Up and coming, New York-based artist José Parlá got his start writing graffiti in  Miami, but it was his dedication to transplanting the street to the  gallery that won him acclaim in the art world. “Society mostly  categorized [graffiti] art as vandalism, so my struggle as an artist was  to show its beauty to those who could not see it,” he says, noting  that, historically, the feedback wasn’t entirely positive: “The more  people told me it was trash, the more I wanted to do it.” For his new  show Walls, Diaries and Paintings at New York’s Bryce Wolkowitz Gallery,  the artist embarked on a global treasure hunt, collecting fliers and  posters from Istanbul, Havana, Tokyo, Shanghai and New York. Parlá drew  inspiration from urban walls in each of the cities, reproducing them in  his richly textured works, which layer the found materials with oil  paint, saw dust, spray enamel and dirt, all punctuated by tag-styled  signatures. Filmmaker Matt Black, who has known the artist for over a  decade, discussed the personal history that informs Parlá’s methods for  today’s short, the second episode in Black’s series, Reflections. Hatje  Cantz will publish a monograph of the artist’s latest works in  conjunction with the exhibition.
José Parlá: Off the Wall on Nowness.com.
 
 
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