HOME » TSL Blog» Tag: haze
Sort By:   Most Recent   |  Most Viewed
Tuesday
Tuesday, November 17, 2009 at 2:42 pm

Eric Haze announces New Abstracts and Icons, a major solo exhibition in New York City of new paintings, drawings, and sculpture. It is the artist’s largest exhibition to date.

Deeply rooted in the graphic arts, Haze has established a vocabulary of personal symbolism with a repertoire representing departures of an abstract and minimalist nature. For New Abstracts and Icons Haze recontextualizes the aesthetic congruences of geometry, symmetry, and repetition through his iconographic lens. "This show represents a clear window into the process I have dedicated myself to over the last three years, with a deeper exploration of the minimalist and pop styles that have always informed my work,” says Haze.

Recognized worldwide for more than three decades for his design work and artistic productions in a multitude of mediums, the 21st century has seen Haze return to his fine art roots. His work in acrylic, ink and charcoal culminated with a solo exhibition in 2008 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Hong Kong.

In New Abstracts and Icons, bold iconography and his natural line quality are free of any predictable design or past imagery. Haze is intent to convey his overall message in the purest and most organic terms possible through the combination of stark color contrasts and clean lines. The result is an overtly minimalist composition. The viewer does not have to sift through metaphors and signifiers; instead, Haze bravely reveals his personality and identity in stripped down, simple form. Through these new works chaos is calmed and harmony is nurtured.

New Abstracts and Icons will be the first event held at Level 2, a newly built-to-suit 2500-square foot gallery space on 812 Broadway and 11th Street. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvres will be served at the opening reception with world class DJs A-Trak and Neil Armstrong providing the audio.  The public opening runs from 8-10 pm. Exhibition hours will be 12-6 pm, Monday through Friday, and 1-7 pm, Saturday and Sunday.

More background on Eric Haze, plus extensive archives of his past works can also be seen at: www.interhaze.com.

Source: Juxtapoz.com

7 months ago
Tuesday, April 14, 2009 at 11:51 am

 
Friday April 24th, 2009

Insomniac Events presents
MERGE
Music * Art * Fashion


Electro/House Main Area
Special performance by the legendary Afrika Bambaataa
Also featuring Aaron Lacrate, Public, Thee Mike B & IShowMyself

Drum & Bass Lounge presented by Bassrush
Hosted by MC's Dino & Questionmark
Featuring DJ's Hazen, Machete, Heavy Hittahz, Subflo, Scooba, Circuit & Deco

Techno Upstairs VIP presented by i.d.e.a.
Featuring Qzen, The Bystanders, Aaron Castle & Sissy Wong

Buddha's Reggae Garden hosted by I&I Soundsystem
Featuring Aurilito & Shakespeare + Special Guests

Artist Exhibit featuring
Retna, Revok, Ewok, Krush, Sonny, Michael Delakaut / Wise, Kenton Parker

T-Shirt printing by Hit & Run // Photos by Shadowscene

21+ // $10 Cover All Night Long

RSVP for Free Entry from 9-11pm on Pete G's List!

http://www.superstarsvip.com/pages/bassrush-rsvp.php

Drink Specials will also be available before 11pm!!

VANGUARD
6021 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood, CA 90028
9 months ago
Monday, February 2, 2009 at 10:22 pm




Last December, the special projects team at STUSSY commissioned me to paint a new installation in their Las Vegas store...



Not only was it a good opportunity to support my ongoing relationship with the brand, but it was also a nice chance to try my hand at one of the large scale freestyle paintings I have been working towards lately, so my main man Carl and I packed up supplies and headed out to Vegas for 4 days to get busy...



Even though I had all the specs and had prepared my plans before arriving, the 14' x 60' wall seemed much bigger than I imagined when I first saw it in person...and a quick test using the small scaffolding and ladders


we had initially secured proved challenging at best. fortunately, Scott from Stussy made some quick calls


and had an electric powered "cherry picker" lift delivered the next morning, while we just mixed paints and plotted a few points with tape the first day...



Working fast and wet, I completed the whole wall in 2 days once we got started, and it was cool to have such a huge smooth "canvas" to put my brush skills to this kind of test in a controlled environment. Adam Weissman from Stussy also shot live video of the whole painting process, which he edited down into a short tight documentary that is scheduled to be posted on the Stussy website today. Carl and a few of the shop staff also shot a series of still photos during the installation,


which I am attaching to follow now :

















We also ran over and took a few pics the next morning, before all the displays and clothing racks were re-installed :











Stussy is also releasing a ltd. edition t-shirt shown below that I created based on the installation, which will be available in time for the upcoming Magic show at their Las Vegas and Tokyo stores only. so check out the stussy website at:

www.stussy.com

to peep the video, and stop by the shop if you will be in Vegas to see the work in person...





*and keep an eye out for more future collabo's and Haze x Stussy product too ; I also recently completed a full collection of Stussy designs and pattern work, including reworking some of their classic icons, which are scheduled for spring 2010 release along with some special roll outs for Stussy's 30th anniversary next year...

1 year and 3 months ago
Monday, August 4, 2008 at 6:31 pm

For more on this exhibition: http://www.riottt.com/HAZE

2 year and 4 months ago
Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 5:36 pm
2 year and 4 months ago
Sunday, July 8, 2007 at 4:43 pm
CLICK CLACK THE WORLD FAMOUS SEVENTH LETTER CREW STRIKES AGAIN

Ed Templeton, Joe King, Steel, Phil Holt, Matt Gordon, Risk, David Choe, Estevan Oriol, Aroe, Joe Hahn, Dmote, Chaz Bojorquez, Fate's Venem, Mr. Cartoon, Michael Delahaut, Kenton Parker, Victor Reyes Chapa, Jersey Joe, Tommy Ruets, Stormie Mills, Aaron Horkey, Earsnot, Mqism, Shepard Fairey, Chris Garver, Sp One, Seak, Saber, Revok, Push, Pose, Retna, Krush, Phyn Finn, Ewok, Totem2, Jason Bles Kundell, Amandalynn, Norm, Zeser, Sever, Grime, Slick, Hense, Alexis Ross, Wanto, Sect, Barry Twist Mcgee, The Mac, Persue Bunny Kitty, Doze Green, Haze, Bates, Ceaze, Ron English, Dame, Askew, Shawn Barber....
2 year and 4 months ago
Monday, June 25, 2007 at 11:43 pm
Juxtapoz is pleased to announce the very special Seventh Letter issue. The Seventh Letter is a graffiti and art collective, and we've taken the entire crew and given them an entire issue of Juxtapoz. The cover story is Saber, fresh off the 10-year anniversary of his famed LA River piece, and his upcoming solo show at White Walls Gallery in San Francisco. Also featured in this issue are Retna, Revok, Eklips, Look, Ewok, Fate, Push, Reyes, Sever, Rime, and Persue. Profiled artists include Barry McGee, SA Studios, Alexis Ross, Wise, Jason Kundell, Pysa, Hael, Hense, Finn, Norm, Amandalynn, Krush, Ceaze, Kenton Parker, Ron English, QP, Wanto, and Stormie. Shepard Fairey, Haze, Chaz Bojorquez, Zeser, and Earsnot make guest appearances as well.

The Seventh Letter issue also features a FREE pull-out poster of Saber's LA River piece, and FREE sticker sheet featuring The Seventh Letter crew graphics.

2 year and 7 months ago
Tuesday, April 10, 2007 at 3:02 pm
It's that rare moment these days when one is struck with a genuine sense of artistic discovery, and one of the more memorable ones I have had in the last few years was the first time I saw the sculpture work of the west coast artist:
PUSH - AWR/MSK/The Seventh Letter Crew


Check out the feature at: RIOTT.com and HAZE

2 year and 7 months ago
Friday, March 30, 2007 at 1:16 pm


Find out more at: KushTV
2 year and 7 months ago
Thursday, March 29, 2007 at 11:29 pm

2 year and 8 months ago
Friday, March 16, 2007 at 8:25 pm




The Temptations

The Tempt One benefit

By CAROLINE RYDER
Wednesday, March 14, 2007 - 4:00 pm
Sneakerheads, graff writers and their skate-punk brethren have infiltrated the peaceful boulevards of Culver City. Garbed in all-over-print hoodies and baseball caps, they’re lining up outside the URB Gallery, where works by more than 100 big-name street artists are being sold tonight. Many of the featured artists are inside, milling around, and Stefan, a young graff writer from Venice, is desperate to get in. “I want to meet Eklips,” he says, referring to his favorite graffiti writer. “It’s gonna be the sickest.”

The Saturday-night art auction is benefiting terminally ill artist Tony “Tempt One” Quan, 38, West Coast graffiti O.G. and co-founder of Big Time, one of the first L.A. mags to document the culture. Tempt isn’t here tonight, because he’s in a hospital bed, paralyzed by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (often referred to as Lou Gehrig’s disease), a neurodegenerative condition he has been fighting since 2003. He can’t move, and his communication is limited to blinking.

Tempt wants to leave the hospital and spend his last days at home, something that will cost his family a minimum of $50,000 in home nursing and equipment costs. So more than 100 leading contemporary and street artists — including Haze, Shepard Fairey, Barry McGee, Slick, Saber, Futura and Mister Cartoon — agreed to donate original works to tonight’s benefit, with all proceeds going to the Quan family. Raymond Roker, founder of URB magazine, offered his gallery space to the cause.

“It’s pretty unprecedented,” says Raymond Codrington, a cultural anthropologist whom I meet outside. Codrington seems to know his Saber from his Futura (he curated last year’s “Movement: Hip Hop in L.A.” exhibit), so I ask him if he’ll give me a guided tour of the art. We step inside, where the aerosol and Sharpie fumes are overwhelming. The environment is predominantly hipster male, with many favoring fedoras, fingerless gloves, and heavy black-rimmed glasses à la DJ Franki Chan. Young skate rats, looking fresh off a Larry Clark movie set, are holding cans of Krylon spray paint like accessories. The few girls I do see are wearing either lots of gold or none at all. Everyone is taking photos — of each other, of the bigtime graff artists in the crowd, and of the art. So much art, in every direction, in every imaginable color, style and medium.

There are black-and-white photo portraits of hot women by Estevan Oriol. Pencil sketches of Tupac and members of N.W.A. Graff legend Barry “Twist” McGee, one of the biggest artists to participate, has painted floating heads, small, square and frowning. A huge mural places Tempt’s black-and-white visage next to his tag. In the center of the room are 17 3-foot-high spray cans with little legs, each one customized by a different artist (one is dressed like a little gangbanger, with its face obscured by a black bandanna). There’s a set of painted skateboards on the wall, one showing the side of a New York subway train covered in Tempt artwork. The artist who donated them is an unknown who had turned up at the gallery that morning and given them his work (his pieces were among the first to sell).

Dave Flores, whose own art show opened tonight (next door, at Project:Studio), wanders in and checks on his piece. Saber, who created the world’s largest graffiti mural, along the concrete banks of the L.A. River, is hanging out by his triptych of dark, fantasy graff paintings. And the artist Blake Ingram, co-founder of the FUCT streetwear line, has donated a series of images showing his wife’s perfectly pedicured feet in hot, strappy high heels (“I have a little shoe fetish,” he later confesses).

I spot a silk-screened print showing Tempt’s own masterful brand of calligraphy. On the margins is a thumbprint. It belongs to Tempt. Slick, Tempt’s close friend, had taken copies of the poster to the hospital, pushed his friend’s thumb into an ink pad, and then pressed it onto each and every print. The driving force behind tonight’s benefit, Slick is posing for photos right now, talking to fans and signing the backs of their shirts. His eyes are tired, and sweat droplets line his brow. “Tonight has been really crazy,” he says. “I don’t know where to begin.” Then, breaking into a smile, he adds: “Tempt’s going to be proud.”

Find out more at: LA WEEKLY
2 year and 8 months ago
Monday, March 12, 2007 at 3:22 am
2 year and 8 months ago
Monday, March 12, 2007 at 3:16 am

1 2 next