Bevery
Hills, CA - It's near midnight on Rodeo Drive, one of the most famous
and elegant streets in the world. A small group of graffiti bandits and
taggers apply their trade on the construction frontage of a world-famous
design shop. Vandalsim? Graffiti? Hardly. The work is a commissioned piece
and the "vandals" are all are former graffiti outlaws who have
pooled their talents to from ICU -- In Creative Unity, a mobile artists
colony that creates wonderous spray paint murals for business and communities.
In Creative Unity is the brain child of Stash Maleski, a former graffit outlaw himself. The group was formed a year after the L.A. riots as a collaborative focal point for artists, curators and organizations dedicated to bringing graffiti art to a new level.
VYAL
started tagging at age 13, and then graduated to more advanced forms of
graffiti art. The life of an outlaw graffiti artist is not an easy one.
In addition to the ever-present threat of arrest there are also the hazards
of stepping on the toes of other taggers as well as the gangs which protect
their turf, and their graffiiti spots, to the death. VYAL: "I
never imagined I'd ever being doing murals on Rodeo Drive!"
ICU
artist Mear began his career in the 9th grade. He sees ICU as a way to
legitimze his artistic passion, and to be able to work with and learn from
other artists. "ICU has brought creative, diverse individuals together.
On your own, you lose insprination, in a group its a good thing; you do
better work, ICUmakes us stirve harder instead of being used to the norm,"
says Mear
ICU focuses on construction murals to raise money. The money is used to fund exhibitions for displaying the individual members as well as the group's art. ICU plans to have exhibitions coming in Los Angeles, as well as exhibitions in Europe and Japan.