Tribute to Sheffield graffiti king Fisto spotted in city 25 years on from vandal spree
Black stick on letters spelling out the word ‘Fisto’ have been spotted attached to a metal fence at Meadowhall Interchange station.
Fisto was the monicker of graffiti artist Simon Sunderland who attained notoriety in 1996 when he was given a five year jail sentence for a trail of vandalism across South Yorkshire.
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Hide AdIt is not known who is behind the tribute which is understood to have appeared at the station in the last few days.
Sundeland, who also went under the name Fista, daubed his ‘tag’ across public buildings, walls, motorway flyovers and lampposts across Sheffield and beyond.
In 1996, he was given a five year prison sentence after several months spent on remand.
The length of the sentence sparked outrage, with supporters including MPs and musicians leading calls for him to be freed.
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Hide AdHe was eventually released more than a year later when his sentence was cut on appeal.
Sunderland later vowed to put his criminal past behind him to concentrate on legitimate fine art, enrolling on a course at Barnsley College and even enjoying the distinction of a solo exhibition at the Archipelago gallery on Ecclesall Road, Sheffield.
But he was later back before the courts, admitting causing £90,000 of damage to the rail network with his new moniker Bloodaxe from January 2008 to October 2009 and was sentenced to 18 months in 2014.
At his original sentencing in 1996, Judge Robert Moore, said the Fista tag was "one of the most prevalent and frequent spoilers of buildings in the area."