|  | 
| Graffiti in Harlem, New York | 
NEW YORK— Street art, teetering as it has been for the last decade between crime  and high-end gallery cash crop, has taken another step toward  establishing itself as a legal, rarefied art form. This past weekend saw  the launch of the Urban Art Foundation, which styles itself as an ACLU  for graffiti-related criminal charges, offering financial backing and  legal representation for those arrested for tagging city streets. It  also hopes to procure landmark status for some of New York’s finest  covertly-made works and promote the art form in public schools.  
The group went public at a "Meeting of the Styles" at P.S. 15  in Paterson, New Jersey, a "Warriors"-style congregation of  international graffiti stars, who came together to raise money for the  nascent organization. Participants included such intriguing-sounding  spray-painters as Eyesor, Madhatter, Herm Life, and Ms. Bless.  Over the course of the day they decorated a wall of the school and  offered spray-painting lessons and other art-related activities for  children.   
Real estate developer Eric Granowsky  conceived of the idea for the new foundation, which is in the process  of becoming a nonprofit, after he was frustrated by the downsizing of  arts programming at his daughter's school — a sad trend in New York  City’s public schools, 20 percent of which lack a certified art, music,  theater, or dance teacher.
This seems to be a sentiment shared by New York City’s police  department, which has ramped up its anti-graffiti stance, with a bump in  street-art-related arrests from 2,962 in 2006 to 4,158 last year.        
Taken from: Artinfo
Comments