Stickers in the urban landscape engage with public spaces in a direct manner. Public space is integral to people's ability to express and claim the right to the city, "not merely a right of access to what already exists, but a right to change it after our heart's desire" (David Harvey, 2003). Stickers are ideal for this task, they are cheap to make, they stick to any surface and are * hard to clean. Many protest stickers are attempts to persuade, to bring attention to urgent themes, or are a form of territorial space-claiming. Whatever the goal, stickers participate in public debates transforming the public space into a bulletin board. — Matt Plezier
All street stickers were photographed on walks by Matt Plezier. The sticker sheet (centerfold) is a foto and stickers by Gloria Glitzer.
This is the second, extended edition, published on the occasion of the presentation of Vernacular Archives #1 exhibition by the Herbarium Riso (Berlin) & the Radical Sticker Publishing Workshop, both at PrintRoom (Rotterdam) in May 2025.