22/09/2021
“No one bothered us at all. But when we were leaving the yard, there were uniformed police in the parking lot where we had originally entered. From that point I panicked and ran over the next fence to the left of me, which took me into a junkyard. There was a hill to go down I climbed the fence with barb wire, flipped over it, slid down a greasy grass hill into the grease pit of a junk yard. There were workers all around me, watching me run through the train yard. I ran all the way home.”
“My brother [hadn’t] made it home at that point. I did panic thinking that he got caught, swearing that I would never do it again. Once he did get home, I realised that they weren’t there for us [but for] another incident at that moment where somebody had got pick-pocketed on that street and the police were there looking to see if they could make an arrest or whatever. Since he was such a little kid they obviously realised that he didn’t pick pocket anybody and they let him go.”
“After I realised he didn’t get caught, what did I do? Well, the very next day I went back to the yard and painted another train.” –SEEN, on painting his first 6 Yard mission in 1973, taken from Artillery Chapter Four.
To read the feature, grab your copy of Artillery Chapter Four here: https://artillery-projects.com/product/artillery-chapter-four/
Limited copies remaining.