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interviews home
Sonny Sandoval ::
Daim ::
Erni ::
Chaz
Chaz...
A Quick Chat with Chaz
When folks think of graffiti and its roots, their minds tend to immediately
evoke images of the East Coast, most specifically, New York City. But in speaking
of New Yorks graffiti kings like Lee, Seen, Cope 2 and Erni; you must,
in that same breath, mention one of the founding fathers of West Coast graffiti,
Los Angeles own Chaz Bojorquez.
Humbly and more than happily, Chaz schooled me. From history to styles to
hip hop and then some
To me, aside from being one of the pioneers of graffiti, you also
seem to be a student as well as a keeper of its history. Maybe you could give
me a short lesson on graffiti and its origins as youve see it
Well, looking from Los Angeles, we have two histories
with the East and West Coasts. And we have our own sense of pride out here
on the West Coast. Even though everyone is influenced by the New York style,
the hip hop style as its called, it was in some ways imported;
and it really doesnt speak to us as Latinos. Hip hop is not really culturally
based, so they say
It does cross color lines and all of that, and has
a lot to do with the New York flavor; which is a Puerto Rican, black and New
York hueros style. They have a whole different kind of history
because its hard to live there. Theyre always in jackets and in
subways and everything else like that. And were over here in shorts,
driving cars, going to the beach and we can go up twelve months out of the
year. Thats a big difference, they cant do that over there.
Another difference [between East and West Coast,] is that in New York the
idea of tagging is about the me mentality. Its about self-identification
and it wasnt so much about a crew or culture. It was more about individuals
kind of going up and marking their own identities. But here on the West Coast,
in the cholo style tradition, one person would write for the whole
gang. So it was more about the we mentality. We used only old
English style letters [we called it old English, but its really German gothic
and even some Celtic designs too.] And preservers of this cholo style now,
are mainly in the prisons. You know you see it just as much on skin more than
on walls today, that is a Latino reality. Old English has had a long historical
influence in East Los Angeles. Old English was always painted on our low rider
scene out here. Even the Hollywood-ites, like Snoop Dogg [who
uses a low rider] and he conjures; Latino imagery, and hes hoppin
and bouncing around. And its always in a convertible, so its part of
the beach scene too. Its about the sun being out and the palm trees
and the babes in the bikinis.
But I give New York all of my respect, because 99% of
the graffiti that the world knows is New York style. But they
kind of dropped it in the late 70s and early eighties. And Europe picked
it up. I dont ever say anything bad about the New Yorkers because they
just have so much talent out there. They are incredible writers.
But here on the West Coast, our tradition goes back to the 1920s when
shoeshine boys used to tag on Olvera Street [first in L.A.] to declare and
claim their corners. They would write their names with dabbers on the sides
of the walls. And in the late 30s and the 40s, there were the
Zootsuiters. And that was a style that came out of Harlem, and
was made famous with the black guys; guys like Cab Calloway and jazz and all
that. But if you look at the Mexican movies, there was Tin tan
and Cantinflas and even in Hollywood, Bugs Bunny was in zootsuits
for a little while. So that whole flavor out here on the West Coast was defined
in that kind of renegade style. And the Latinos had their zootsuit style.
They had their own talk called Calo [old Bullfighter street slang.]
They were doing their own nicknames, and they picked up that old English style
writing. Graffiti was more about doing a public announcement; about writing
a roll call on the wall with everybodys name. It wasnt about one
person tagging here and going across the street tagging and then going across
the city and tagging. It was about defining the territory of who you were;
Latino. How many are you; were thirty strong. How long have you been
around; you would say veteranos or pee wees like grades
for the different ages. And then; where youre from, and youll
put down; 18th Street or Avenues, something like that, or White Fence, or
Dog Town, or Alpine Street. So it was about defining where you were from,
not who you are. So it came from a whole different kind of perspective, it
was about having a lot of group pride. But in doing that, we kept it in the
hood. We never exported it, you never talked about it. And a change came around
1985 with the first Mac computers and I guess by the early 90s, people
started getting their websites. And its only been recently that people
have realized that there was graffiti happening out here from an earlier time
than New York. And its not really as respected. And you know something,
its OK, because cholo graffiti is a fringe graffiti from East Los Angeles.
Its a graffiti by us, for us.
Almost as if its meant to be like that
Its meant to be like that. Because one of the
disadvantages of the worlds graffiti right now is with the websites
and everything: everybodys looking over everybody elses shoulder.
You can pick up a graffiti magazine in South Africa, Thailand, Australia,
Canada, New York, or Europe and see that theyre all beginning to look
alike. A lot of the styles, theyre picking up from each other. And its
great that we have this world culture; but were beginning to mesh a
lot of the imagery. But the cholo stays pure because a lot of it is still
in the prisons not in magazines. The words you use are earned. And you dont
pick up your tag name, it has to be given to you.
As you were saying that in the late 70s and early eighties it was more
New York. And from the 90s into 2000, its been more Europe. But
it almost seems that there is a resurgence, a new popularity of the cholo
style. Because you see so much more of the cholo style in peoples work these
days
Yeah. Because people who are into graffiti are going
back into their history, they want to know about this. And theyll see
one cholo logo, in one magazine and theyll say, Whats that!
And then theyll start looking it up. And once that they find that its
coming from East L.A., then, they start realizing that there are quite a few
writers out here. But the old school, the O.G.s, the veteranos, doing the
cholo style; theres only just a few of us; but our influence is being
picked up by younger writers. Theyre using lines that are more gothic/cholo
stylings. Im the oldest writer, but I didnt invent cholo graffiti.
I continued the heritage. I added my flavor to it with the brush rather than
the spray can [because that was like painting with my foot, I hated painting
with the spray can.] I needed to control both edges of the line like a marker
and I didnt feel like I had good can control. Cuz there was only one
tip and only one color [black] back then.
So you were painting almost even before spray cans then?
Well the spray can came in probably about 1952 or 53,
in LA, with the little tester spray cans, used to paint plastic model slot
cars. I was born in 1949, Im 53 now. So I started drawing graffiti when
I was 19, in about 68, but I didnt hit the streets until 1969.
In my notes earlier, I was writing about some of the legends of graffiti;
Lee and Seen and Cope 2 and those guys from the East Coast. But you were probably
writing before they even hit their first train! It doesnt seem like
people realize that about you
Who started first isnt the point. Philadelphia
started tagging before New York. And I have heard that in Edinburg, Scotland
also had an early form of tagging that also resembles L.A. In the beginning
when I was tagging, I was putting Chingaso all around the Arroyo
Seco River walls [all rivers in L.A. have concrete walls,] which was the branch
of the L.A. River that goes up into Highland Park; which was the first community
in all of Los Angeles. And there are areas around there that we go back to
with photographers and anthropologists and try to rediscover some of those
old writing spots. And if you think like a writer, you can find some of those
old spots. Weve traced some old English style letters, a few Western
styles with seriphs, to 1914! Weve gone to places where I used to go
as a little kid. We used to go play in the street sewers and there used to
be tags there before I was born. And they used to smoke write
them with their Zippo lighters or with candles. And going back there recently
with a crew we found graffiti tags from the 1940s and 1950s; a lot of 1950s,
which INSPIRED me! I get real excited about those early forms of graffiti.
What are you going to do with all of the photos, publish a book?
Were probably going to do something, but first
we have to have some kind of permanent documentation. And were not trying
to tell anyone that we started graffiti
Its about having pride
in our own heritage and styles, something that no one can really deny us.
Its strange because I always hear everyone involved in hip hop preaching
how important it is to know your elders and having an understanding of where
everything came from. But really its not like that.
Ill tell you, hip hop is all about the money.
And what motivates it? Its the music industry because theyre the
only ones that make and have money. But when they say that hip hop has the
four elements of breaking, rapping, deejaying and graf; I think they could
spend a little bit more time respecting graffiti. The only time all four elements
are used, graffiti is just the background of someones video. Writers
only make a living by making art or clothes design. When you watch MTV
Cribs and you see a big rappers home and it looks like the furniture
came from Ikea, with no paintings on the walls, then theres something
wrong here. They spend all of their hard-earned money on entertainment rooms
and audio studios. Theyre only looking at music, which should be their
sole focus. But I think graffiti has yet to have its time. It needs to be
more appreciated. Graffiti is music that you look at!
I wanted to talk about your influences. I mean obviously
you see the cholo style influence in your work. But there are other influences
I see in your style; like the Asian style of writing letters, even calligraphy.
And I guess those things all come together to make your own unique hand style.
You know being in Los Angeles is our greatest blessing.
Were right in between Europe; our European heritage. But we are also influenced
by the Asian sense of spirituality and artistic mentality. So were right in
the middle of those two cultures. I also claim my American native blood. We
claim this land in the name of Atzlan, our ancestral homeland that includes
the southwest United States. The very first reason I tagged was to pledge
my allegiance to my American Latino heritage [we call ourselves Chicanos.]
I first tagged a roll call list of all of my friends. Being Chicano is my
biggest influence in all of my work. But my stuff is also Asian influenced.
I studied calligraphy from kung fu Master Yun Chung Chiang and this was in
about 1968. And Master Chiang studied under Pu Ju, who is the brother of the
last emperor of China. So it wasnt so much about learning about the
calligraphy line. But what the line meant. What calligraphy did for you as
an artist was to teach you discipline and preparation and visualization of
exactly what you really want that line to say. Because for us, being non-Asian,
we can look at an Oriental scroll and not know what the letters say. But if
you teach yourself the philosophy of line, you can tell the intent or the
purpose and what those letters are saying just through the styling of the
line. Is it powerful like a tiger? Is there a waterfall with birds? Are they
taking about love? Are they talking about war, or the mountains? strength
and beauty
These are the essence of what I try to put into my letters.
My letters are pretty simple, but my whole foundation is based on strength
and beauty.
Also having been raised in L.A. I have a lot of Hollywood
in me. Because if you look at my paintings, there is a story involved, like
the movies. There are characters, who is involved in the story
And Ill
write their names. Theres the scenario, the stage, whether its
gonna be a roll call or its gonna be a battle with these words, is it
a historical event? Or Ill have some theater in there because the letters
will be all bottom lit, like a stage. And then I also try to make some adventure
happen
But most important, a complete story with a conclusion. From my
very first tag, it was about saying something important, so I would spray
it clean and straight. Now being older I ask
why is this image important?
Why would these letters this painting more important than a Daim, Mear, Dose
or a Saber? I guess its not whose work is more important, but the most
important is what makes uniquely different. But at the same time, I love to
keep the connection between us, connect the dots. There is a huge, worldwide
graffiti movement that was not here a decade ago, and everyone is apart of
it now. Why is my art still called graffiti and theirs is called graffiti?
Is it the stylings or a West Coast flavor, a sense of color, the collaboration?
I tell ya all were about here is having fun. But how about the money!?
[laughs]
Like you said, thats the one thing within the four elements that gets
ignored when it comes to money or respect
Money can pervert. In some ways I have not been very
successful in the sense that I dont sell a lot. Because people like
my work or they dont get my work. But I feel as long as Im struggling;
somehow I get a sense that Im doing the right thing. Because in my work
Ive never compromised. Dont get me wrong, Im not at all
poor, I own a lot of property, but I think that you can not really compare
good graffiti with money in your pocket. Commercial graffiti, looks commercial.
Ive been lucky enough to use my skills. Ive traveled around the
world for three years. And Ive been to 36 countries, studying letters
and hand stylings and culture. My recent paintings deal with the collaboration
of cultures, not between black and white people, those are old issues because
those two cultures are so similar and tied together. Generally, they speak
the same language, they have similar jobs and work ethics, they go to the
same colleges. Where the American Latinos, the Chicanos, the Hispanics, whatever
they call us
Even though were Americans, we speak a different language,
we have different kinds of foods, we have different work ethics, different
kind of music and a different sense of pride. Anglo and Afro Americans dont
think about not being American. But we as Latinos always think about our Americanism.
Our Latinoism deals with that native blood in us. So were
a different kind of Americans, and when I need respect I get it from my own
writer friends here in Los Angeles. You dont get respect unless you
give respect, and were strong on the West Coast. Its not about
the money, its about blowing eachother away with letters and images drive-by
style. We do it in the streets, galleries and clubs. So my recent work deals
with the whole Chino/Latino thing. Like I go to clubs and there are all these
Asian guys with Latina girlfriends and vice versa. They got the same Honda
low rider cars, they eat the same food, they eat rice and beans and theyll
have Asian food. They just kind of mix it up. Its a whole different
flavor out here, Im real proud of it; I always promote it and push it.
All of that says a lot about the content of my work. Its about border
issues; you know, L.A., West Coast, beach, surf, skate
Were American
Latinos.
Out of all graffiti writers I can think of, you probably have the longest
career. And youre still active. What is it that keeps you going?
I started too early and there wasnt a younger
generation of writers behind me. It was just traditional, territorial gang
writing here on the West Coast and it still continues today. It took about
16 years, around 1985 before New York style graffiti started in L.A., or so.
Actually the young men that I deal with right now, Im their fathers
age. And the younger ones, I could be their grandparents age, weird, I dont
get it. When I went to New York and met the New York old school writers over
there, I was in my late forties and they were in their mid forties or so.
And when I saw them with their gray hair and their wrinkles and all of that;
I was so moved that I connected with writers who have gone through all of
that shit, because at this age your mentality has changed. You dont
have that anger. You just have the mentality that you survived, you know,
like a Vietnam vet. Because that was my era, so when I see these older writers,
I have so much respect for them-Cocoa, Bama, Futura, Phase Case, Stay High
and Snake and even some of the younger ones like Lady Pink, Lee, Erni and
Mare. But then when Im out here on the West Coast, whats kept
me going is the youngbloods. Hip hop kind of found me in around
89 or 90, when hip hop started coming strong, and all of the graffiti
writers were like 17, 18, 19 years old. And they went back into their history.
And they started asking me to show and write with them and I started asking
them to show and paint with me. Now many of those same writers have galleries,
magazines, clothes shops and music studios. We found out that we have so much
in common, we dont even look at each others age. We see each other as
a force. So I tell these guys now that we dont need warriors anymore,
we need an army because everyone is strong now. I feel that Im part
of an incredible, once in a lifetime art movement; and its getting bigger.
I lucked out.
How many years then has your career spanned
I started in 1969. So thirty-three years of doing graffiti. And thats
doing all kinds of graffiti; tagging, working on graffiti movies, doing all
kinds of logos for products, silk screen prints, paintings, murals, t-shirts
anything
thats applicable. Ive painted lowrider cars and tattoos [there
are close to a thousand men in prison that have my skull tattooed.] Most recently,
I did a large digital vinyl print for a background on a Nelle
and Harrison Ford movie and some new skateboard designs too. I guess I feel
fortunate to still keep on doing what Im doing, while the rest of the
world has reinvented itself.
I have also had an equally successful career in graphic arts [recently doing
a logo for Cheech Marin,] as a Chicano artist [recently showing in Chicano
Now at the Smithsonian Museum and I also designed a CD for poet Luis
Rodriguez] and I also show with the low brow artists of the West
Coast [Juxtapoz Magazine artist show, Track 16 gallery in October.] And I
am currently showing skull artwork in a downtown Tokyo gallery. And also,
I was involved in helping to organize a big show of Black Velvet
paitings that just opened in Tijuana, Mexico and back to Italy next month,
Im always busy. My career has been around for more than thirty years,
but I feel that Im just starting. Willem de Kooning said that you really
dont start to paint until you reach 60!
So you influence these younger guys, but who are the guys today that still
influence you?
I admire all of them; the Europeans, the New York guys
and all of the guys out here on the West Coast.
My earlier influences were people like Greg Griffin, some painters like Vermeer;
his sense of clarity and perspective, and a purity in his sense of scope and
mentality. The Japanese print makers of a hundred years ago are like gods
to me. But also Hendrix and Santana you know, those are big influences. The
graffiti writers, I like our gang out here; you know Mear and Saber and Abel
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