Archives: On the Street

FREEDOM SUITE by West One | Friday September 30, 2011 | Los Angeles

September 28, 2011 – 3:53 AM

Abstract Expressionist “West” Launches Art Exhibition at Environment Furniture

Exhibition Opens in October with Street Art Mural on Beverly Boulevard

Environment Furniture, part design consortium, part modern craftsman, creates timeless contemporary collections for the home that respect the planet. Environment’s allure remains not only in its firmly entrenched environmental commitment, but also in its aesthetic: an understated elegance and rugged sophistication.   Today, the company is excited to announce a collaboration with West, a renowned Graffiti artist turned Abstract Expressionist, to bring people together both in and outside of the showroom in a celebration of street art.  West will paint a huge mural on the exterior of Environment’s Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles location creating community through shared ideas, knowledge, culture and art.  The mural will be unveiled at a kick-off event September 30 along with the opening of an exhibition of West’s work inside the showroom.

“We live in a vast city where everything’s at right angles,” West said.  “My work is movement and energy.  It’s organic.  The viewer will see different things – maybe themselves, maybe the city.  Maybe the broader environment.  I hope to make us look at our space, our environment, a little differently.”

The partnership was fostered when West was shopping in the Environment showroom and met owner and CEO Davide Berruto.  They discussed large-scale murals, art in general and how Environment’s recent addition of Topanga shelves to its collection celebrated the contributions artists have made in the design space.  Over a few month’s time, expanding the impact of those Topanga shelves, and with the currently strong influence of street art in Los Angeles (thanks to the current Museum of Contemporary Art [MOCA] exhibit), Berruto and West landed on this unique idea to expand street art in a more permanent fashion to Beverly Boulevard’s landscape.

“Our designers scour the world for unique, special and environmentally responsible pieces inside our showroom,” Berruto said.  “We are really excited to offer something as cutting edge as this mural outside as a gift to everyone who passes by.  West plans for the artwork to have no beginning and no end, in essence, no environment.  I find a grand and wonderful irony in that.”

At the invitation-only, kick-off event, Environment will auction off Topanga shelves specially painted by West.  Proceeds from the auction will benefit www.Jamaicankids.org.  Jamaican Kids is based in Los Angeles and was formed to help Jamaican children who live in difficult conditions in ghettos by providing them with all they need, including clothes, school supplies, medical care, and in some extreme cases, even a new home.  A percentage of each sale of West’s paintings on display throughout the exhibition will also benefit the charity.

West is best known for his Graffiti work in New York City in the 1980s and ‘90s.  In 2000, he had a fundamental shift in his work and began to feel confined by the rules and strict technical codes of Graffiti lettering styles.  West began to study the work of the Abstract Expressionists particularly Franz Kline, Willem DeKooning, Robert Motherwell, and Clifford Still, and in their work saw “an opening, a freedom, that was missing from the mannerism of traditional Graffiti.”  West now encourages viewers to enjoy his work with no preconceived notions.  People can literally take what they want from these abstract pieces.

Open to the public starting October 1, 2011, the West Exhibition will be on display at the Environment Furniture Showroom, 8126 Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles through December 31, 2011.

http://westonefc.com

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3 KINGS : SUBLIMINAL PROJECTS OPENING SEPTEMBER 17TH

August 31, 2011 – 1:03 PM

3 KINGS
September 17th – October 8th, 2011

Opening Reception:
Saturday, September 17th, 2011 / 8-11pm
Valet Parking Provided

FEATURING FRED BRATHWAITE AKA FAB 5 FREDDY, LEE QUINONES AND LEONARD MCGURR AKA FUTURA 2000 WITH GUEST CURATOR PATTI ASTOR

Subliminal Projects is proud to present its opening fall show 3 Kings, on view September 17 through October 8, 2011. In classic NYC Subway Graffiti lore, a “King” is one who has achieved the most recognition for not only excellence in style but for the mark they have made on the culture. For over thirty years these “3 Kings” have been at the top of the game. Their history-making rise to international prominence from the subway tunnels of New York City was recently chronicled in MOCA’s “Art In The Streets” exhibition. At Subliminal Projects they will be presenting their contemporary work created exclusively for this exhibition along with classic pieces. Please join us at a reception for the artists on Saturday, September 17, from 8-11p.m.

Lee Quinones is generally recognized as the greatest graffiti artist of all time. His ten whole car train with the Fabulous Five is a feat that has never been matched. Lee was also the creator of the graffiti writers’ creed, “If art is a crime, let God forgive me.” From his first show at the FUN Gallery in 1982 “Rust-O-LEEum”, he has never looked back, expanding his painting in extremely sophisticated ways while often including a touching look at the past.
Futura 2000 had his first one man show at the FUN Gallery in 1981 and with his unique, ethereal style became one of the FUN’s most successful artists. He was instrumental in bringing graffiti art to Europe and beyond with rock group The Clash, painting back drops on tour and designing album art. Futura was also one of the first artists to work with manufacturers of transformer figures and clothing designs. His otherworldly new work is always eagerly awaited.

In 1981, Patti Astor was famous as “The Queen of The Downtown Screen”. Having worked with such directors as Amos Poe, Jim Jarmusch and Eric Mitchell, she was starring in her 12th beyond low budget “No Wave Cinema” film, UNDERGROUND USA, (the punk rock Sunset Boulevard), enjoying a six month run as the midnight movie at the St. Mark’s Cinema. Fab 5 Freddy (Fred Brathwaite) had come downtown to check it out and so the “King of Uptown” met the “Queen of Downtown”.

Unbelievably at that time no one in the downtown Mudd Club scene had ever heard of graffiti art, break-dancing or rap. However, that was soon to change. With partner Bill Stelling, Patti opened FUN Gallery, the first art gallery in NYC’s East Village. From 1981-1985 this gritty tenement storefront was the epicenter of the early 80′s cultural explosion in art, music and dance. With Fab 5 Freddy leading the way, downtown punk rock met uptown hip-hop. English rockers The Clash and the Sex Pistols partied with Futura 2000 and the Rock Steady Crew, Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf traded tags with DONDI and LEE and Jean Michel Basquiat spun platters with Afrika Bambaata, everyone rocking to the box at the FUN, while renowned collectors, art historians and museum directors joined in the party.

Though the FUN Gallery’s duration was brief, the barriers had come down and the art world would never be the same.

Join these longtime friends and veterans of the most important cultural explosion of the last thirty years at our fall exhibition 3 Kings.

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STREET ART STORIES

August 5, 2011 – 3:54 AM

Brooklyn Street Art invites you to “Street Art Stories”, a presentation and panel discussion about new stories told on the street today, to be held at MOCA Grand Avenue Ahmanson Auditorium, Los Angeles, California on Saturday, August 13, 2011, at 3 pm.

 

STREET ART STORIES

Presented by Brooklyn Street Art
A Presentation and Panel Discussion About New Stories Told on the Street Today

In Street Arts’ latest chapter, the storytellers are hitting up walls with all manner of influences and methods. More than ever before, formally trained and self taught fine artists are skipping the gallery route and taking their work directly to the public, creating cultural mash-ups and highly personal stories of their own, altering the character of this scene once again. Eclectic, individual, and as D.I.Y. as you can imagine, these Street Artists may have knowledge of who came before them or not, but they are determined to be a part of one art scene that is perceived as authentic, relevant, and alive.
Join Steven P. Harrington and Jaime Rojo, authors and founders of Brooklyn Street Art and contributing Street Art writers for The Huffington Post ARTS, as they show and compare examples of work from New York’s streets today. Then join a lively discussion with knowledgeable panelists about precursors to this storytelling practice and how it may be evolving what we have been calling “Street Art” for the last decade.
Hosted by The Huffington Post ARTS and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA) at MOCA Grand Avenue Ahmanson Auditorium, our panelists are:
• Kimberly Brooks, Fine Artist and Founding Arts Editor of the Huffington Post
• Shepard Fairey, Fine Artist, Street Artist, and Graphic Designer
• Marsea Goldberg, Director of New Image Art Gallery in West Hollywood, CA
• Ken Harman, Managing Online Editor at Hi-Fructose Magazine and Owner and Curator at Spoke Art Gallery in San Francisco, CA
• Ethel Seno, Editor of “Trespass: A History of Uncommissioned Urban Art” and Curatorial Coordinator for the MOCA exhibition “Art in the Streets” at the Geffen Contemporary at MOCA
Presenters and moderators, Steven P. Harrington, Editor in Chief, and Jaime Rojo, Editor of Photography at BrooklynStreetArt.com
Location:
MOCA Grand Avenue
Ahmanson Auditorium
250 South Grand Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Date and Time:
Saturday, August 13, 2011, at 3 pm

RSVP:
Admission is free and seating is very limited so please RSVP your request to MOCApanel@BrooklynStreetArt.com today. You will receive a confirmation via email by August 4 __if your request can be honored.

While in LA, please check out Street Art Saved My Life : 39 New York Stories, a show curated by Steven P. Harrington and Jaime Rojo of BrooklynStreetArt.com
Presented by Brooklyn Street Art in collaboration with ThinkSpace and C.A.V.E Gallery
August 12 – September 4, 2011 at C.A.V.E. Gallery in Venice, California www.cavegallery.net
Street Art Saved My Life : 39 New York Stories Online Press Release: http://mim.io/692a11
HuffPost ARTS http://www.huffingtonpost.com/arts/
MOCA http://www.moca.org
Brooklyn Street Art http://www.brooklynstreetart.com/

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Deedee Cheriel on the Streets of LA

July 26, 2011 – 8:02 AM

In preparation for her show this Saturday, PCP artist Deedee Cheriel has been busy around town…

 

 

“Songs for Infinite Starry Nights”
Featuring New Works by Deedee Cheriel

July 30 – August 27, 2011

Opening Reception: July 30, 2011 (8 – 11pm)
Merry Karnowsky Gallery

MORE PHOTOS HERE

View Prints by Deedee

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