patience

::Fly As F::

Live your fucken dreams! 

Revok x The Seventh Letter x The Hundreds

REVOK, Montana Cans, The 7th Letter and 1xRUN present: The Detroit Beautification Project

 REVOK, Montana Cans, The Seventh Letter and 1xRUN present:
The Detroit Beautification Project

As the chill of winter has given way to the warm hues of spring here in Detroit, we’re excited to unveil our most recent public arts project that will bring over a dozen of the world’s premier graffiti artists into the city for a series of murals in the neighborhoods that need them the most.

To coincide with the first phase of the project we’re excited to release a series of prints with several of the participating artists including RISK, SEVER, STEEL, REYES, DMOTE, WANE, CES, REVOK, Tristan Eaton, Dabs Myla, 123 Klan and POSE.

For the first RUN of the Detroit Beautification Project we’re excited to present our very first print by REVOK. His vision for the Detroit Beautification Project is to uplift communities and brighten the day of the residents of the great City of Detroit.

We are presenting this never before seen image of a piece REVOK created in a now demolished church back in 2009 during his first visit to Detroit. In what is commonplace in the world of graffiti & street art, an artist will go to great lengths creating a piece of work in certain location, only to have the works lifespan cut short by city clean up crews, over zealous and mentally disturbed vigilantes or rival artists… Or in this case a demolition wrecking ball. The work often lives on only in the documentation of a few, or in this case one image.

Get yours at: 1xrun.com/runs/Sacrilege / Revok1.com

Dabs and Myla via @KnownGallery

Via Known Gallery.com 

ZOO YORK presents a new Pro Series in collaboration with artists RIME of The Seventh Letter Crew.

Paying homage to ZOO YORK’s graffiti roots, this series showcases pieces by one of the true masters. To see more of RIME’s work to toJerseyJoeArt.com and TheSeventhLetter.com

For dealer locations near you please visit: ZooYork.com

SAGE VAUGHN | LAST YEAR Opens January 13th, 2012 at Known Gallery
Opening reception: Friday, January 13, 2012 | 8:00 -11:00pm

Known Gallery is excited to start off this year with “Last Year”, a show of new works by Sage Vaughn and a very special guest. This will be Sage’s first solo exhibition at Known Gallery, featuring new large-scale woven editions based on paintings and collages from his ongoing ENVELOPE SERIES. Contrasting the nonchalant qualities of collage making and the painstaking exactness of woven tapestry, this work becomes part of an experiment in making art that can exist both off and outside the gallery walls.
Sage has been working with collage for the past four years and attributes the passion to friends Jason Dill and Dash Snow who introduced him to the medium. “I enjoy sorting through vintage magazines and culling imagery to illustrate themes in my work. The printing processes used back then are so pleasing to the eye. Everything was hand created. No Photoshop.”
Selected works from the ENVELOPE SERIES will also be on display. The series, consisting of both small paintings as well as cut and reassembled imagery on manila envelopes, serves as an intimate window to the artist’s creative process. “They’ve taken the place of sketchbooks in my practice. I have them all over the studio so I can constantly make things while I make things.” Numbering in the hundreds, Sage has been working on the ENVELOPE SERIES since 2007.
When asked about the inspiration behind this unique medium of woven artwork, Sage explains, “I love looking at tapestries, rugs and textiles. The richness of the color and the texture are so intricate. I would spend all my money on them if I could.” Sage further discusses “When I was a child, my grandmother told me a story about when she was a young recently divorced woman; she and her sister were on a quest, driving through New Mexico, trying to purchase a genuine Navajo rug from an actual Navajo Indian. She ended up at a general store, which sold Native American crafts.” When his grandmother asked the owner how to purchase goods directly from the Navajo Indians, the disappointing response was, “The way it works is you buy it from us, not from the Navajo.” “It took her a week of driving down endless desert roads until she finally met an old Indian woman who sold her a beautiful piece that she still has in her home out in the Valley.”
LBJ holding a toddler Indian, Dr. Phil as a spiritual guru and a Native Indian teaching a Caucasian boy how to take aim with a bow and arrow are just some examples of Sage’s social commentary via satire. “I think most good art has an element of humor within it to help us laugh at the human condition.” Imagery of foxes, birds, and Indians also echo Sage’s obsession with the line between wilderness and civilization.
Sage Vaughn (b. 1976 Jackson, OR) lives and works in Los Angeles. For the past seven years, Sage’s work has been exhibited at fine art galleries around the world including Lazarides/London, Galerie Bertrand & Gruner/Geneva, Art Agents Gallery/Hamburg, The Dactyl Foundation for the Arts and Humanities/New York, Corey Helford/Culver City, Richard Heller/Los Angeles and FIFTY24SF/San Francisco.
Known Gallery441 North Fairfax AvenueLos Angeles, CA 90036310-860-6263
This Friday @KnownGallery. 
jayhurt:

Word Play Neon By Patrick Martinez | Available 09.07.2011

Neon sign made exclusively for Known Gallery by Patrick Martinez
WORD PLAY neon sign
13″ x 8″
Signed by artist
Edition of 20

Available this Wednesday, September 07th, 2011 at Noon PST exclusively at KnownGalleryStore.com

Featuring the works of: Kevin Ancell, Jason Jagel, Patrick Martinez, Greg Lamarche, Saber, Push and Augustine Kofie.
Opening June 18th, 2011 | 8-11pm
Known Gallery 441 North Fairfax Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90036 info@knowngallery.com
@jay_Hurt doing his T. Richardson pose and Willie The Barber Beefcake
young @jay_hurt fresh and clean

RETNA and VistaJet team up to paint a Global Express XRS aircraft

RETNA and VistaJet team up to paint a Global Express XRS aircraft during EBACE 2011.

LAST WEEK to see Alessandro Gottardo & Kellesimone Waits show at KNOWN GALLER
Alessandro Gottardo and Kellesimone WaitsGuest Curated by Shelley Leopold, presented by LA Weekly and Pearl PaintAbout Alessandro Gottardo:Currently based in Milan, Italy, Alessandro was born in Pordenone in 1977. He studied at a specialist art high school inVenice and in the Illustration department of the Istituto Europeo di Design in Milan. He has won numerous awards, including the most prestigious international accolade in the illustration field – a Society of Illustrators Gold Medal, which was presented to him in 2009. His clients include : American Express, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, TIME, Esquire, Newsweek, National Geographic, The New Yorker, Le Monde, The Economist, Guardian, Random House, and Penguin Books.About Kellesimone Waits:Kellesimone, born into a family of artists and musicians, discovered her penchant for drawing early. At the age of 5, she “invented” a style of tracing so revolutionary that it remains top secret to this day. Attracted to issues dealing with gender and society, Kellesimone chose to attend the all women’s Mills College in Oakland where she is currently studying various formats and mediums including experimental video, working towards her degree.Known Gallery441 North Fairfax AvenueLos Angeles, CA 90036310-860-6263Hours during shows:Wednesday thru Saturday: 12 - 7pmSunday: 12 - 6pmPDF available: info@knowngallery.com
Retna Talks MOCA, Graffiti & Fashion with Fabiola Beracasa for ELLE

Via: Known Gallery
While in LA for ELLE’s Women in Music party,  I took a minute to  catch up with Retna, the breakout LA street artist  who’s among the  lucky few chosen by Jeffrey Deitch for MOCA’s Art in the  Streets show.   Retna, aka Marquis Lewis, has a heart warming smile to  offset his  devilish glances, and happily told us how he grew from a  “graffiti  artist” and landed in one of the most important street art  shows to  date.
ELLE: When did you know this was your calling ?R: I liked graffiti when I was about eight-years-old,   but it wasn’t really called street art at that time, it was just   graffiti.  When I first saw it I knew that was what I wanted to do I   just never really thought that it would turn into a career, you know? I   just did it because it made me feel good, or it made me happy when I   looked at it, but I never would’ve thought of where it would go…
ELLE: When did it turn from something that you loved, and did passionately, to something you could actually live off of? R: I think that was maybe the past seven years.  [I] got into   design, my first forays into actually making money off this or being   able to make somewhat of a living off this was designing graphics for   clothing companies.  So I was designing for this Japanese brand doing   some cut and sew stuff; I think at that point I saw, “Hey I can do these   graphics, and you know I can pay for other stuff that I want to do,”   and then little jobs just started carrying on and it kind of kept   leading to other things.  I did a lot of stuff just from the heart for   free for the longest time and, well, you do things because you want to   do them and you don’t want to sit around and wait for people to pay   you.  You think, “Well fuck, I’ll just go make it happen.”
ELLE: What does it feel like to be part of Jeffrey Deitch’s Street Art Exhibition?R: It feels great.  I’m really excited to be a part of   it, it’s definitely a little overwhelming [as] it’s my first museum   showing.  It seems like it came a lot earlier than I expected.  As a kid   you want those institutions to recognize you and make you feel like   you’re important.  I acknowledge [Jeffrey’s] commitment to what we do   and I’m really honored to be a part of it.  It’s exciting to be in a   show with all of these people that you grew up looking up to and it’s   kind of mind blowing.  I would’ve never thought that they’d come visit   me at my studio when I was eight-years-old, looking at these books that   they were in.  They’re the greatest people and then to be around them   and to actually exhibit with them, it’s kind of something unreal.
ELLE: There’s always that argument that when you   move the graffiti, the street art indoors, into a museum into a gallery,   it loses something.  How do you feel about that?R: That’s all on the person viewing it. I think what’s   great about that movement is that some guys still do both… so I think   the idea early on with graffiti or street artists was you always want   things that you can’t have, you always want to be in that spots that you   can’t be in or you know people don’t want you to be in—so when we   wanted to climb and paint this building we needed to figure out a way to   go do it—so I think with the museum it’s just another aspect of that   same mentality.  We wanted to be in there, so we figured out how to get   in the door and put our stuff all over it.  Or, a couple [of] people   crack the door and then the flood gates [open].   I feel that if it   wasn’t for all of those, my predecessors doing all of the early work   from the 70s and 80s and 90s and what have you, I wouldn’t be able to be   there.
ELLE: You’ve worked with fashion companies before,   how does fashion influence your art? Or do you feel that there is a   correlation for you?R: I’ve been heavily influenced by fashion, and a lot   of that work was influenced by like Art Nouveau and stuff like that.  It   still relates to some of my other work where I do matadors and bishops   and these pieces where the clothing is just a little bit older, but  I’m  still kind of following along those same lines.  I obviously love  and  enjoy looking at fashion magazines, mostly women’s fashion, not  really  interested in men’s fashion so much.  I just think it looks  great and  it’s art.
ELLE: Did you ever get in trouble for doing graffiti?R: Yeah, I’ve been arrested a good amount of times. My   mother was just devastated.  She came here from El Salvador, worked two   jobs and tried to send me to some of the best schools and I gravitated   toward graffiti early on.  So for her it just hurt, it was really a   disappointment.  She loves it now.  She’s more protective of the work.    She used to throw away a lot of my work early on, but that’s also what   made me better.  She was my biggest critic at the time.
ELLE: Where do you see Retna going from here? R: In my mind’s eye? To the end I guess… yeah, till the end of time…
-Source: digitalretna.com x elle.com
double take! via revok1.com