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Sonny Sandoval ::
Daim ::
Erni ::
Chaz
Droppin Science..
Erni NYC Kicks Knowledge
Whether you know it or not [whether you even like it or not]-there is no escaping
Erni Vales. Not so much in a personal sense, but rather in creations borne
from his own hands. Its unlikely to go one full day, if you live in the modern
world, without seeing something Erni has been involved in. From album covers,
to magazine layouts, to logos, to television, to pieces-Erni is the metaphorical
King Midas of art today, but in talking to him you would never know it.
***
I never realized, until looking through your site www.top-2-bottom.com,
how many different things you are involved in, outside of graffiti. And you
would never know it in talking to you: as youre more on the chill, inconspicuous
tip. Have you always been the quiet kid?
Ive always been more reserved and laid back. You
kill the stereotype I have of what a New York graf writer is-tough, a ruff-neck
When I started I was a ruff-neck.
Where in New York did you grow up?
The Lower East Side
Im sure youve heard of Lee. He lived in the building next to mine.
Talk about a shadow to stand in. I was like, Oh great, the king of graffiti
lives right next door to me.
How much older was Lee?
About six years older. Hes actually still six
years older. [laughs]
Yeah. Right.
He was weird; he wouldnt do any pieces in anyones black books,
he would never tell you what he was doing, he never would tell you what he
was about to do. He was always mysterious, even on the verge of shady. He
wasnt super well liked, especially after he did that Allen Boys piece.
The Allen Boys were like the rival gang because we grew up in Smith Projects.
So the Smith Boys, who later turned into Die Hard, were like, This f@#%in
guy, hes doing the Allen Boys piece and theyre our freakin
enemies! So at that point, everybody started liking me better. [laughs]
They still respected him because he was still the king of graffiti. I mean
he didnt have problems walking around the neighborhood or anything,
but they definitely were like, Thats f@#%ed up.
Was Lee a mentor to you?
He actually wasnt a mentor at all because like
I said, he was a little weird.
Were close now. And Ill make fun of him now like, You shady
character!
One time, this is a funny story, Im in his house, just hanging out and
he eats like a freakin gavon. This guy eats like eight meals a
day. And hes like, You know what, Im really in the mood
for some orange juice. Will you go to the store and get me some orange juice?
And Im like, Im not one of those freakin toys that
goes runnin around cuz you ask for sh@t.
And hes like, What do you want then? Im like, do a
throw up in my book.
And hes like, I dont do books.
And Im like, I dont do orange juice.
Then he was like, Alright, Ill do something in your book.
So he did the little throw up in my book which was very cool. But when I left,
I didnt take the book with me. I forgot it. And I came back like two
days later to pick up the book and mysteriously, just that page had been razor-bladed
out of the book. So I was like, Yo, well wheres the throw up?
And he was like, I dont know.
Im like, Well, you had the book. And you did the throw up. And
now its neatly cut out of the book
And hes like, Well, what can I say, I did the throw up-so now
were even.
Like I said, were really close now because hes overcome a lot
of that. We laugh about it today. But he wasnt so much a mentor, I mean
you would look at his things in awe
So you were more of an admirer.
Yeah, because he was like the first guy with can control.
Wicked, wicked can control. His pieces, when they were first done, they were
unbelievable.
What other writers did you come up admiring?
Mitch 77. I was talking to somebody the other day-if
graffiti were baseball, if Lee was Babe Ruth, Mitch 77 was like Ted Williams.
It was like all right, this guy [Lee] can hit home runs all the time, but
this guy [Mitch 77] can do everything. You know this guy bombed the insides,
he did throw ups, he did blockbusters, he did wild styles, he did top to bottoms.
Everywhere!
Its a shame he didnt get put into Subway Art like
everyone else did. But anybody that knows, from that time, you say Mitch 77
and theyll be like, That guy was the baddest. He was like
an unsung hero. There arent that many of his photos now and he didnt
get a lot of play in the Subway Art, but he was a bad ass
Staying with the theme of versatility, I consider you
a very versatile artist. I mean Ive seen canvases by you, photos of
pieces on the streets, layouts and even furniture
was versatility something
that you worked at?
At one point, I abandoned graffiti completely. I was
like, Ive seen it all, its the same pieces [this was before
the Europeans really started going bananas], theres only so much you
can do with a spray can. So me and my partner Gil were like, Lets
go learn other things. So we learned how to do full finishes, more traditional
paint textures, started experimenting with paintbrushes and learning how to
paint for real. You play with washes and oils and you could probably master
almost everything; except maybe oils, those might take you a lifetime. But
when you came back to spray painting, you had a whole new appreciation. I
told Carl, [one of the two owners of Tribal] the piece I just did here on
this wall looks good because it works on that wall. It works really well with
the room, with the walls, the colors-and thats a good mural, when everything
works together.
Erni blesses the new Tribal warehouse in San Diego.
So when you go back to doing pieces, its the
same thing. For example, if youre piecing with some of the best writers
in the world, you gotta stand out. So you think, How do I do that?
Maybe its not a wild style; maybe its something simple, something
clean.
It just seems for an artist, versatility is important.
Its funny because youll hear some writers today saying, F@#%
doing all that art sh@t: Im a graf writer.
Yeah, it is funny because before graffiti started out,
before Subway Art, before Style Wars, before the galleries-graffiti
was, whos rockin the line. Whos piece burned whose? Who
did a piece with this guy and got rocked? And thats what it was about.
You made your own style, you didnt bite and you tried to innovate your
own style to be the best on that car or that train that you were doing. Thats
what it was. And that competition kind of got lost over the years. That competition
that made you think, I need to be better. How do you get better?
You gotta learn. Graffiti was about getting the most you could out of a spray
can. Learning and exploring more, changing the letters; thats where
wild style came up. It started as a bubble letter, then it became this thing
by itself over the years from culture to culture to culture. It became these
wild, elaborate pieces.
So then in that tradition, why not say, You know what, I have to go
beyond graffiti now to learn more things to bring them back to graffiti.
Its the only way. You cant say, Alright, Ive learned
everything in this spectrum that there is to know. Because then youve
just done what youve accused everyone else on Madison Avenue of doing.
You would see a book come out and it had fake graffiti on the cover and you
were like, Oh, some f@#%in ad agency with an art director thinks
they know what graffiti is, did that; and theyre just ignorant to what
we do. Well, weve become ignorant to the world. And thats
what happened. Once you did that, you werent an artist anymore. An artist
has to always explore-exploring feelings, exploring emotions. And thats
one thing that lacks in graffiti today; no one explores anymore.
And thats my critique on graffiti specifically in the past five or six
years. There is a whole lot of talking, but no one is saying anything. Look
at the world today-isnt there something in the world that affects you,
that will reflect in your work?
Thats why when you talk of the Europeans, I guess
that is where the evolution is going. What writers are you into today-are
you into Daim and company, etc.?
Yeah, those guys. And I know that theyre also
going to school and they are applying the learning [to graffiti and art.]
And youre seeing it in their work.
I met Daim, we were gonna piece once, but it didnt work out. We were
talking about this wall we were working on in the Bronx. And Daim didnt
want to do this theme that they had chosen because he had done it before.
So he was trying to get them to come up with another theme, but they were
set on doing that. But I understood his point which was; weve already
done this particular thing, why do it again-you dont need to do it again.
I understand and I respect that; anyone who pushes the envelope, because thats
really what graffiti is about. And there are even a lot of guys playing with
weird styles that dont look like graffiti at all. Whether you like it
or not, that doesnt matter. Its all cut out of the same stone
and theyre trying to find something. And the only thing that separates
hundreds of thousands of graffiti artists out there, again, is to look inside
and see something inside of you and say, You know what, I really do
have message and I need to get that message out. How come out of a hundred
thousand graffiti artists, no one has a message? Its really weird. And
I love seeing the pieces, theyre great. Name, crew, name, crew, name,
crew
But what are you saying.
Exactly.
That bugs me because I could go into the East Village and go into some gallery
and I could see guys whose paintings might suck. But you know what-theyve
committed themselves to the act of painting and they have something to say
and they are driven to do that.
Its hard to get graffiti artists to paint. Theyre like, Well,
how much am I gonna get, whats in it for me, am I getting free paint
Man, when I was nineteen, I would run to the wall. You gotta wall? You got
paint? Im comin! I dont care. And now its more political.
But I still know artists today who spend all of their money on another tube
of oil paint, another can of spray paint. And these people, they dont
go out, they dont have any money, they work in a restaurant and then
they go home and they paint. They might be ugly paintings, whatever, but theyve
committed themselves. Like you said, a lot of people dont know the scope
of my work. A lot of people think I just do graffiti now and then. I dont
know what they think Im doing in between, but for twenty years, Ive
been consistently working. Ive had a couple of vacations. But beside
that, Ive worked. Anyone who comes to my studio, I tell them, Come
with some hours! Looking back now, I think, Jesus, thats
a lot of work.
erni@top-2-bottom.com
A friend was mentioning to me that you were going to
be doing a CD-ROM of your old black books
I have five black books, two that I did all myself. The other three are about
eighty percent myself. And this is just from high school. So I was like, What
am I gonna do with these, what am I gonna do with these? And finally
I was like, you know what, Im going to make a CD-ROM. Its gonna be interesting
because these pieces are from 85 to 90.
And as they were scanning these, the guy calls me and
says, Youre gonna need two CD-ROMS. And I said, Why?
And he said because we had about 400 pieces.
We talked about work ethic earlier. And in my observation-being
an artist does involve natural ability, but most importantly, as cliché
as it may sound, it involves hard work. You guys are the artists because youve
done those pieces, or those throw ups more times than anyone else.
Yeah, thats what it is-the commitment and the
discipline. Yeah, its fun hangin out and partying and drinking and having
a good time, but when everyone goes home, somebody has to work.
Dont sleep.
Right. Somebody has got to get into that studio when no one is around and
no one is lookin.
Thats a good lesson. Because its seems like the
younger generation has lost the value of work a little bit. Everyone wants
to be an artist or a DJ or whatever. But it doesnt just happen. So its
good for kids coming up to hear from someone who has achieved success doing
what it is they love to do. And its not just talent, it is work.
In high school, I went to Art and Design, which was
just out of control. I mean Pink, Fable, Wiggles, Doze, Wayne and I could
go on with about 15 or 20 more people you might have heard of
And then
probably 150 people who didnt really go beyond, but were part of the
culture.
It was like, everyday, you were surrounded by graffiti. Everyday. They made
a rule in school that at lunch, only six people could sit at each table. Because
at our table, the writers table, had 25 or 30 people at it. Just black books
going by. The bathroom in that school, you couldnt go in there with
a ballpoint pen and find a spot. There was this one guy, his name was Mixer
and I remember telling him, Youre lucky, cuz youre a lefty
and if you stand on top of the divider and hold on to the light bulb, you
could reach that spot! [laughs]
What about Wiggles, hes ill.
Hes one of the true ambassadors of hip-hop. Because
hes really humble and he doesnt need to be because he can do it
all. I cant dance to save my life. He can dance, choreograph, he can
piece, he can MC, he can DJ-he can do it all. And Im like, I can
piece. And give me enough time and I probably can get the bartender to buy
us a round of drinks. [laughs]
Graffiti was 24 hours a day-it was all day, all night. That was the root of
it. And now, I see people passing around black books and all it is is throw
ups and tags. Thats not what it was. It was easier in high school you
know. I remember once, Doze came in with eight black books and he did the
same piece in everyone. At one point, I had like 19 black books at a time
at my house. And you try to do a nice piece because people will get mad at
you if you dont do a nice piece. I almost got into a fight with Sharp
and Delta from the old school. They rolled up on me and I was like, What
are you so mad at me for? And Delta said, You did a whack piece
in my book. [laughs] And I was like, Give it back to me. Ill
do a better piece, but I got like 20 books at my house! [laughs] I mean
I was good, but that doesnt mean that every piece comes out good.
Back then, had you just done a throw up in someones book, they would
have been like, Yo, if you didnt want to do something, you shouldve
just said no.
And then it would get to the point where the book got really good. Youd
give it somebody and they would never give it back. So thats why everyone
is just doing tags and throw ups cuz no one will give you their book. In my
first book-I have like three Daze pieces in it, I have two Crash pieces, a
Dondi and Futura piece in it. So at that point, it was time to get a new book.
And that was my oldest book and my pieces were horrendous.
Its kind of cool though, its just proof.. of an
artists evolution.
You have to have a start. And that Subway Art
book came out and it kind of destroyed the evolution for a lot of people after
that because people took a bunch of different styles and made their own style.
Then you got these pieces that you didnt know who did them. But before
the book, when you were looking at trains-if a Case 2 piece went by, even
if it was at 40 miles an hour, you knew. You were like, That was Case
2. Cuz that was his style. You couldnt read em, but you
knew it was him. If a Seen piece went by it didnt matter what word he
wrote-it was clean, it was tight. You knew it. You dont have that so
much anymore. Again, you see one of Daims pieces maybe and youre
like, That must be him. Or Loomit or any of those guys who are
concentrating on individualizing the artist. Another thing that theyre
doing, thats really important
Its something I learned from reading
Andy Warhols book, his diaries and reading Keith Harings book.
Andy Warhol didnt like working with other artists, but he understood
it was important for pop art to work with up and coming artists and he worked
with Keith Haring. And you read his diaries and hes like, I cant
stand that theyre getting so much exposure. It would drive him
mad. But he still knew it was important. I collaborate with a lot of different
artists, mostly non-graffiti artists. The only graffiti artists I collaborate
a lot with now are Pink and Smith. Because they like to be out doing these
walls and they want to do nicer murals. A lot of other graffiti artists dont
want to do that so much, they want to get their name up, they want to do a
nice piece.
Those European guys really work with each other. They help each other and
now look what theyve done in their career because of it. Now theyve
created some kind of a movement, they created a unity and I dont even
know if those guys even get along-it doesnt even matter. They know that
professionally, its your job. And if we want to do this as a living,
we have to support each other. Thats why I will only say positive things
about graffiti, about graffiti artists. For example, if there is someone I
dont like, and there are people I dont like, and people ask me
about them-I usually say I dont even know them, Im not familiar
with their work. Because Id rather just say that than say something
negative. Because saying something negative, ultimately, hurts me in the end.
And thats pointless.
Erni - Oil on canvas.
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