saber   /   November 30th, 2011 3:15 pm

Eviction of #OccupyLA

This is a photo of the LAPD removing part my #OccupyFlag during their eviction of #OccupyLA

LUCY NICHOLSON.REUTERS

photo by LUCY NICHOLSON/REUTERS

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saber   /   October 14th, 2011 4:42 pm

#OccupyFlag Video….

1.a.occupyflag.web

Its October 14, 2011, day 28 of #OccupyWallstreet. America is rocked. The world is watching, the media is manipulating, people are energized. Citizens have come together to express their frustration with corruption through this robust and peaceful protest movement.

Occupy Wall Street is the first real protest movement of my generation. Satellite movements have sprung up in every major city across the country including Los Angeles.  Making art is the best way I know how to participate and what a better way then to create a huge American Flag that breaks up into 64 individual protest signs laid on the South East lawn of City Hall. The slogans written on each sign were grabbed from the related Twitter hash tag topics on #OccupyWallstreet #OccupyLA. With the frustrations of the 99% mounting, Pandora’s Box has been thrust open. Complacency is no longer an option…………

2.a.occupyflag.web

3.a.occupyflag.web

7.a.occupyflag.web

Photography By Saber And Jon Lake

OCCUPYWALLSTREET.ORG

OCCUPYTOGETHER.ORG

USDAYOFRAGE.ORG

GETMONEYOUT.COM

OCCUPYLOSANGELES.ORG

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saber   /   October 13th, 2011 8:42 pm

Saber, Graffiti Artist, Fights To Lift Mural Ban In LA – Huffington Post Arts

SABER

For the artist Saber, participation in the democratic process has always been complicated. He’s an international graffiti legend, holding the world record for the largest graffiti piece, done along the LA river in 1997. Despite its place in the history books, the city of Los Angeles spent a whopping $837,000 to paint over it in 2009. Now Saber is approaching public art laws from a different angle, spearheading an effort to reform Los Angeles’ mural policies…………THE REST.

By Andrew Reilly

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saber   /   October 12th, 2011 11:15 am

Saber Unveils Protest Flag for Occupy L.A. and His Push to End Moratorium on Murals

saber 5_550

Artist/activist Saber has never been one to do anything in a “small” way as evidenced by his world record holding graffiti piece on the L.A. River — done in 1997 and visible from space before it was buffed last year. His latest projects are no exception. A couple weeks ago he unleashed a genius skywriting campaign over city hall to try to end the L.A. County mural moratorium and this week he joined forces with Occupy L.A. to contribute his Protest Flag, a 32 x 16 ft flag that divides into 64 separate protest signs, with slogans like “Bail Out Skid Row,” “Ass, Cash or Grass, Republicans Ride For Free” and “Art Is Not a Crime.”……………… MORE FROM Shelly Leopold at LA WEEKLY

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saber   /   September 19th, 2011 2:42 pm

Art Is Not A Crime…End the Mural Moratorium

Statement from the Artist:

9.19.2011

End Mural Moratorium. Art Is Not A Crime…

The reason I hired five jet planes to sky write over City Hall and downtown Los Angeles is to bring awareness to how ridiculous a moratorium on public art is.

The city states that all public murals are signage, effectively banning art from the walls of Los Angeles. And it is removed at the taxpayers’ expense. Money is given to private graffiti removal companies, who have broken onto private property to paint murals beige. The owners of small businesses where murals have been painted have been harassed and threatened with fines if they do not remove the artwork. Police officers raid homes and places of work, intimidating artists and building owners. During this time of economic crisis, “mural signs” are an easy target for the city to extract money. This moratorium is a clear violation of the first amendment right to free speech and enforcement for these unreasonable laws is a complete waste of taxpayer funds.

To put things in perspective I recently visited the beautiful set of murals inside the Terminal Annex Building on Alameda. This mural was painted in 1941-44 and was funded by the “Works Progress Administration” (WPA). Murals are just a part of the legacy of a national program that put the country to work during the Great Depression.

Fast-forward to the Great Recession, taxpayer money is now used to obliterate all traces of the artwork my generation have created. I believe this is city-funded censorship pushed by lawmakers with personal vendettas. Potential jail time is more probable for us than the opportunity of creating an artistic legacy for the next generation. In a city that used to proudly call itself the “Mural Capitol Of The World,” the officials who enforce this ban should be ashamed to call themselves “Angelinos.”

Art Is Not A Crime… End Mural Moratorium.

- SABER

Tell Mayor Villagaigosa and the L.A. City Attorney’s office to end the mural moratorium now:

Long War on Public Art in Los Angeles County

Click on the links below for more information:

* Mural Ordinance Update to the Cultural Affairs Commission

Heal the Bay House (Santa Monica – 2011) photo: saberone.com

* The ‘Heal The Bay House’ was created to by Risk and Retna raise awareness for Coastal Cleanup day.  RESTORE AND PROTECT THE WORLDS OCEANS is written in complex lettering on bands of color representing sky, pollution and water. A spokesperson for Heal the Bay called it “a powerful and beautiful way of reminding people of the value of the ocean,” but not everyone agreed. The day the artwork was unveiled, the city ordered an immediate take down and demanded a $5000 a day fine. Saber was on the scene to describe the cops initial response. While many in the upscale community wanted it to stay up longer, public pressure succeeded in keeping the artwork up through Costal Cleanup day.

* Despite the ban on murals, the Art District of downtown Los Angeles remains a “Haven for ‘Street’ Murals”

Fairfax Avenue Mural by Renta, Rime, Revok, Norm, Os Gemeos, Saber. Photo by Melrose and Fairfax

* One week before the opening of MoCA blockbuster exhibition Art in the Streets, a private contractor working for the city of Los Angeles broke into fenced private property to buff a mural by several artists featured in the upcoming controversial show. The building owner and surrounding community were furious and stopped the whitewash halfway across the mural. The contractor was forced to come back the next day remove the dull beige paint.

* A North Hollywood woman on a fixed income commissioned a 75 ft. mural  to brighten the alley next to her home, but Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety inspectors concluded that a single word included in the fanciful swirls and other spray-painted designs turned the piece into an illegal “sign.” Facing mounting fees and unable to pay $10,000 for a permit, she was forced to have it painted over. One of the young men who painted it over said “Instead of this, the city ought to be fixing potholes. Let the art survive.”

* The owner of the Studio City Car Wash had an artist paint The Great Wall of Studio City but the 64-foot-long mural is threatened with a $1,000-a-day fine for violating city codes.

* City council panel’s take on the ‘mural vs. commercial sign’ debate in June of 2010

* Private residents commissioned the artist, Phil Lumbang to paint this cheerful mural on the front wall of their home, but the city’s Building & Safety Department found the mural violated the city’s restrictions on outdoor advertisements and they were told they must paint over the illegal mural. A commenter said “I live just up the street from this house and I miss the mural every time I pass by.”

* Despite protests, as of 2009 murals continue to be outlawed.

Photo: knowngallery.com

* The SABER piece in the LA River, with reputation for being the largest graffiti piece had drawn admirers from around the world for 12 years before it was buffed by the Army Corps of Engineers and city sub-contractors.

* In 2007, the graffiti gallery Crewest, along with help from the activist group Friends of the L.A. River (FoLAR) organized “Meeting of Styles: LA.” The event brought together over 100 graffiti artists to spray paint a 10,000 square foot section of the L.A. River at the Arroyo Seco Confluence in Highland Park. Despite the fact that the organizers secured all necessary permits for the mural project, and that the event was fully licensed by the county; supervisor Gloria Molina objected to the work after the fact and introduced an emergency measure to the County Board of Supervisors that forced the mural to be whitewashed from the flood walls. A spokeswoman for Molina called the legal graffiti murals a “public nuisance and a potential safety hazard,” and justified Molina’s decision to introduce the mural’s removal by saying the county was “trying to save lives.”

* It wasn’t always like this, back in the 1970’s more than 400 mural productions were supported through the Citywide Murals Program under the Department of Recreation and Parks before the program was disbanded. The non-profit SPARC (Social and Public Art Resource Center) was founded in the spirit of work like The Great Wall of Los Angeles.

A view of “America Tropical,” partly whitewashed. (Credit: PBS)

* Of course, this sort of thing has a long history in Los Angeles. In 1932, David Alfaro Siqueiros painted America Tropical in a rooftop beer garden on Olvera Street. The mural’s centerpiece featured a crucified Indian, hovered over by an imperial American eagle. The part of the offending mural that could be seen from the street was covered almost immediately; the rest was whitewashed within a year.

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SPECIAL THANKS TO:

Obey, The Seventh Letter, Upper Playground, Juxtapoz Magazine , Willie T, and the amazing people at Worldwide Sky Advertising

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Radio Interviews With Saber On The Project And Petition:

KCRW Which Way, L.A.? Interview

KPCC Patt Morrison Interview

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saber   /   May 6th, 2011 3:54 pm

DISSENT on The Daily Beast

“What defines a city on a hill is not vengeance. It is justice…”

Capital Punishment and Bin Laden on Andrew Sullivan’s The Dish

Dissent.web

DISSENT, 2011 (from the Tarnished Flag series)

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saber   /   April 23rd, 2011 5:33 pm

THE SEVENTH LETTER x MOCA exclusive tees available now…

saberftee

Find On KNOWNGALLERY.COM

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saber   /   January 26th, 2010 5:27 pm

Saber- “Tarnish” Open Edition Offset Poster Release

saber.flag1.09web

We are very happy to add this beautiful poster to our open edition collection. The outpouring of support for this work has been awesome. These prints have been made for all the people who want to support Saber’s message…

Artist: Saber
Title: Tarnish, 2009
Size: 18″ x 24″
Description: This is the open edition offset poster of Saber’s painting, “Tarnish”. Printed on heavyweight 110lb. recycled card stock

NOTE: Due to high demand, please allow 1 week for shipping confirmation.

Price: $20 plus shipping

THE SHOP

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saber   /   January 25th, 2010 5:55 pm

Saber On Dylan Ratigan Show-MSNBC

Catch Saber talking about his involvement in wanting to advance Health Care Reform.

DON’T MISS THIS!!!!

STAND UP AND SPEAK OUT IF YOU AGREE!!!


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saber   /   January 13th, 2010 7:54 pm

Saber On Epilepsy and Insurance, Conservative Republicans, and Why The American Flag

In case you missed this one….Saber talks about his battle with Epilepsy and Insurance Companies, being a finalist in Organizing For America’s “Health Care Reform Video Challenge” and the conservative reaction, the Release of his “Flag 2010″ Print Edition, and what the American Flag symbolizes to him.

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