Throwback Thursday: James Wilde x Raw Materials

James Wilde x Raw Materials

August 8, 2018 we showed street artist James Wilde some love, and here we are a year later and even with all these changes and so much new stuff going on – yeah, we still love her!

BTW, one week until we open at our new location – 645 S. Los Angeles Street. Will you be there?

Artist Sam Larson demos Krink K-42 Paint Markers and K-70 Ink Markers

@samlarson using Krink K-42 Paint Marker

Happy Lunar New Year! To kick off our February sale, we are featuring artist Sam Larson (@samlarson) and Krink’s K-42 Opaque Permanent Paint Markers and K-70 Permanent Ink Markers, which are on sale for 20% off!  Check out some of Larson’s recent drawings below.

K-42 Opaque Permanent Paint Marker

The K-42 is a classic paint marker. It comes in 17 colors, here Larson uses Light Blue, Orange, and Yellow. The alcohol-based paint is permanent, opaque, and non-toxic. The marker features a broad-tip with valve-action so that the artist can lay down an abundance of color while strictly regulating the paint’s flow. Handmade in the USA.

Larson uses Krink K-42 Paint Markers in Light Blue, Orange, and Yellow

K-70 Permanent Ink Marker

This marker is a great all-around marker for everyday use. It has a large capacity and valve-action tip, so it can easily be re-inked and last a long time. Additionally, the nib is double sided, with a 3mm bullet tip on one side and a 5mm chisel tip on the other! High quality alcohol-based ink is permanent, opaque, and excellent for use on paper, cardboard, metal, and painted surfaces. Available in Super Black, Cyan, and Magenta. Handmade in the USA.

Larson uses Krink K-70 Ink Marker in Super Black
Larson uses Krink K-70 Ink Marker in Super Black
Larson uses Krink K-70 Ink Marker in Super Black
Larson uses Krink K-70 Ink Marker in Super Black

S.C. Mero in the LA Times

Did you catch our blog post from a week ago hipping you to S.C. Mero’s exhibition at the LA Art Show? The day after the L.A. Art Show closed, Mero took Deborah Vankin from The LA Times on a tour of her street sculptures and Vankin wrote it up:

“The cone was part of Mero’s eight-piece solo exhibition presented by Art Share L.A., a nonprofit supporting emerging local artists. Mero’s public art installations, which she’s been making since she graduated from USC in 2011, typically dot the sidewalks of downtown L.A.’s Arts District, where Art Share L.A. is based. The conceptual sculptures employ humor to shed light on pressing urban issues such as gentrification, drug addiction and homelessness.”

“I just love how Sarah directs a lens onto dire societal issues,” said Art Share L.A. Executive Director Cheyanne Sauter. “But she relies so much on the accidental audience, and I wanted to make that more intentional by bringing her there.”

If you missed her show, we recommend you take a self-guided tour of S.C. Mero‘s street art, the locations are listed in the LA Times article.

Today at the LA Art Show: S.C. Mero – Art Lives Here

If you’re at the LA Art Show today, we highly recommend you check out one of our favorite exhibits by one of our favorite artists – Art Lives Here: S.C. Mero Presented by Art Share L.A. She has her remote-controlled traffic cone with her, and if your timing is right, she might take you and the traffic cone for a spin around the convention room floor.

“Art Share L.A. has partnered with skid-row based, emerging guerrilla artist S.C. Mero to bring a taste of the streets of Downtown Los Angeles to LA Art Show. Embodying the nature of downtown, the onsite installation pieces are just a teaser to the larger site map of her work – which guides attendees into downtown to explore our community under the guise of a pseudo street art scavenger hunt. Each of her site-specific, clever creations calls attention to issues surrounding homelessness, gentrification, drug use, global warming, and more. The goal of this project is to encourage further exploration of underground art, arts activism, and social justice in the Downtown community in a way that is inviting and accessible for everyone.”

Hauser & Wirth Family Studio Workshop: Los Angeles Mural

Family Studio Workshop: Los Angeles Murals at Hauser & Wirth in Downtown Los Angeles. Participants combine watercolor paint and tape to make miniature murals that represent feelings associated with Los Angeles.
Photo: smg photography | Sarah M. Golonka

One of the great things about Raw Materials’ location in Downtown Los Angeles is its close proximity to world-class museums and galleries, and having access to their arts programming. One such neighbor is Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles, in the heart of the Arts District. This month Hauser & Wirth’s Family Studio Workshop takes inspiration from Mary Heilmann’s monumental mural ‘Pacific Ocean,’ directly across the gallery’s onsite restaurant, Manuela. Participants will combine watercolor paint and tape to make their own miniature murals that represent a feeling associated with Los Angeles. Finished projects will echo themes represented in Heilmann’s site-specific work, like the movement of water and California surf culture. The workshop will be led by Matt MacFarland and is scheduled for Sunday, January 27, 2019 at 12 pm.

This drop-in activity at Hauser & Wirth is free, however, reservations are recommended. Click here to register.

New Montana GOLD Colors: Warm Greys

Montana Gold Warm Greys

We are excited to announce an additional seven colors to the Montana GOLD color palette: Dolomite, Ceramic, Buzzard, Yosemite, Asphalt, Meteorite and Basalt!!! As the popularity of grey tones continues to rise, Montana rose to the occasion, selecting just the right tones to warm up an already comprehensive grey palette. These new additions offer a complimentary grayscale to the current collection, completing the range and offering the same exceptional opacity and coverage you’ve come to expect from all things Montana. The Warm Greys are available and on sale at $7.99/can (list price $10.75)! Come get your grey on!

Ron English to Whitewash Banksy

Banksy’s “Slave Labour (Bunting Boy)” mural as it appeared in May 2012 (via Wikimedia Commons)

“We’re tired of people stealing our stuff off the streets and reselling it so I’m just going to buy everything I can get my hands on and whitewash it,” English told the United Kingdom’s Press Association, adding, “I’m going to paint over it and just include it in one of the walls in my house.”

Ron English Plans to Whitewash a $730,000 Banksy, and then Sell It by Zachary Small for Hyperallergic