Crewest in the L.A. Times!
"Off the streets, into the gallery"
By Alex Chun, Special to The Times
Street art in Los Angeles has become as ubiquitous as bleach-blond hair and personalized license plates, so it's no surprise it has infiltrated art galleries as well.
"A lot of galleries used to be scared to put in street artists — they thought people coming in would tag up the outside of their galleries and cause chaos," says Freddi "Freddi C" Cerasoli, proprietor of the Lab 101 Gallery in Culver City. "Then people like me began to put these artists in nice-looking galleries and proved that's not true, and in the last three years I've begun to see high-end galleries start to show these same artists."
These days, L.A.-area galleries such as Crewest, Thinkspace Gallery, Gallery 1988, Lab 101, BLK/MRKT Gallery and the Corey Helford Gallery are featuring notable street artists such as Shepard Fairey, Buff Monster, Greg Simkins, Asylm and Kofie.
"My generation grew up with culture jamming and MTV, and this is what we relate to," says Cerasoli, 37. "Rather than wanting a Warhol, they want to hang an icon from their own era."
Street art encompasses spray-painted graffiti, stencil graffiti, sticker art, posters and even performance art in public spaces. Though it's illegal in many cases, purveyors of the form are quick to distinguish it from tagging and other gang-related activities.
"In contrast to gang graffiti, artistic graffiti has nothing to do with territory, threats or violence," says Crewest owner Alex "Man One" Poli. "Artistic graffiti is all about expression."
A respected graffiti artist in his own right, Poli moved his 5-year-old gallery from Alhambra to a bigger location in downtown L.A. last March and says his new gallery has been well received by the artistic community and is part of Gallery Row and the Downtown Art Walk.
"The new location brings people into the gallery who normally wouldn't think twice about a gallery featuring graffiti art," he says. "The art's really powerful and bold, and it really captures people's attention once they see it, and when they learn it's done with a spray-paint can, it really blows their mind."
For the artists, showing in galleries affords them the opportunity to flex their creative muscles.
For example, at a show a year and half ago, Buff Monster, who is best known for his silk-screen posters often featuring a character sprouting breast-like ears, built a fountain in the middle of a pool composed of six breasts rendered in 3-D.
"When you're driving on the street at 60 miles per hour, you have to be able to read what I say in a split second, and it doesn't show all my visual vocabulary," says the 27-year-old Hollywood artist, who opens a solo show at Gallery 1988 on Feb. 1. "The galleries offer a nice opportunity to create something really ambitious that you couldn't do on the streets."
weekend@latimes.com
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Current and upcoming shows
"BMG Artists' Annual" (current group show includes street turned studio artist Jeff Soto), BLK/MRKT Gallery, 6009 Washington Blvd., Culver City. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends Feb. 17. (310) 837-1989, www.blkmrktgallery.com.
"Buff Monster: One in the Pink," Gallery 1988, 7020 Melrose Ave., L.A. Opening reception, 7 to 10 p.m. Feb. 1; regular hours, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends March 1. (323) 937-7088, www.nineteeneightyeight.com.
"007" (group show that includes street artist Asylm), Crewest Gallery, 110 Winston St., L.A. Opening reception, 5-9 p.m. Feb. 3; regular hours, noon-7 p.m. Tuesdays-Thursdays; noon-8 p.m. Fridays-Saturdays; noon-6 p.m. Sundays. Ends Feb. 24. (213) 627-8272, www.crewest.com.
"The Hunted" (solo show on Blaine Fontana, a street turned studio artist), the Lab 101 Gallery, 8530-B Washington Blvd., Culver City. Opening reception 7-10 p.m. Feb. 3; regular hours, 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays, noon-4:30 p.m. Sundays. Ends Feb. 21. (310) 558-0911; www.thelab101.com.
"Charity by Numbers" (viewing of items for an online charity auction includes works by artists Shepard Fairey, Greg Simkins, Jeff Soto, Buff Monster, Sam Flores), Corey Helford Gallery, 8522 Washington Blvd., Culver City. Opening reception, 10 p.m.-midnight Feb. 10; regular hours, noon-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends Feb. 17. (310) 287-2340, www.coreyhelfordgallery.com.
By Alex Chun, Special to The Times
Street art in Los Angeles has become as ubiquitous as bleach-blond hair and personalized license plates, so it's no surprise it has infiltrated art galleries as well.
"A lot of galleries used to be scared to put in street artists — they thought people coming in would tag up the outside of their galleries and cause chaos," says Freddi "Freddi C" Cerasoli, proprietor of the Lab 101 Gallery in Culver City. "Then people like me began to put these artists in nice-looking galleries and proved that's not true, and in the last three years I've begun to see high-end galleries start to show these same artists."
These days, L.A.-area galleries such as Crewest, Thinkspace Gallery, Gallery 1988, Lab 101, BLK/MRKT Gallery and the Corey Helford Gallery are featuring notable street artists such as Shepard Fairey, Buff Monster, Greg Simkins, Asylm and Kofie.
"My generation grew up with culture jamming and MTV, and this is what we relate to," says Cerasoli, 37. "Rather than wanting a Warhol, they want to hang an icon from their own era."
Street art encompasses spray-painted graffiti, stencil graffiti, sticker art, posters and even performance art in public spaces. Though it's illegal in many cases, purveyors of the form are quick to distinguish it from tagging and other gang-related activities.
"In contrast to gang graffiti, artistic graffiti has nothing to do with territory, threats or violence," says Crewest owner Alex "Man One" Poli. "Artistic graffiti is all about expression."
A respected graffiti artist in his own right, Poli moved his 5-year-old gallery from Alhambra to a bigger location in downtown L.A. last March and says his new gallery has been well received by the artistic community and is part of Gallery Row and the Downtown Art Walk.
"The new location brings people into the gallery who normally wouldn't think twice about a gallery featuring graffiti art," he says. "The art's really powerful and bold, and it really captures people's attention once they see it, and when they learn it's done with a spray-paint can, it really blows their mind."
For the artists, showing in galleries affords them the opportunity to flex their creative muscles.
For example, at a show a year and half ago, Buff Monster, who is best known for his silk-screen posters often featuring a character sprouting breast-like ears, built a fountain in the middle of a pool composed of six breasts rendered in 3-D.
"When you're driving on the street at 60 miles per hour, you have to be able to read what I say in a split second, and it doesn't show all my visual vocabulary," says the 27-year-old Hollywood artist, who opens a solo show at Gallery 1988 on Feb. 1. "The galleries offer a nice opportunity to create something really ambitious that you couldn't do on the streets."
weekend@latimes.com
*
Current and upcoming shows
"BMG Artists' Annual" (current group show includes street turned studio artist Jeff Soto), BLK/MRKT Gallery, 6009 Washington Blvd., Culver City. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends Feb. 17. (310) 837-1989, www.blkmrktgallery.com.
"Buff Monster: One in the Pink," Gallery 1988, 7020 Melrose Ave., L.A. Opening reception, 7 to 10 p.m. Feb. 1; regular hours, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends March 1. (323) 937-7088, www.nineteeneightyeight.com.
"007" (group show that includes street artist Asylm), Crewest Gallery, 110 Winston St., L.A. Opening reception, 5-9 p.m. Feb. 3; regular hours, noon-7 p.m. Tuesdays-Thursdays; noon-8 p.m. Fridays-Saturdays; noon-6 p.m. Sundays. Ends Feb. 24. (213) 627-8272, www.crewest.com.
"The Hunted" (solo show on Blaine Fontana, a street turned studio artist), the Lab 101 Gallery, 8530-B Washington Blvd., Culver City. Opening reception 7-10 p.m. Feb. 3; regular hours, 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays, noon-4:30 p.m. Sundays. Ends Feb. 21. (310) 558-0911; www.thelab101.com.
"Charity by Numbers" (viewing of items for an online charity auction includes works by artists Shepard Fairey, Greg Simkins, Jeff Soto, Buff Monster, Sam Flores), Corey Helford Gallery, 8522 Washington Blvd., Culver City. Opening reception, 10 p.m.-midnight Feb. 10; regular hours, noon-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Saturdays. Ends Feb. 17. (310) 287-2340, www.coreyhelfordgallery.com.
Lowrider Arte Features Man One

Crewest's very own, Man One, is featured this month in
Lowrider Arte's 2007 kick off issue.
Aside from his "Boyz on the Hood" Eazy-E portrait on the cover of the magazine, there is a nice six page spread on some of his work and history.

This issue marks the first time a graff artist has been hand picked
as the Featured Artist.
Nice.
Peel Here: Sticker Show

Sticky Rick is doing it again!
The 2nd annual "Peel Here!" show
(Hey Ricky...we got your back!)
At the Ghetto Mansion
2225 South Olive Street
Los Angeles, CA 90007
Saturday, December 2, 2006
7 to 11PM only $5 and you get all this:
Art, Music, Taco Truck, Plenty to Drink, Parking &
Stickers, Stickers, STICKERS!
Featured Artists:
14Bolt, 20mg, AKO, BRANDED, Berto H, Bytedust, ConArt, C ATV,
C.Damage, DMN, Dr. Rabias, Enik, Evil Dave, EyeOne, Galo,
Ikari, Justin Kees, MAD Toy Design, ManOne, Persue, Mark Of the Beast,
Olive47, PHONETiCONTROL, Restitution Press, Robots Will Kill,
Slick, Urban Medium
Live Art by DubStar3000 & MadOne
Exclusive Stickers by SEEN, Robbie Conal, OG Abel.
First 100 Guests will receive a FREE Sticky Rick's Sticker Pack!!!
Here's a little vid from last year's show..
Dome Sweet Dome
Logan Hicks: our favorite stencil master

Logan does it again! Check out these dope K-Swiss that he put out in collabo with Evil Monito. The packaging is sick! Read more about it here....
Scott Power: K-Swiss x Logan Hicks x Evil Monito = collaborative shoe release and packaging
Conart says "Stop Biting!"
The opening for our October show at Crewest ("Stop Biting!") was really hot!We had artwork on display by Mear, Katch One, Pjay, Xpres, and a bunch of
other guys who have represented Conart throughout the last decade and a half.
Owner Ash Hudson brought out all the dope archives and tees that made CONART such a notable West Coast brand. Even his bro Slash ( Guns N Roses) dropped by and showed some love!
Daddy Kev of Alpha Pup mixing it up.


Fresh designer AJ of Moody Visionz
kicking it with PJAY and his son.

Check out the little write up at LabelNetworks.com
Chris Haston: Rides with Mary
Ofelia's Ofrenda
As part of our exhibition, Top of the Dome, we had an incredible altar installation by Ofelia Esparza dedicated to all fallen graffiti artists from the L.A. area. It was dedicated especially to Sk8, Ayer, Over, Zerek, and Pure. Rest in Power. Here are some of the photos.



Photo courtesy of Eriberto Oriol




Photo courtesy of Eriberto Oriol
Vyal Painting @ November Artwalk
During our November Artwalk our guests were able to check out the live skills of Vyal One as he knocked out each one of these dope panels with one can and one roller. No gimmicks.




Check them skullies...





We know you want to cop one of these? They're priced to go!
Just hit us up if interested: info@crewest.com




Check them skullies...




We know you want to cop one of these? They're priced to go!
Just hit us up if interested: info@crewest.com



















