'Too old to run from police': Paint artists mix in (totally legal) graffiti jam - Action News
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'Too old to run from police': Paint artists mix in (totally legal) graffiti jam

People walking down the back alley of Saskatoon's White Buffalo Youth Lodge Saturday were in for a colourful surprise.

29 'writers' let loose on back wall of White Buffalo Youth Lodge

A group of 29 graffiti artists converged on the back wall of the White Buffalo Youth Lodge in Saskatoon Saturday. (Guy Quenneville/CBC News)

"There's no guidelines here," said graffiti artist Darren Wolfe as he stood atop a scaffold Saturday morning behind White Buffalo Youth Lodge.

"It's run what you brung*. Pick whatever you want to paint, whether it's letters, a skull or a character."

Artists worked from scaffolds rising about halfway up the wall. (Guy Quenneville/CBC News)

Wolfeteal spray paint can in handwas one of 29 artists painting the entire back wall of the 20thStreet youth centre with a panoply of variously-coloured designs.

By invitation, of course.

"I'm 36 years old and I'm too old to run from the police and so I don't paint anything illegal," said Wolfe.

Artist Darren Wolfe said he's too old now to run from the police, which is why he was taking part in Saturday's sanctioned event. (Guy Quenneville/CBC News)

Artists from Vancouver to Winnipeg and even one from Los Angeles were taking part in the 11th Saskatoon graffiti event Saturday, which was expected stretch into late afternoon.

More than one artist preferred not be interviewed, or even photographed, preferring to remain in obscurity.

Not so with Wolfe.

"It started out through my love of art and wanting to put my name in as many places as I possibly can," he said of his start in graffiti.

"Basically I wanted people to pay attention to me, I suppose, and I wanted to grab their attention in the right way, by showing them what I can do with a spray paint can."

A group of onlookers watched the artists-on-scaffolds intently.

Co-organizer Mark Charmbury manned the table where a deep (and colour-coded)supply of spray paint cans awaited participants.

The cans at artists' disposal. (Guy Quenneville/CBC News)

"It's just an opportunity for a bunch of writers to get together and create and express themselves and their various styles," said Charmbury.

This year's event even spread to a wall on the nearby City Centre Church.

"It's allowed for the artists to go bigger with their pieces. We don't have to squish everyone in, which is kinda nice. It just gives more art for the community."

The event will be capped Saturday at 9 p.m. with a screening at The Broadway Theatre of "Can't Be Stopped," a documentary about the influential C.B.S. graffiti crew from Hollywood.

* According to Urban Dictionary, "run what you brung" is "aterm used forstreetraces, where you accept the results of araceinstead of making theories how the race could haveturned outdifferently."