The Bit We Have to Be Honest About
Let's get the plain fact out first, because everything else hangs off it: painting or marking property that isn't yours, without the owner's permission, is against the law in New South Wales. It doesn't matter how skilled the piece is or how good your intentions were — that's vandalism in the eyes of the law, and people genuinely cop fines and worse for it. Dad's not going to dress that up. If you ever pick up a can, the difference between a celebrated artist and someone in trouble is, very often, one word: permission.
And yet — here's the tricky part — the law and your eye don't always agree. The scenario toy makes you feel exactly this. An abandoned warehouse wall, a city-approved laneway, the side of a train, a small business's shutter: drag the "how legal" and "how good" scales for each, and watch the gap open up. The laneway is easy — legal and good, everyone happy. The train is easy the other way — illegal, disruptive, costly to clean, hard to defend. But the abandoned wall and the shopfront? Those are where it bites.
Who Owns a Wall, Anyway?
A lot of the tension comes down to ownership and consent. Public space feels like it belongs to everyone, but almost every wall has an owner — a council, a business, a railway, a person — and that owner gets to say what goes on it. That's why public versus private property matters so much: a council might invite art onto a public laneway, while a shopkeeper has every right to be furious about an unasked-for piece on their shutter, however striking it is. The shopfront scenario is the sharpest version of this clash: real skill, real meaning, on a wall whose owner never said yes and doesn't want it.
Some artists argue that the city is a shared canvas and that rules about ownership are part of what they're protesting in the first place. Others argue that consent is consent, full stop, and that respecting it is what separates an artist from a vandal. Both positions are seriously held by thoughtful people. You don't have to land in the same place as Dad — but you do have to know the law you'd be choosing to break, and own that choice honestly.
Why This Rung Matters Most
It would be easy to make this unit a feel-good one — graffiti is cool, galleries love it, look at Banksy. But you're old enough for the harder version: the same act can be art and a crime, the people who own walls have rights, and a clever piece on the wrong wall still hurts someone. Hold all of that at once and you're thinking like an artist and a citizen. That's the real skill this rung is after.