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André the Giant Has a Posse is a street art campaign based on an original design by Frank Shepard Fairey and Michael Meinhart, created in 1989 while Fairey was a student at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). At the time Fairey declared the campaign to be "an experiment in phenomenology." Over time the artwork has been reused in a number of ways and has become a world-wide pataphysical movement, following in the footsteps of Ivan Stang's Church of the SubGenius and populist WWII icon Kilroy Was Here. At the same time, Fairey's work has evolved stylistically and semantically into the OBEY Giant campaign.
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Fairey and campaign co-creators Blais Blouin, Alfred Hawkins, and Mongo Nikol created paper and vinyl stickers with an image of the wrestler André the Giant and the text "ANDRE THE GIANT HAS A POSSE 7' 4", 520lb", as an in-joke directed at hip hop and skater subculture, and then began clandestinely (and somewhat fanatically) propagating and posting them in Providence, Rhode Island and the Eastern United States.
By the early 1990s, tens of thousands of paper and then vinyl stickers were photocopied and hand-silkscreened and put in visible places throughout the world, primarily in culturally influential urban settings in the United States, such as New York City, Atlanta, Austin, and San Francisco, but also in places which travellers often visited such as Greece, London, Mexico, Florida and the Caribbean Islands. In effect, Fairey and associates were creating a 'posse' of a wide audience of those who were in on the joke and willing to spread the message, and those who were not but found the original image profoundly irresistible.
Threat of a lawsuit from Titan Sports, Inc. in 1993 spurred Fairey to stop using the copyrighted name André the Giant, and to create a more iconic image of the wrestler's face, now most often with the equally iconic branding, OBEY and DISOBEY.
Over time, Fairey's artistic imagery has evolved into a sometimes subtle, sometimes not, parody of a range of iconic styles, mostly a juxtaposition of popular political propagandas and multi-national commercialism. It usually bears the text OBEY Giant, DISOBEY, or most commonly OBEY.
In addition to countless small stickers, OBEY Giant has been spread by stencil, murals, and large wheatpaste posters, covering public spaces from abandoned building faces and street sign backs, to commercial spaces such as billboards and bus stop posters. Furthermore, the popular "OBEY" slogan and stylized Andre The Giant face continues to be reproduced on products ranging from art and clothing to home accessories and decor, considerably expanding the impact of the campaign through iconology based on an allegence to media and popular culture in the guise of counterculture.
Despite the ever-growing popularity of the OBEY Giant campaign, the actual objective is still unclear. Fairey occasionally creates work with actual messages (one OBEY graphic declares "Make Art Not War") but most of Giant's pictures have no text. The campaign's self-description on OBEY products is filled with doublespeak: "Frequent and novel encounters with OBEY propaganda provoke thought and possible frustration, revitalizing the viewer's perception and attention to detail."
Fairey later used stencils to make posters on old wall paper: 'a simple way to make art for people who had seen my stuff on the street and wanted a piece'. As demands on his time grew, Fairey needed help disseminating his work. Gerardo Yepiz helped make stencils of many of Fairey's designs, and also found a die cutter to mass-produce the two most used Giant icons.
As a result of a perceived commercialization of the OBEY Giant movement, the Creative Commons-licensed World Giant movement was created in 2005, which seeks to alleviate concerns that Fairey's commercial success was nullifying the movement's momentum and unfairly capitalizing on the labor of the original co-founders and anyone around the world who had ever put up a sticker. This split was made public via a video meme of a humorous manifesto produced by Giant/World Giant co-founder Mongo Nikol for an internet contest sponsored by media art activist group Contagious Media.
The original "André the Giant has a posse" sticker format has been widely imitated for humorous intent. In these parody stickers, the image of Andre the Giant has been replaced with a similarly stylized black and white photo of some other person or character, along with the new figure's height and weight. For example, the sticker "Tattoo the Midget has a bigger posse" features the image of Hervé Villechaize, the character "Tattoo" on Fantasy Island, while Colin Purrington's "Charles Darwin has a posse" stickers promote the teaching of evolution. These parody stickers are a further extension of the original joke, and thus are most likely to be found in locations where the original Andre the Giant iconography is already familiar, such as SoHo, Manhattan. Another Parody sticker is of the character Strong Mad from the popular Homestar Runner cartoons. It states that Strong Mad is 8 foot 900lbs & bears an exact likliness tho the Andre Tag.
Fairey's original goal of raising the image of André the Giant to an iconic status has been some what of a success, as evidenced by the appropriation of this imagery by others.