Yanoe Zoueh

Yanoe Zoueh

“Yanoe x Zoueh” are an interdisciplinary collaborative team from Los Angeles, CA. Both experienced in painting and creating in a multitude of styles, navigating between graffiti, traditional portraiture, representational imagery, sculptural and vivacious abstraction, with agility. In working together, they bring their disparate aesthetic influences and their professional experiences in the art world, into a cohesive whole. They have created site specific installations and murals throughout the world. Both artists have a keen understanding of mass and space and are expertly versed at translating multidimensional modalities into dynamic, unidimensional artwork. Yanoe x Zoueh currently have the world record for largest Augmented Reality mural with 15,000sq ft of painted space transformed into a 360 degree ethereal world.

RYAN “YANOE” SARFATI

Ryan “Yanoe” Sarfati, is a Belgium American contemporary artist best known for his large-scale murals and evocatively versitic aesthetic. Born in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Yanoe forged his urban art identity as a graffiti writer, crafting wild-style, interlocking lettering radiating with energy. Yanoe relocated to Los Angeles during the early 1990s and has since become a formidable, prolific force in the mural and installation scene. With site-specific murals in cities ranging from Tulsa, Oklahoma to Columbus, Ohio to Los Angeles, California, Yanoe creates work that is an important integer of placemaking. Developed over his multi-decade career, Yanoe has a keen understanding of mass and space and is elegantly versed at translating multidimensional modalities, like Brutalist architecture, into dynamic, unidimensional walls. In more recent years, Yanoe has pivoted the intentionality of his practice to fine art, exploring studio painting and commercial partnerships with companies such as: Nike, Urban Decay, Headspace, Google, Apple, Facebook, and Netflix.

ERIC “ZOUEH” SKOTNES

Eric Skotnes is a Los Angeles-based urban artist known for interconnecting disparate styles into an aesthetically integrated whole. Skotnes began writing graffiti at 11 years old, an influence that has evolved throughout his career and remains prevalent in his outdoor murals. He studied illustration and fine art at the Art Center College of Design and, through that training, is well versed in classical, figurative painting and knowledgeable about the history of art. Colliding these schoolings—one in the classroom, the other on the streets—Skotnes creates murals and works on canvas that juxtapose his wild-style graffiti with figural renderings of classical sculptures from antiquity