Rif Raf Giraffe plays matchmaker for buildings, money and artists in Crossroads

July 18, 2018  |  Michael Locklear

Jason Harrington, Rif Raf Giraffe; photo by Michael Locklear

Jason Harrington sees opportunity in places often overlooked – alleys, elevator shafts and the sides of brick buildings. For the artist better known as Rif Raf Giraffe, they’re vast canvasses, waiting to be filled with gallons and gallons of paint and passion.

Harrington recently traversed the East Crossroads Arts District in search of more real estate. He’s working to find enough walls for dozens of painters in September, when they’ll descend on Kansas City from across the country.

2017 SolaNoir mural painted by Kansas City artist Sabertooth Thomas

“There’s nothing like putting up 20 new walls in three days,” Harrington said. “It’s pretty awesome to watch a city transform that quick.”

It’s all part of a mural festival that he and his wife, Ami, are organizing for a second year. Originally known as SolaNoir, the event is now called SpraySeeMO.

The Harringtons are playing matchmaker – bringing together donors, building owners and artists to paint 20 to 30 walls in just a few days: Sept. 13-16.

“The advantage of the festival is some of these people have walls and don’t want to pay a dime for this art, and other people got money and don’t have walls,” he said. “So this is the one opportunity where you can put the people who have money with the people who have walls and just get those walls painted that probably wouldn’t be painted.”

Death of a giraffe, birth of an identity

Jason, who’s now 38, found a key part of his identity as an artist in his mid-20s. He was editing video in Chicago, where he went to art school, and he couldn’t seem to forget National Geographic footage he’d seen of a giraffe being hunted. (“Terrible,” he says.)

“I was walking home later on that week, and on my walk home, I found a toy giraffe,” Harrington said. “It’s a sign, right?”

From there, he added “rif raf” to the name because, at the time, he saw himself as “working-class trouble.”

Rif Raf Giraffe.

“Aww, that’s catchy,” he said. “So it stuck.”

‘No inspiration time – you just create’

Harrington moved back to Kansas City five years ago, and in early 2017, painted his signature name on his largest mural yet: off Locust Street near East 17th.

 

Such huge pieces have led to paying projects, allowing him to paint for a living for the past two years. One of his most recent jobs was at the Made in KC Marketplace on the Country Club Plaza.

“A lot of artists wait for inspiration, and if you want to be a professional, there is no inspiration time. It’s you just create,” Harrington said. “And once you get in the habit of constantly creating, you feel empty or dead if you’re not in that mode.”

A three-piece work in progress by Jason Harrington.

Harrington is drawn to the futurism movement, he said, and his current work tends to be future pop.

The questions that fuel his work: “What are we going to think of ourselves when we actually know what everyone else is thinking? And I know what I think, so I just assume the world is going to be a real different place once we’re there. Is everyone’s secrets going to be out? Are we just going to be more accepting, or are we just going to try to put more curtails on things and have that Chinese surveillance state … ?”

Harrington also dabbles in political cartoons, like a depiction of President Donald Trump that he painted in Art Alley last year.

The mural didn’t last long – one of the dangers of the art form, he said.

“People defaced it,” Harrington said. “It garnered a lot of attention because it was a powerful image.”

“It might start an argument if you bring up a topic, but if you just stick it on a wall, and then they got to look at it, and there’s no one there to say anything, they’re just stuck with their thoughts,” he added. “What does this mean? Why do I think this about this?”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Skip by Digital Baron

    Skip restaurant lines (and downloading another app) with text-based ordering

    By Tommy Felts | March 13, 2019

    In an increasingly automated world, American consumers are experiencing app exhaustion while continuing to need innovative solutions to address daily pain points like waiting in lines at their favorite restaurants, said Eric Tucker. “People are tired of downloading apps,” said Tucker, founder of KC-based Digital Baron, which  delivers Skip, an app-less mobile and pay platform.…

    Andre Davis, Built Interior Construction

    Cleaner, more durable design: Future of construction is already Built, says Andrè Davis

    By Tommy Felts | March 12, 2019

    Built Interior Construction is “precision-cutting” cities of the future by injecting innovation into the slow-moving construction industry, said Andrè Davis. “The challenges in our industry is that construction methods are so archaic,” said Davis, business development executive at the Kansas City interior construction firm, founded in 2016 by Russ Branden, David Anderson, and Mark Brandmeyer.…

    Brendan Reilly, Dan Scott and Richard Neal, Lelex Prime

    Lelex Prime: ‘Decoding human thought’ could give ultimate competitive edge

    By Tommy Felts | March 12, 2019

    You won’t find tumbleweeds blowing down Main Street, but if you look hard enough you’ll start to see Kansas City taking the shape of a new Wild West; one where tech startups like Lelex Prime have staked their claim, Brendan Reilly said. “Have you seen ‘Westworld?’” Reilly, the company’s CRO, asked as he sat at a…