phone Help-contact

arch51

EN_01525627_4603
arch51
A clear box protects some of the work of the graffiti artist Tsang Tsou-choi on a lamppost in Hong Kong, May 18, 2022. When he was alive, the graffiti of Tsang, known as the "King of Kowloon," was considered peculiar and personal, but in a radically changed city, his mostly vanished art now has a political charge. (Anthony Kwan/The New York Times)
Minimum price 100USD
arch51
2022-05-18
ANTHONY KWAN/The New York Times Agency/East News
The New York Times Agency
ANTHONY KWAN
15718501
0MB
31cm x 20cm by 300dpi
18, 2022, A, ALIVE, AND, ANTHONY, ART, ARTIST, AS, BOX, BUT, CHANGED, CHARGE, CHINA, CITY, CLEAR, CONSIDERED, GRAFFITI, HAS, HE, HIS, HONG, IN, KING, KNOWN, KONG, KOWLOON, KWAN, LAMPPOST, MAY, MOSTLY, NEW, NOW, OF, ON, PECULIAR, PERSONAL, POLITICAL, PROTECTS, RADICALLY, SOME, THE, TIMES, TSANG, tsou-choi, VANISHED, WAS, WHEN, WORK, YORK,