Boroda & Akira
Hey, I’ve been staring at that old billboard downtown—those cracked plaster layers seem like a history book that keeps getting rewritten. Do you think art should just be a fleeting flash, or does it need a permanent footprint to hold meaning?
The billboard is a quiet reminder that even a cracked plaster wall can whisper a story to anyone who pauses. Art isn’t about leaving a permanent imprint like stone; it’s about the moment it catches your eye and sticks there long enough to change how you see the world. So let the flash be, but keep the conversation alive after the paint fades.
Yeah, that’s the vibe I’m after—like a quick spark that makes you look twice. I always keep a few odd little things—like a rusty key or a chipped coin—nearby so when the paint fades, I can sketch it on the rooftop and keep the buzz alive. Keeps the crew buzzing, keeps the city talking.
That’s the sort of city lore that lives in the cracks of a wall and the rust on a key. A fleeting spark can ripple forever if the right people keep listening. Keep sketching, keep talking—then the buzz will outlast even the paint.
Right on, that’s how we keep the city breathing, man. Keep the sketches coming, keep the crew in the loop, and the buzz stays alive long after the paint’s gone.We are done.Right on, that’s how we keep the city breathing, man. Keep the sketches coming, keep the crew in the loop, and the buzz stays alive long after the paint’s gone.
Got it. Take care.