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2 year and 5 months ago
Thursday, May 10, 2007 at 5:19 pm


Find out more at: MTNCOLORS
1 year and 10 months ago
Thursday, January 3, 2008 at 2:29 am








An exhibition featuring the work of select members of the notorious
The Seventh Letter (T7L) graffiti collective. Within The Seventh Letter collective is an elite crew known as Angels Will Rise (AWR), who have established themselves as L.A.’s most influential modern
muralists.

The show will consist of a floor-to-ceiling mural installation constructed by AWR members:
Pusher, Zeser, Krush, Rime, Saber, Revok, Retna, Reyes, Skrew, Sever and Ewok.
Curated by Brett Aronson

January 19 - February 12, 2008
*Opening Reception: Saturday, January 19th, 2008
Gallery D5
ROBERT BERMAN GALLERY
At Bergamot Station Arts Center
2525 Michigan avenue, Suite C2/D5
Santa Monica, California 90404
2 year and 10 months ago
Wednesday, December 20, 2006 at 12:48 pm
The Seventh Letter Crew busted out this ad for the rebirth of GuerillaOne.com.
The Seventh Letter x Marketing Division x GuerillaOne.com x Known Gallery x Will Rise Inc.


1 year and 9 months ago
Thursday, January 17, 2008 at 12:03 pm

 

Please cover these walls with graffiti


By -- Lea.Lion @latimes.com
January 17, 2008
THE elite graffiti crew Angels Will Rise has made a name for itself byspray-painting full-color, wall-sized murals -- of both the illegal and commissioned variety -- around L.A. over the last 20 years. But when 11 of its members met up in a mid-city warehouse in November, it was not to plan their next bombing mission, but to create murals bound for gallery walls.

The resulting pieces are part of "Will Rise," which opens at Robert Berman Gallery on Saturday and pays homage to the aesthetic that brought fame to this subgroup of the merchandising collective Seventh Letter Crew. Namely, its West Coast-flavored "wild style" script.

"Basically, the exhibit consists of 70 panels that fit together in a modular installation to mock up what an outdoor mural would look like," says show curator Brett Aronson. "A lot of gallery shows take the aesthetic of graffiti and try to put it on a canvas, but that disrupts what graffiti is by taking it off the wall. Obviously, the gallery is not a concrete outdoor wall, but the concept was to try to represent that."

For the show, each artist created a mural on six 4-by-4-foot panels. Their pieces will be displayed from floor to ceiling on three walls to create the effect of "a subway tunnel covered in graffiti," says gallery owner Robert Berman.

During a recent visit, the tunnel wasn't yet installed, but a mural by Marquis Lewis, known in the graffiti world as Retna, adorned one wall. The work depicts what Lewis refers to as a "family crest" in copper-toned brushwork.

On an adjacent wall, a mural by Saber, known for creating the world's largest graffiti piece in the L.A. River channel, features swirling letters in shades of silver, purple and white. On a far wall, a mural by Revok, who is widely considered to be the godfather of modern-day graffiti, combines fanciful script with a tech-inspired font to spell out his name.

"I came from the school of thought that graffiti was supposed to be on the street; it wasn't supposed to be in a gallery," says Lewis. "But the gallery setting allows graffiti artists to explore avenues they normally wouldn't because they are rushed or they fear getting arrested."

Of course, it helps that after years of outlaw status, graffiti artists are getting respect in the gallery world. "People are starting to look at this as the new tough art, the same way that in New York in the '60s they were looking at Pop Art," Berman says. "The world is their canvas."

1 year and 7 months ago
Saturday, March 15, 2008 at 1:14 pm
2 year and 3 months ago
Thursday, July 12, 2007 at 9:32 am
The Rise of the Seventh Letter
Mad society kings
By Shelley Leopold
Wednesday, July 11, 2007 - 12:00 pm

Once you know what you’re looking for, your sixth (make that your seventh) sense will kick in and you’ll start seeing them everywhere — on empty walls surrounding vacant lots, on the ramparts of the L.A. River, along freeways, on billboards... everywhere. To the cold, blank spaces of our urban canvas, the throw-ups and pieces bearing the marks of The Seventh Letter crew add color, beauty, a bit of danger perhaps, and, increasingly, legend. Not since the postmodernist heyday of Pollock and Picasso has the art world been host to such a decidedly macho milieu...

read entire article at: LA WEEKLY




1 year and 9 months ago
Monday, January 21, 2008 at 8:48 pm
See also: Press Release
1 year and 9 months ago
Tuesday, January 22, 2008 at 3:08 pm
See also: Press Release
1 year and 9 months ago
Monday, January 21, 2008 at 9:43 pm
Photos by Amayzun. See also: Press Release
2 year and 8 months ago
Sunday, February 11, 2007 at 12:11 am



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