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Links for Morgnshtern? English bit about footy,[1] and sports in general,[2], and specifically about sports organisations.[3]

Link to Chłopska Sprawa and Fara św. Krzyża w Tczewie for article illustration!

Links for BB: Study of coverage in Przekrój,[4] newsreel produced by the Warsaw Documentary Film Studio.[5]

Burning Candy
A collaborative mural by members of Burning Candy in Hackney Wick
Notable workTelepathic Heights
Style'savant-garde'
MovementGraffiti, urban art, street art

Burning Candy (alternatively Before Chrome[6]) is a street art collective from London, United Kingdom.

Artwork by the collective was incorporated into the work of the artist John Dolan.[7]

Telepathic Heights mural by Burning Candy in Stokes Croft
A silver Burning Candy tag adorns a building in Shoreditch High Street

Participants[edit]

Burning Candy is known to include the graffiti artist Cept, Cyclops, Australian artist Dscreet, Gold Peg, LL Brainwash, Mighty Mo, Rowdy, Sickboy, Sweet Toof, and Tek33.[8][9] The collective's origins have been described as a knitting circle that originally took place in the basement of a Mecca Bingo hall.[10]

A throwup by Burning Candy member Tek33 on Leake Street, incorporating the artist's trademark pitchfork[11]

Random bits & bobs[edit]

  • Reference for Gitowscy?[12]
  • Link to Radical Peasants Party programme[13]
Trainspotters at Doncaster railway station in the twenty-first century.

Comics[edit]

Trainspotters have been depicted in comic form in various publications. In 1987 a Viz strip featured a new character called ‘Timothy Potter, Trainspotter’.[14] From the early 1990s Acne comic included a trainspotting character called Borin Norman and a recurring strip titled ‘Train Spotters’.[15]

A tetsu-doru (鉄ドル) is an idol, while solottetsu (ソロ鉄) denotes an unmarried female railfan.[16]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Borys, Bartosz. "The Warsaw Jews and football before the war". Jewish Historical Institute.
  2. ^ Gliński, Mikołaj (28 January 2015). "Be Strong and Brave: Jews, Sport, Warsaw". culture.pl.
  3. ^ Bańbuła, Joanna (July 2019). "Jewish sport associations in Poland before World War II". Israel Affairs. 25 (4): 754–762. doi:10.1080/13537121.2019.1626103.
  4. ^ Stefańska, Katarzyna. Izdebska, Agnieszka; Konończuk, Elżbieta; Płuciennik, Jarosław (eds.). "Bikiniarze w „Przekroju". Podwójna narracja" [Bikiniarze in Przekrój: Double Narration]. Zagadnienia Rodzajów Literackich. Space as a Category of Culture. 66 (2): 219–233. doi:10.26485/ZRL/2023/66.2/4. eISSN 2451-0335. ISSN 0084-4446. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  5. ^ Lemańska, Helena; Szelubski, Jerzy; Łapicki, Andrzej; Janik, Wiktor; Zawarski, Stefan. Kaźmierczak, Wacław (ed.). Operator was podpatrzył (Newsreel) (in Polish). Warsaw: Polish Film Chronicle.
  6. ^ NoLionsInEngland (18 October 2008). "Burning Candy Show". Graffoto. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  7. ^ Claassens, Carina (2 September 2013). "Interview: John Dolan". Street Art London. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  8. ^ Rushmore, RJ (17 October 2009). "Burning Candy Mural". The Thousands. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  9. ^ "SOS – Dscreet". Street Art News. 18 May 2021. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  10. ^ Osburn, Chris (September 2010). "Interview with The Baron: DOTS". Whitehot Magazine. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  11. ^ Chris, Tiki (4 September 2007). "Londonist Interviews ... London Graffiti Artist Tek33". Londonist. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  12. ^ Olszewski, Przemysław. "O Git-ludziach i międzydzielnicowych bójkach". pragagada.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 18 March 2024.
  13. ^ https://polona.pl/item-view/a831e924-608b-4613-bf6a-3720d6094508?page=0
  14. ^ Bradley, Simon (2016). The Railways: Nation, Network and People. St Ives: Profile Books. p. 530. ISBN 978-1846682131.
  15. ^ Chambers, Thomas (2023). "From Trespasser to Nerd: The Changing Image of Trainspotting in Post-War Britain" (PDF). Nuart Journal. 4 (1): 50. ISSN 2535-549X.
  16. ^ Kikuko. "Koya-Kosenkyo 向野跨線橋". kikuko-nagoya.com. Retrieved 17 January 2024.