintage Krylon cans for colors that have been discontinued for quite some time.  I have my collection of original graff magazines and books.  I have thousands of graff related photos dating back to the 80s and more importantly, I have all the great memories.  My collection of archives and paraphernalia isn’t exclusive to graff related items.  I’ve collected pretty much anything that deals with Hip-Hop culture in general.  My home office is a serious omage to the culture.  My file cabinet is covered in Hip-Hop related stickers alone – anything from an original “OPP” sticker or Yo MTV trading cards to Hip-Hop apparel hang tags that I customized into magnets.  I have some real conversation pieces.

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Having observed graff for three decades, what would you say is the most impressive thing about how the culture has developed during this time? What has been the most surprising?

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Graff culture never ceases to amaze me.  Its essentially gone from a secret society of outlaw artists to an internationally recognized artform with a global contingency.  It went from being eradicated below ground to blowing up something crazy above ground.  I’m always impressed at how Graff’s evolution, be its style or its lifestyle has maintained immense resiliency, cleverness, inventiveness and steady progression.  Graff writers are pop culture’s new rock stars.  Guys like Lee and Cope 2 who were considered outlaws and their works considered urban blight, are global celebrity’s and bankable talent.

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Graff culture is unstoppable and it’s gonna continue to grow and radiate for many years to come.  With corporations still eager to get in between the sheets with graff artists to promote or sell their products and/or services, more and more writers are seeing a reason to stick to their guns and take their craft to much higher levels.  Hip-Hop is big business and rappers shouldn’t be the only ones prospering from it anymore; not when art is one of the most provocative, respected and lucrative mediums on the planet.

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Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez

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You mention you have pen pal letters! What’s that all about?

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A: Back in the late 80s, myself and some of my graff friends like: Ket, Cole, Nic 1, Cavs, and John The Greek were communicating with other writers around the globe and engaging in photo trading, which was essentially swapping your graff photos for other writer’s photos – kinda like trading baseball cards.  My foray into photo trading started off around 1987 after reaching out to West Coast graff magazine “Ghetto Art” (which later became “Spray Can Art”) and starting a friendship with the rag’s publishers, Charlie DTK and Tim “Power.”  Charlie, who is now considered a West Coast graff legend, would send me dope graff flicks by him and hot LA writers and I would send him hot graff flicks from New York.  We would always include a letter with all of our flicks to exchange information, gossip or to simply shoot the shit.

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Sometimes we would even send each other packages containing VHS and audio tapes of graff related stuff like “Style Wars” and Hip-Hop mix shows by Red Alert, Chuck Chillout and Mr. Magic.  This is all pre-Internet and if you wanted to holler at anyone out of town or abroad, you sat down and wrote a letter or you hollered at them on the phone.  Eventually, more cats started getting down with photo trading and the next thing you knew, I was writing cats from New York to Holland…it was crazy! I have a huge folder of all the original letters I ever received from the cats I wrote to dating back to the late 80s.  Looking back, it’s bugged-out how committed we were to our craft.

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Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez

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What are your plans for the collection?

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I recently took a bunch of my Hip-Hop collectibles to the Las Vegas apparel show “Magic.” I consult for the heritage Hip-Hop brand Sedgwick & Cedar and laced our booth with some of my vintage Hip-Hop pieces.  I was instrumental in laying out the booth’s overall flavor and had some of  my prize pieces like an old name buckle, vintage Krylon cans and markers and Cazal glasses in these hot trophy cases.  The booth looked like a Hip-Hop museum and mad heads were drawn to it on the strength of its funky true school flavor.  It worked well with baggin’ sales and it definitely let cats know that there were some real vets in the house.  Some of my graff related collectibles are featured in a book that I began working on with my old shooting partner from Brooklyn, John The Greek.

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This book features some of our greatest NY Graff flicks from the late 80s to 1993.  The book has a lot of shots of dope subway graff during its twilight on the New York subway system, which is significant in itself.  It also features the “Foto Kingz,” the crew of graff writers who also documented graffiti culture for crazy years.  That crew consisted of Cavs, Ket, Cole, John The Greek, Nic 1, Charlie DTK and later me.  I’m hoping we really get a chance to publish the book as its content is not just culturally and historically significant, but just a hot slice of true Hip-Hop culture.

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Courtesy of Koe Rodriguez