Wet Look New Super Hi-Gloss Enamel, Out-Of-Sight Orange, late 1970s: formerly owned by Lady Pink
Street art and graffiti hold cultural significance in the way they help artists express their individuality and critique political, cultural, social, and economic issues, as a subculture with a message. Graffiti writers are highly knowledgeable about all varieties of spray paint. Each brand of spray paint is known for particular qualities. The Wet Look brand of spray paint was thick, had some unusual and vivid colors and was harder to find in New York than other brands. This can of late 1970s Out of Sight Orange was formerly owned by New York graffiti writer Lady Pink.
Lady Pink (Sandra Fabara, b. 1964), is an Ecuadorian-American graffiti and mural artist. Her career focused on using graffiti and murals as acts of rebellion, empowering women and self-expression. Lady Pink’s name was chosen for her aesthetics because the name “Pink” is feminine and she wanted other artists to know that she was a girl. She started calling herself Lady Pink because of her love of historical romances, England, the Victorian period, and the aristocracy. Lady Pink was nicknamed the "first lady of graffiti," because she was one of the first active women in the early 1980s New York City subway graffiti subculture.