![Still has the tagger](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/197.jpg)
![still has the tagger still has the tagger](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/79/7e/57/797e57f2c1e827115388a616f5ed05c9.png)
This anonymity is rooted in graffiti street culture. However, many artists who work in graffiti styles, like Alec Monopoly, still keep an element of mystery around their identity. Several of these graffiti artists are becoming well-known. They will typically still use spray paint or other methods of street graffiti, such as stenciling. These graffiti style artists may create works both on the street by commission or on canvas and other traditional surfaces. Some graffiti artists and street artists like Eduardo Kobra or Clem$ have moved away from creating illegal street art and transitioned into more formal artwork. But the unknown street artists and taggers can not receive payment for these works, and they would be difficult to sell without removing entire walls or sections of buildings. Some illegal graffiti is preserved and kept on display, most notably the work of the artist Banksy. Taggers are working illegally and do not usually want to be widely recognized outside their circles. Street tags stay on the building they were sprayed on until they are either removed or tagged over. It is impossible to sell or exhibit street tagging. Like other forms of fine art, graffiti art can be transported, sold, and exhibited. Graffiti art might be created on a canvas or other painting surface. Graffiti art is a contemporary art form that takes inspiration from the processes and methods behind street graffiti and brings them into traditional artworks. What Is the Difference Between Graffiti Tagging and Graffiti Art? Graffiti is a much broader term that can include more graphic designs and images, stickers, poster graffiti, stencil art, or even urban knitting. Tagging is a graffiti style, but not all graffiti types will focus on the artist’s name or signature. The different styles of graffiti and tagging can be found below. Through the 70s and 80s, subway trains were a prime canvas for taggers, and they became so obscured with graffiti tags you could no longer see through the windows. Taggers will try to outdo each other by tagging over each other’s works or tagging in unusual spaces.
![still has the tagger still has the tagger](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/94/52/23/945223270af3ee645220d52fc555d2a5.png)
The locations for these tags became more inventive and more challenging to reach as tagging culture matured. Artists like Cornbread and other youths in New York and Philadelphia started tagging their names on public surfaces. However, it wasn’t until the 1960s that graffiti innovators created the street art culture we recognize today as graffiti.
![still has the tagger still has the tagger](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/34/54/35/34543519caa0f51156302ca2cb414577.png)
![still has the tagger still has the tagger](https://img1.grunge.com/img/gallery/bizarre-things-discovered-inside-pyramids/intro-1510852094.jpg)
You can still find some of this ancient graffiti on historical buildings even today. It was common practice even in ancient Greek and Roman times for people to paint or scratch their names on the surface of public buildings. But tagging in its most basic form has been around for centuries. Graffiti may seem like a modern 20th-century art phenomenon. Tagging is the original and simplest form of graffiti it is also the most common and can be seen in cities worldwide. This distinct signature is known as a “tag”, and the artist is referred to colloquially as a “tagger”. Tagging refers explicitly to writing the artist’s signature (or their pseudonym name or logo) on a public surface. Graffiti can describe any writings or drawings created on a surface in a public space. In this article, we’ll explore the history of graffiti and the differences and similarities between graffiti and tagging. To an outsider, graffiti and tagging may seem like the same thing. Where I see this team being more effective is putting out a call on the Community Blog to ask for support and maintainership before the Infra hackfest.Graffiti and tagging are two forms of contemporary street art that rose to popularity in urban cities in the late 20th century. My concern is I do not see this team having bandwidth or time to invest in development time on fedora-tagger. To date, we have never maintained or acted as core developers of an infrastructure application. The development work we do is focused on metrics and implementing fedmsg. The type of work we do is mostly detailed on the docs site. I appreciate and see value in the fedora-tagger app, but I do not think it is the scope of this team to maintain and develop the application I am -1 to transferring it to CommOps, but I would like to make an effort to call out for help on fedora-tagger. I did not notice the urgent need for an answer, which was technically yesterday.
![Still has the tagger](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/197.jpg)