Leo+DadMade for Leo
Where Graffiti Comes From
Rung 2 of 4 · The method

How It Became graffiti — 1970s New York

The ancient urge gets a name, a city and a soundtrack. This is the story of how marking a wall turned into a movement.

Cultural frame Builds on: where it comes from

Play Drag the marker along the timeline, from cave walls to today, and watch each era slide into view.
🎧
Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

The urge is forty thousand years old. The culture we call graffiti is barely fifty. It has a surprisingly precise origin story, and knowing it changes how you read every wall you walk past.

One Kid, One Number, One City

In the late 1960s and early '70s, a teenager in New York who worked as a delivery messenger started writing his nickname and street number — TAKI 183 — on walls and station entrances all over the city as he did his rounds. In 1971 a newspaper actually ran a story about him, and that was the spark. Suddenly thousands of other kids realised the move: get your name up, in as many places as possible, where everyone can see it. Getting up — being seen across the whole city — became the whole point. The subway was perfect for it: a train covered in your name would travel through every neighbourhood, carrying you to people who'd never meet you.

Not Alone — Part of Something Bigger

Here's the bit that matters culturally: graffiti didn't grow up by itself. It came up alongside DJing, MCing (rapping) and breakdancing as one of the founding elements of hip-hop — a whole culture invented by mostly Black and Latino young people in the Bronx, out of very little, in a city that had largely written their neighbourhoods off. Graffiti was hip-hop's visual voice: the same energy that was reinventing music and dance was reinventing the wall. That's why you can't really read graffiti as "just vandalism" — it's one quarter of one of the most influential cultures of the last century.

Say it plainly: graffiti as we know it has a birthplace and a date — 1970s New York, as part of hip-hop. It started with kids getting their names up on the subway, and the goal was simple: be seen, everywhere.

From a Name to a Piece

And then it grew up fast. At first a tag was just your name, written quick. But once everyone was tagging, you had to stand out — so the letters got bigger, then bubblier, then outlined, then filled with colour, then layered into the dazzling, almost-unreadable interlocking style called wildstyle. A quick scrawl became a throw-up; a throw-up became a full-colour piece (short for masterpiece) that might eat all night and a dozen cans. The skill ladder you climb in this very unit is the same one those writers climbed: from a mark, to a name, to an artwork.

In the toy, drag the marker through the timeline and watch the story unfold — cave walls, Pompeii, the '70s subways, the move into galleries, the stencil-and-street-art era, and now. Same impulse, getting more ambitious at every stop.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If graffiti is one of the four elements of hip-hop, how would you explain the link between a rapper's verse and a writer's tag?

Why might "getting up" everywhere matter more to someone the city has ignored than a single, perfect painting would?