World Piece Book Party from DP/Operator Carl Weston on Vimeo.
World Piece Book Party
Produced, Shot and Edited By Carl Weston
World Piece Book Party from DP/Operator Carl Weston on Vimeo.
World Piece Book Party
Produced, Shot and Edited By Carl Weston
COPE2 – Solo Exhibition at Maximillian Gallery from KWEENZ DESTROY on Vimeo.
COPE2
Authentic
Solo Exhibition
Opening Reception: Saturday July 9, 2011 / 6pm – 9pm
Exhibition July 9 – August 17, 2011
Maximillian Gallery
@ The Sunset Marquis
1200 Alta Loma Road
West Hollywood, CA 90069
Tele: 310-881-6025
MaximillianGallery.com

Jeffrey Deitch, formerly of New York’s most street art-savvy gallery Deitch Projects and now director of Los Angeles’s Museum of Contemporary Art, has taken his brand of populist, youth-courting art west (see last year’s Dennis Hopper retrospective), and he’ll continue in that vein when the first major museum survey of graffiti, street art and street art photography, Art in the Streets, opens there next month. Better yet, the exhibition will be coming to the Brooklyn Museum next year, from March 30 to July 8, 2012.
Combined with the likely arrival of the National Portrait Gallery’s controversial—but by all accounts excellent—Hide/Seek at the end of this year, it’s shaping up to be a very exciting 2011-12 season at the Brooklyn Museum.
A centerpiece of the exhibition in L.A. will be a re-installation of Todd James, Barry McGee and Steve Powers’s massive Street Market installation from 2000 (pictured), originally mounted at Deitch’s 18 Wooster Street space in Soho. The original installation featured two over-turned trucks, a series of tagged-up storefronts and innumerable pieces by each artist. Seems like the kind of thing that would fit perfectly in the Brooklyn Museum’s newly renovated Great Hall, no? (art21)
Via: (The L Magazine)

A Beautiful Crime
Read’s ArtSpace, 1042 Broad St., Bridgeport. Opening reception Fri., March 25, 5 p.m. Exhibit runs through April 25. For information, email BeautifulCrimeShow@gmail.com .
Bridgeport’s Fame City was one of the most celebrated graffiti spots in the country before it was shut down. Right now, New York City is in danger of losing its famed 5Pointz. Graffiti artists simply don’t have many hospitable environments where they can practice their craft and improve the public’s perception of them. The graffiti-inspired art show “A Beautiful Crime,” which runs from March 25 to April 25 at the ground floor gallery in Read’s Artspace, hopes to provide the chance to do both.
The show, which also puts up its works for sale, was conceived and put together by Razul Branch and three artists — Aisha Nailah, Gelator and Yves Wilson — as a way to clear up misconceptions about graffiti artists. The foursome also saw Bridgeport as a potential hub for artists. “We saw this would be a great opportunity to launch this arts scene here along the same scale as Hartford and New Haven,” says Branch. “Some of these guys are extremely accomplished artists, they just don’t have as many venues to showcase their talent because the moment someone hears they’re graffiti artists a lot of times their mind is closed off right after that.” (read more)

In the first issue of his graffiti and pop-culture magazine While You Were Sleeping, Roger Gastman thanked “Mom for the loot,” and then thanked “everyone who ever told me that graff was a dumb waste of my time.” Gastman, who was 19 at the time, had already been running a graffiti supply business in Bethesda, Md., for three years and was starting to assemble a valuable collection of graffiti ephemera, sourcing discontinued Krylon paint colors at mom-and-pop hardware stores as though he knew, even as a teen, that his obsession would serve him well.
Now 33 and living in Los Angeles, Gastman is still having the last laugh. The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, is gearing up for the April opening of “Art in the Streets,” a major graffiti and street-art survey he’s curating along with the museum’s new director, Jeffrey Deitch, and the independent curator Aaron Rose. “The History of American Graffiti” (HarperCollins), written by Gastman and Caleb Neelon, also comes out next month.
While the tattooed, baseball-capped Gastman says he wasn’t expecting the e-mail he received from Deitch about the MoCA show, “I sort of feel like I’ve been training for it my whole life.”
He was introduced to his calling in the streets of Washington, D.C. “Everyone had a tag,” he recalls, sitting under an Adam Wallacavage octopus chandelier in his Los Feliz living room. “It was just what you did.” His skills may have been “average at best,” but he was there — climbing the rooftops, painting the freight train cars and documenting it all. He says his tight network of artists, collaborators and friends is simply a product of being in the right place at the right time — he met the now legendary Saber under a bridge when he was 15 — and an ability to keep his word. “Most people are flaky,” he says with a shrug.
“What I really liked about Roger from the beginning,” says Shepard Fairey, a fixture in the pages of While You Were Sleeping and later Gastman’s partner in Swindle magazine, “was that he seemed really self-motivated, smart, funny and irreverent. But he’s also professional enough to put out a magazine and organize all the moving parts that go into that. It’s a pretty unique blend.”
By The Time I Get To Arizona – opening June 25, 2010 from 33third Los Angeles on Vimeo.
Produced by: Viejas Del Mercado
Sponsored by:
33third Los Angeles / 33third.com
Montana Store Los Angeles
Puma
Saturday June 26th
7:30-10PM
Open to the Public
Featuring Works By:
Axis
EL MAC
RETNA
MEAR
KOFIE
DABS & MYLA
ESTEVAN ORIOL
THE PHANTOM
DASH 2000 FIDEL
VYAL
EYE ONE
HASTE
RITZY PERIWINKLE
ACAMONCHI
CACHE
CODAK
JAMIE GERMS ZACARIAS
KOPYE
SURGE
Mid-City Arts Gallery
5113 W. Pico Blvd.
Los AngelesCa. 90019
(310) 694-3460
midcityarts@gmail.com
Henry Chalfant’s 50th Birthday Party 1990 from Carl Weston on Vimeo.
Many of New York City’s top graffiti writers came to pay respect to Henry including:
Dondi – Rip
A-One – Rip
Frosty Freeze – Rip
Seen Ua
Doc Tc5
Web Tc5
Tats Crew
Bio
Nicer
Brim
Ken
Tkid
Deal
Sane – Rip
Smith
Ket
Ghost
Min
Ven
Revolt
Haze
Sharp
KenSwift
Crazylegs
Lee
Blade
Bom5
Noc167
Rammellzee
James Top
and many others..
Mid-City Arts Anniversary Art Show and Installation Teaser from 33third Los Angeles on Vimeo.
Mid-City Arts is a year old and we are doing it big with an anniversary art show and installation including all of the artists that made the first year of Mid-City Arts (gallery) a success. The show opens Sunday August 2nd, from 12-6 PM and includes artists:
Aloy AsTEK atlas axis Augor Bonks Cab cache CERN CES chaka chorBOOGIE clinton BOPP codak cope2 cr8 Dash dUSTER Dytch else Erni Estevan ORIOL Evol Ewok EZRA xpres frame Goshe GYlt Hex Indie kopye Krush LESEAN THOMAS Make Minette Mosh Muck Persue Phantom Pose pose2 Rask RELAX Retna Risk Saber SLEEZE Sloke Slow Stat7 Surya T-KID Trixter Typoe VENG Vyal WEAH WISK
Sacha Jenkins and David “Chino” Villorente co-hosted the “Piecebook Battle” @ Fondation Cartier in the Montparnasse district of Paris. It was very cool. Despite the intermittent rain, the crowds came through all day to support the 15 contestants and four finalists chosen by the hosts and my mellow JonOne 156 (Dominican Power!).
“Piecebook Battle” Contestants @ the Cartier Foundation, Paris from Raquel Cepeda on Vimeo.