A Graffiti Legend Is Back on the Street
April 20, 2005
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[from nytimes.com]
He arrived on foot, and on time, wearing heavily grease-stained beige overalls and boots. He seemed to be in his late 30’s or early 40’s, with thinning light brown hair. He had the windburned eyes and blackened fingernails of an ironworker, along with the vaguely feral intensity of someone on the lam.
But he hardly looked like the kind of shadowy revolutionary figure who had once declared that his goal was to “tear the city to pieces and rebuild it.” Now, he says, smiling weakly, “I stop at stop signs; I pay taxes; I get up and go to work and get a paycheck.”
In the New York graffiti world of the early 1990’s, he was everywhere and larger than life, sometimes literally: the name Revs, usually accompanied by that of his partner in crime, Cost, could be found scrawled, wheat-pasted or painted in gargantuan white letters on overpasses, walls and roofs from SoHo to northern New Jersey. The work upended many traditional notions of graffiti and helped inspire a new generation of so-called street artists.
Then in late 1994 Cost was arrested for vandalism. Revs went underground and left the city for Alaska. And when he returned, his work went mostly underground, too - into the subway, where he painted long, feverish diary entries worthy of a Dostoyevsky character on dozens of walls hidden deep inside the tunnels. (He called this a personal mission and said he did not care if anybody else saw them.)
But over the last few years, he has re-emerged into public view and reincarnated himself in a way few of his fans ever expected, as a legitimate and (mostly) law-abiding sculptor. He has made dozens of works using construction-grade steel and other metal parts and has sought the permission of building owners to weld and bolt them to the outsides of buildings in the meatpacking district, the East Village, the Gowanus Canal area and Dumbo, where the gentrifying but still half-deserted streets have become a veritable Revs gallery.
Yet unlike many former graffiti artists who have turned their street credibility into successful careers as graphic designers or youth-market branding gurus, Revs has continued to shun, angrily, the worlds of conventional art and commerce. He makes his living about as far from the art world as possible, as a union ironworker, surrounded by co-workers who mostly have no idea of his reputation as a near-mythical deity of the graffiti world. His only gallery show, in Philadelphia in 2000, was to raise money so he could pay a lawyer after he was arrested for the subway graffiti. Otherwise, he has refused to sell his work or take commissions for it.
Pesky Humans Gallery Exhibition
April 5, 2005

Pesky Humans is having their first gallery exhibition. Show some love if you are in LA and free this Friday.
The Art Annex
657 N. Spaulding (at Melrose)
Los Angeles, CA 90036
Gallery Opening:
Friday April 8, 2005
8PM - 12AM
Featured Artists:
CHRISTIAN WISEMAN * LESLEY REPPETEAUX * NATHAN SPOOR * MEAR ONE * L. CROSKEY * MICHELE WATERMAN * THOMAS HAN * JOE LEDBETTER * TIM McCORMICK * JOPHEN STEIN * POOR AL * LYNN MARIE GREAVES * MISHA * DOVER * SOPHIA POTTISH * JOHN GILL * JEREMY SZUDER