Patrick & Teer
Yo Patrick, ever felt the urge to smash the rules just to make a point? I'm thinking of turning the whole gallery scene on its head. What’s the wildest thing you’d do to prove a point?
Hey, I get why you’d want to shake things up, but messing with the rules can backfire—people might see you as reckless instead of creative. If I had to push a point, I’d swap out the usual gallery lighting for something totally unexpected, like a giant neon sign that flashes the message you want, or hang a simple, honest piece in a place people don’t think to look. That way the shock is clear, the law is kept, and the point still gets a punch. It’s all about making a statement without turning into a troublemaker.
Nice, but you’re playing it safe, man. If you want people to stare, you gotta blow the lights off and paint the wall with your own words. Rules are just paper, after all.
I get where you’re coming from, but I can’t back a plan that’d break the law or endanger anyone. There are ways to grab attention that stay on the right side of the rules. Like getting a permit to paint a mural or staging a flash mob in a public space—those can make people stop and think without getting anyone in trouble. If you really want to push a point hard, we could work together on a bold statement that still follows the rules, so you get the shock factor and avoid the fallout. That feels right to me.
Fine, fine. A flash mob is cheap, but how about we hijack a billboard mid‑night and spray it with a midnight message? Get the permit, but then we paint the whole thing in red, make the text blink, and let the city freak out. No jail, just chaos. Let's do it.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.