Why am I passionate about this?

Graffiti makes me see the city differently. In fact, graffiti makes me see art and society differently, too. Yet, while an incredibly potent visual form, graffiti is still—over fifty years since its first appearance—commonly misunderstood and maligned. Books are for me a key space through which these often cliched critiques can be countered—let alone a key medium for such an ephemeral art. Each of the books on my list reappraises graffiti as a visual and cultural medium alike. They show the complexity of the image as much as the subculture and together position these iconoclastic images as one of the key art movements of the 20th century.


I wrote

Monumental Graffiti

By Rafael Schacter ,

Book cover of Monumental Graffiti

What is my book about?

This book takes an entirely new approach to graffiti, arguing that these often disparaged and demeaned images should be seen…

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The books I picked & why

Book cover of Gordon Matta-Clark

Rafael Schacter Why I love this book

Gordon Matta-Clark is one of my favorite ever artists. An innovator who crossed the fields of architecture and art, Matta-Clark found new modes of expression by simultaneously deconstructing his urban surroundings and destabilizing the canonical regulations of art. What’s more, and unlike many of his contemporaries, Matta-Clark had a keen eye for graffiti, using it within his own practice (such as in the work “Graffiti Truck”) as well as archiving the images that surrounded him in 1970s New York. 

Whilst some of these images have previously been seen in exhibitions of Matta-Clark's work (his hand-colored, stunning “Photoglyphs” most famously), the majority of the 2000 photos Matta-Clark took during the early ‘70s have never been seen until the publication of this stunning book. At over 400 pages and with over 400 beautiful color images, as well as containing interviews and essays by some key practitioners and writers of the era, this book is my book of 2024, hands down. Kudos to editor Roger Gastman for making it happen!

By Carlo McCormick , Caleb Neelon , Chris Pape , Roger Gastman (editor)

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Gordon Matta-Clark as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.


Book cover of Rammellzee

Rafael Schacter Why I love this book

The summer I finished my PhD, I had the feeling that I had made a huge mistake—the mistake being I hadn’t written my whole doctorate on the life and work of Rammellzee, the pioneering artist and mythical graffiti writer who had died aged just 49 the year before. A game-changing innovator who combined literature, music, performance, sculpture, and fashion to produce an avant-garde art practice that is still influential today, Rammellzee showed what was possible when graffiti was truly unshackled and set free.

Whilst it was too late for me to go back in time and restart my PhD, thankfully, Maxwell Wolf and Jeff Mao have produced the most definitive monograph on Rammellzee to date. Packed full of incredible images and the most mind-bending ephemera, it’s a must for anyone interested in graffiti, Afrofuturism, or performance art, let alone anyone who wants to learn about one of the most electrifying, and criminally under-appreciated artists of the last fifty years. 

By Jeffrey Deitch , Carmela Zagari , Jeff Mao (editor) , Maxwell Wolf (editor)

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Rammellzee as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Rammellzee was an enigmatic yet key figure in the nexus of creative forces that defined New York City s heady downtown scene in the late 1970s and 1980s. In the first major monograph on the multi-hyphenate artist, his inspired vision and wildly diverse artistic output are considered in depth. The oversize volume presents a treasure trove of material, providing extraordinary insight into his creative genius: a comprehensive selection of artworks (his iconic resin frescoes, paintings, sculpture, and performance paraphernalia), never-before-seen documentation of his graffiti work and performances, archival material, and ephemera. Gathered here for the first time, these materials tell…


Book cover of The City Beneath

Rafael Schacter Why I love this book

I learned so much from reading anthropologist Susan Phillips’ fantastic account of Los Angeles over the last 100 years. Exploring the history of the city from the ground up, she combines a microscopic analysis of the city’s diverse graffiti cultures–from the graffiti of hobos to that of surfers, prisoners, and punks–with a macroscopic account of the changing nature of this most famous megalopolis.

I loved the beautiful, intimate images Philips included, as well as her refreshing, first-person appearance throughout the book. More than anything, though, I really enjoyed the way that Phillip's approach extends the understanding of 20th-century graffiti beyond the traditional East Cost (and hip-hop-centric) focus, seeing an entire world within the traces the most marginalized leave behind and showing how graffiti reveals as much about the changing nature of a city as of society itself.

By Susan A. Phillips ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The City Beneath as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A sweeping history of Los Angeles told through the lens of the many marginalized groups-from hobos to taggers-that have used the city's walls as a channel for communication

Graffiti written in storm drain tunnels, on neighborhood walls, and under bridges tells an underground and, until now, untold history of Los Angeles. Drawing on extensive research within the city's urban landscape, Susan A. Phillips traces the hidden language of marginalized groups over the past century-from the early twentieth-century markings of hobos, soldiers, and Japanese internees to the later inscriptions of surfers, cholos, and punks. Whether describing daredevil kids, bored workers, or…


Book cover of Nov York

Rafael Schacter Why I love this book

This book blew my mind when I first read it. In fact, it continues to do so today, over 20 years since it was first written. Perverse, contradictory, offensive, effervescent, and totally un-put-downable, Brown (aka Nov, aka Nov York, aka Dumaar Freemaninov) takes us on an extraordinary journey into the life of a 1990s New York graffiti writer, into the underbelly and dirt of the city and into its drugged out, demented dramas.

How autobiographical is it? How much is truth? How much fiction? Whichever the answer, Brown’s anarchic, unique book took me on a trip that I will never forget, and in doing so, gives an insight into a world far beyond the graffiti image itself. A must-read (and to be read aloud whilst travelling on the subway as per the author’s instructions)! 

By Dumar Brown ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Nov York as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.


Book cover of The Faith of Graffiti

Rafael Schacter Why I love this book

Norman Mailer is a legend of American literature and, without a doubt, the most famous writer to have ever written seriously about graffiti. Alongside the equally legendary British photographer Jon Naar, whose stunning images grace their joint work, this book is up there as one of the most influential books on graffiti ever written.

Celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of its publishing in 2024, Mailer and Naar’s book was the first to take graffiti seriously as both a public act and public art alike. Whilst much of Mailer’s essay is colored by his own personal tribulations and enmities, and whilst Naar’s photos are in some ways more ethnographic rather than focussing on the “best” works of the era, the book’s unmistakable positioning of graffiti as art was critical in reframing the possibilities of the practice. In this way, The Faith is not only critical as a document of its time but as a key fulcrum in the development of graffiti as an art itself.


By Norman Mailer , Jon Naar (photographer) ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Faith of Graffiti as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The Faith of Graffiti is the classic, definitive look at the birth of graffiti as an art form, pairing the fascinating 1974 essay by Norman Mailer—National Book Award and two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Naked and the Dead and The Executioner’s Song—with the stunning, iconic photography of internationally acclaimed photographer Jon Naar. Back in print for the first time in three decades and expanded with 32 pages of additional photos, The Faith of Graffiti is a landmark in the history of street art: an essential, contemporary, and still-relevant meditation, in words and pictures, on the meaning of identity, property,…


Explore my book 😀

Monumental Graffiti

By Rafael Schacter ,

Book cover of Monumental Graffiti

What is my book about?

This book takes an entirely new approach to graffiti, arguing that these often disparaged and demeaned images should be seen as monuments in literal, not just, metaphoric terms. 

Focusing on the material, communicative, and contextual aspects of graffiti, the book ethnographically unpacks this image world in order to re-assess public art, citizenship, and the city today. Challenging us to consider what the appropriate monument for our contemporary world could be, Monumental Graffiti shows us why graffiti demands our urgent attention as a form of civic expression, challenging power structures by questioning whose voices are included in—and whose are excluded from—public space.

Book cover of Gordon Matta-Clark
Book cover of Rammellzee
Book cover of The City Beneath

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